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If leaders
know how to conduct better meetings, those meetings can actually
become time well-spent—time that increases employee
productivity, participation, and innovation.
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If your RTO team members hear "Meeting at 3:00" and
think, here comes another waste of my time, then it's time for a
meetings overhaul at your organization. Author Kimberly Douglas
stresses that meetings can be important team-building and
idea-generating opportunities for your employees. The key, she
says, is knowing how to do them the right way.
Printable version:
Rent-to-Own Training Series Topic 14: Ten Pitfalls of Pitiful Meetings
It's Friday afternoon, and your team is filing into the
conference room, mumbling and grumbling as they take their seats
for yet another meeting. An hour passes and the meeting comes to
a much-anticipated end, leaving everyone involved wondering why
the meeting was held in the first place. After all, the usual
suspects dominated the discussion, and the same ideas that came
up in last week's meeting were once again batted around. No one
seemed to write anything down, and no one agreed to put anything
discussed into action. If this kind of ineffective meeting
sounds familiar, you're not alone, says Kimberly Douglas, author
of The Firefly Effect: Build Teams That Capture Creativity and
Catapult Results (Amazon
Kindle edition). It's a problem that plagues many
organizations—but it's also one, she adds, that can be remedied.
"In these tough economic times, every second of the work day
is valuable," says Douglas. "None of it should be wasted in
meetings that seem to go nowhere or that are plagued by conflict
or lack of participation. I have sat through countless meetings
myself - some great, and some not-so-great. But those that
weren't so great could have been so much better with just a
little more effort. If leaders know how to conduct better
meetings, those meetings can actually become time
well-spent—time that increases employee productivity,
participation, and innovation."
The question of productivity is a huge issue when it comes to
meetings. According to a Microsoft survey of over 38,000
employees, almost 70 percent felt that the average 5.6 hours
they spend each week in meetings are unproductive. Another
survey conducted by OfficeTeam had 28 percent of its
150 senior executives responding that meetings are a waste
of time. Furthermore, 45 percent of respondents said they
believed their employees could be more productive if
meetings were banned at least one day a week.
"In too many companies, meetings have become a way for
leaders and their employees to simply go through the
motions," says Douglas. "If a new initiative is being
implemented or new product ideas are needed, the feeling
from management is often, 'Well, let's have a meeting. At
least it will seem like we are doing something.'
Unfortunately, not enough thought goes into how to conduct
those meetings. Having a meeting, in and of itself, is not a
bad idea. In fact, meetings can be the most engaging and
thought-provoking times of the day for leaders and team
members alike. The key is avoiding those pitfalls that sink
a meeting's productivity."
Ten pitfalls of pitfalls meetings
1. What's the point?
2. Where's the agenda?
3. Conference room overcrowding.
4.
The meeting will seemingly go on forever.
5.
The meeting becomes a free-for-all.
6. Big talkers eat up all the time.
7. Conflict kills productivity.
8.
No one knows who's making the decisions.
9.
No decisions, commitments, or next steps are captured.
10.
No meeting evaluations are performed.
1. What's the point? A common problem with many
meetings is that they're scheduled with seemingly no clear
objective in mind. Douglas suggests that you run through a
pre-meeting checklist before putting it on everyone's schedule.
First, ask yourself whether the meeting is even necessary. Could
the information you want to provide be just as easily presented
in an email? What do you want to accomplish with the meeting?
Will reaching that accomplishment really require a group
decision? If you ask yourself these questions and decide that
you do need to have the meeting, next consider who should
attend. Design an agenda for the meeting. And clearly
communicate any prep work that needs to be done by the
participants beforehand.
"Being clear about the meeting's objectives will ensure a
greater likelihood of it being effective than anything else you
can do," says Douglas. "Simply answering, 'So why are we
meeting?' before everyone is gathered in the conference room
will help you ensure meetings are productive for everyone and
will also help you avoid lost opportunity cost and draining
employee motivation."
