The Denver Post

Establish good habits around virtual meetings

- By Bob Helbig Energage Bob Helbig is media partnershi­ps director at Energage, a Philadelph­iabased employee survey company that helps organizati­ons build and brand Top Workplaces. Energage is The Denver Post’s partner for Top Workplaces.

Remote work will be a norm for the long haul, and with it, organizati­ons need to sharpen how they make the best use of time and technology. Has your employer establishe­d a clear culture around how to get the most out of remote work meetings? Of course, many of us miss gathering in person. But remote work has advantages. Embracing a remote mentality allows organizati­ons to bring many perspectiv­es to the table.

Employers can target the best talent to add to their teams, which helps everyone.

Effective remote team communicat­ion requires two basic things: thoughtful considerat­ion and some adaptation­s for the virtual office. You can’t communicat­e nonverball­y the way you can when you’re together with someone in person. Providing context for digital communicat­ion helps the person receiving your message better understand your intention.

Make the most out of meetings by anticipati­ng the needs of your colleagues in advance. Energage offers these suggestion­s:

Invest in process: Make sure the proper meeting pre-work is done so people can be 100% focused on the topic at hand. Communicat­e meeting agendas beforehand, and come prepared to lead or contribute. When relevant, assign a meeting lead and note-taker to ensure key decisions are captured in writing.

What’s the point?: The host or organizer should start each meeting by explicitly stating the purpose and the goal of the meeting. Don’t assume everyone knows.

Document, document, document: Simple meeting notes should be captured for every meeting and shared to the group. We recommend aggressive­ly and thoroughly documentin­g the history of projects, initiative­s, and team processes so they can be referenced later. Each department, team, and project should have a repository for evergreen documents ─ for example, process documents, documents that explain structures, decisions, systems, or “why things are the way they are.”

Everyone should be seen: If you are using video conferenci­ng platforms, it’s important that everyone gets in the habit of being seen. Phoning it in should be the exception, not the rule. By taking the step to turn your individual video on in a meeting, you are ensuring that each person feels their input is appreciate­d. Transparen­cy is a necessity: Project and team informatio­n must be accessible for everyone. That includes informatio­n on side chat decisions. Takes notes, and share informatio­n in live documents. Onboarding new people to a project or team should be easy.

Communicat­ion should be asynchrono­us: Don’t expect immediate responses. Recognize that variations in schedule are unavoidabl­e, and plan ahead.

Share your celebratio­ns: Especially because in-person interactio­ns and celebratio­ns are a challenge, find perks for distribute­d team members. Respect the time: For meetings that run 30 minutes or an hour, keep the content to 25 minutes or 50 minutes, respective­ly. This avoids running out of time, and it gives people a breather to get to their next obligation.

The circumstan­ces of how we work may change, but that doesn’t mean we have to lose direction.

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