2. Where's the agenda? Remember the last time you
actually received an agenda in advance of a meeting? Likely, you
immediately had a higher perception of whether that meeting was
going to be a waste of time or not. Once you know who will be
attending the meeting, you need to finalize the agenda. A
quality meeting agenda includes:
• The date, time, and location of the meeting
• The meeting's objectives
• Three to six agenda items, accompanied by how long they'll
take to discuss and who the discussion leaders will be
• A clear explanation of the prep work that should be completed
before the meeting
Note that it is okay to use standing agenda items from
meeting to meeting—such as "Company Overview," "Industry
Trends," "Strategy Discussion," "Review of Metrics," "Results,"
and "Problem Solving"—as long as you also include the length of
time allotted for each item and who will be leading the
discussion. Send the agenda out as far in advance of the meeting
as possible, and then re-distribute an agenda/meeting reminder
48 hours prior to the meeting.
When putting together the agenda for your meeting, Douglas
also suggests considering the individual Hermann Brain Dominance
Instrument profiles of your team members. Before you begin your
meetings overhaul, have an HBDI certified specialist come in to
profile your team. The HBDI is an assessment instrument that
measures people's specific thinking preferences. Your team
members will be divided based on the HBDI quadrants: Analyze
(the blue quadrant), Organize (the green quadrant), Strategize
(the yellow quadrant), and Personalize (the red quadrant). Once
you know how your team members think, you can design a meeting
agenda that better suits each one of them. It is a great way to
design your meetings so that there is something for everyone,
and you can even color code your agenda based on the quadrant
colors to indicate which parts of the meeting your team members
will find the most engaging.
"When people come into a meeting knowing what is going to be
discussed, they see exactly how their time will be spent," says
Douglas. "They have time in advance to plan their own
participation and can thus participate more effectively. By
simply creating an agenda, you are already significantly upping
your chances of having a successful meeting."
3. Conference room overcrowding. Would you attend a
meeting if you didn't know why the meeting was being held and
why you, in particular, were invited? Often, too many people who
don't have a clear understanding of what role they are supposed
to play are invited to meetings. Those in attendance need to
know if you want them to be an expert, an influencer, or a
decider.
"When you're creating your meeting participant list, think
about the meeting's purpose," says Douglas. "Does Stan from
Accounting really need to be in on the next marketing meeting?
Does Barbara in HR need to know what is expected of the sales
team for the next quarter? Make sure everyone who is attending
the meeting knows exactly why they were invited. If need be,
communicate directly to them why you want them there. Keep the
number of 'required' attendees as small as possible. And if
critical members can't attend, consider postponing the meeting
until they can. Having a meeting without all of the right brains
present can cause just as many delays and productivity problems
as postponing the meeting a couple of days. Finally, use the
following litmus test. Ask yourself, Will this meeting be the
best use of this person's time, given its objectives? If you
answer yes, then it's highly likely that person should be there.
"Once you do get all of the right team members assembled, you
might also consider having them use a meeting cost calculator,
which allows them to privately enter in their salaries and the
meeting length to calculate how much it is costing the company
for them to be in a given meeting," adds Douglas. "It is a
powerful tool that can promote individual productivity because
it reminds everyone involved of the financial significance of
the time spent in the meeting."
4. The meeting will seemingly go on forever. Now, that
might be an exaggeration, but that exact thought will be
crossing the minds of those attending a meeting that seems to be
going nowhere. When the eyes of attendees start wandering to
watches, BlackBerries, and wall clocks in an attempt to see
exactly how much time they've spent in the meeting and to
estimate how much more time will elapse before they can get back
to their long to-do lists…you're in trouble.
"Providing a meeting agenda will go a long way toward solving
this problem," says Douglas. "When attendees know exactly when a
meeting will be over, they won't spend their time internally
speculating about when they can leave. Create a reputation for
yourself as being a meeting leader who starts and ends on time,
every time. And if you do need to extend the meeting's length,
ask the group's permission before doing so. When you're creating
your meeting agendas, remember that the ideal maximum meeting
length is 60 minutes. And use what I call 'time boxes' for each
agenda item. That means X amount of time is allotted for each
agenda item. Bring a kitchen timer that you can use to enforce
the time limits. Because time is of the essence for every agenda
item, you might want to encourage your discussion leaders to go
around and get a headline from each person in the meeting to
start each discussion topic. That gives everyone a chance to
participate, without allowing one person to take up all of the
discussion time for a topic. And to keep those attending on
their toes, you might even want to consider unusual start times
like 11:45 a.m. or 1:15 p.m."
5. The meeting becomes a free-for-all. Anyone who's
ever attended a meeting or led a meeting knows that it doesn't
take long for things to get off track. The best way to avoid
losing control of the conversation and the meeting as a whole is
to set some conversational ground rules right away. Make it
clear to those in attendance that the ground rules will be used
to ensure that everyone's time is well-spent. Then select four
to six rules based on the unique needs of those attending and
your specific meeting objectives. A few possibilities include,
"Everyone participates," "Speak in headlines" (to prevent
attendees from rambling), and "Police yourself—Am I
participating too much or not enough?" etc. Keep the rules front
and center. You may even want to write them on a flip chart to
display during the meeting. Or, once they're established, you
can include them in the actual agenda.
"Always ask for the input of the group," says Douglas. "They
may think a rule will hinder the productivity of the meeting, or
they may have a suggestion that will help to keep everyone on
topic. The bottom line is, create rules that will help everyone
stay focused on the meeting's goals. Do that consistently, and
your meetings will be the better for it."
6. Big talkers eat up all the time. Every meeting has
them: those people who love to let everyone know they are the
most important people in the room, have the best ideas, and have
a comment to make on every subject. Your conversational ground
rules should help keep your big talkers (or big-headed!) in
line, but there are other ways to ensure that one person doesn't
dominate. First, don't let big talkers sit at the front of the
room or the back center of a U-shape. This definitely gives them
a feeling of being on stage. In fact, you may even want to use
assigned seating for the meeting. (If you decide to use assigned
seating, change the assignments for each meeting, and if you are
the leader, change where you sit each meeting.) Doing so will
also prevent big talkers from sitting next to a buddy. Big
talkers tend to feed off of one another, and separating them
will help reduce their excessive input.
"There are other meeting strategies that will help you garner
the participation of everyone rather than just one or two
individuals," says Douglas. "I find that individual think time
is very valuable. Not only does it force your big talkers to
organize their thoughts rather than blurting them out every
chance they get, but it also allows your introverts to gather
their thoughts and formulate what they would like to say. When
the individual think time is up, do a round robin during which
you ask team members to weigh in. Be sure to start with an
introvert whom you saw writing a lot during the think time.
You'll likely find that once you get this person talking,
everyone in the group will be surprised by how great his or her
input is, and they will wonder why the introvert hasn't spoken
up before.
"Breaking attendees up into small groups can also be
effective. If quieter attendees can bounce ideas off of each
other without the threat of being interrupted by someone else,
you are able to truly let their innovations shine through. Trust
that those in the meeting are mature enough and self-aware
enough that they can monitor their own behaviors. If someone is
consistently getting out of hand, it will then be your
responsibility to pull him aside after the meeting and let him
know that his behavior cannot be tolerated. Emphasize that by
listening to the ideas of his colleagues, he actually sets
himself and the company up for greater success because more
ideas come to the fore."
7. Conflict kills productivity. An important thing to
keep in mind is that effective meetings aren't necessarily free
of conflict. In fact, conflict can be a good thing, and it
should be valued by those attending any given meeting. The key
is not letting it get out of hand. Douglas advocates viewing
conflict as "creative abrasion," a phrase coined by the
president of Nissan Design International, Jerry Hirshberg.
Here's a metaphorical explanation of how it works: Picture two
tectonic plates on the earth's surface—your way and my way,
perhaps—grating against each other. Many people know that when
this kind of friction occurs between plates, earthquakes often
ensue. But what happens when these two plates—or viewpoints—come
together? If the environment is right, they create a mountain—a
third viewpoint that is a product of the first two approaches
and that is grander, loftier, and more powerful than either one
was on its own. In other words, conflict is turned into synergy.
"For creative abrasion to work, leaders have to view conflict
as a good thing," says Douglas. "When a conflict arises, maybe
someone disagrees with an idea that's been thrown out or with
how a certain issue was handled. Defuse the disagreement with
collaboration. Openly discuss solutions and compromises that
everyone can get behind. And remember, conflict is a group
issue. Don't single anyone out when a conflict arises. Handle it
as a group. Create and reinforce a common set of group conflict
norms. Similar to the ground rules you use to make your meeting
more effective, conflict norms can be used to beget productive
discussions that will lead to decisions to which everyone
can—and will—commit. Have each member of your team write down
three to five norms that would lead the group as a whole to a
more productive conflict and allow for better decision making.
Examples include: 'Establish a common goal that the group fully
understands,' 'Provide an opportunity for every voice to be
heard,' 'Speak so others can hear your message,' 'Clarify pros,
cons, and risks of options or potential solutions,' etc.
"When things do get heated, ask everyone to take a break for
a couple of minutes to think things over," says Douglas.
"Reinforce the ground rules and ask team members to listen to
each other and consider what a possible compromise might be.
Remind everyone of the meeting's ultimate goal and ask, given
that goal, how you all can move forward to achieve it. You might
hear from your team that more information needs to be gathered.
That would make for a good reason to stop the meeting right then
and set a date for a future meeting. If the knowledge is in the
room, it's likely people just aren't listening to each other.
They need to balance inquiry with advocacy. They have probably
spent too much time advocating their own positions and not
enough trying to understand the other views. Break everyone into
smaller groups and give them a moment to think through the other
positions. Ask them to write down at least two to three reasons
why opposing ideas might be good, as they relate to achieving
the ultimate goal. Then give each side a few minutes to state
their points. Ask everyone to listen and consider a compromise.
"And if worse comes to worst, use humor to disarm a tense
discussion, and then try to get everyone re-focused," adds
Douglas. "Once you've trained your team to truly value and
listen to one another, I think you'll find that situations that
may have previously turned into tense conflicts instead turn
into intense brainstorming and collaboration sessions."
8. No one knows who's making the decisions. So your
meeting is nearly over, you've discussed everything on the
agenda, and you're ready to send everyone on their ways.
Unfortunately, no one is quite clear about what they're supposed
to be doing or who is going to make that decision. "As the
leader, you don't have to be the one making all of the
decisions, but you do have to make sure the decision-making
process is clear to everyone," says Douglas. "Decide what the
best decision-making process is at the beginning of the meeting
based on the criticality of the decision, time constraints, and
the need for buy-in. Will a group compromise be necessary?
Should everyone vote and defer to the majority's decision? Will
it be better to build a consensus and go from there? Or should
you, the leader, make the call? The best method is going to
depend on what exactly the meeting's goal is."
The Vroom-Yetton Decision Making Model can be used to help
you decide which approach to take. It is a powerful tool for
determining and making explicit how groups will make decisions.
As the leader, use this framework to help you think through
which level of input you want from the team before you even
engage them in discussion on the issue. The levels of the Vroom-Yetton
are as follows: Autocratic, Consultative, and Group-Based (More
information about these levels can be found in The Firefly
Effect). With those levels in mind, a leader must also consider
such factors as the need for complete buy-in from the team,
timing, complexity of the problem, breadth of impact of the
decision, etc. Basically, the more critical the decision and the
more buy-in you need for the execution of the decision to be
effective, the more consensus you need to build.
"Whatever decision-making method you choose, make sure
everyone understands who will be making the final decision from
the get-go," says Douglas. "The quickest way for a leader to
lose his team's respect is for him to make a decision that his
team thought they would be making. If you just want your team's
input and will be making the final decision on your own, let
them know that ahead of time. They will be happy to weigh in and
will feel good that you respect and want their opinions. I find
that most teams don't care as much that they get to make a final
decision; they just care that they didn't know from the
beginning that they weren't going to be making the final
decision. When this happens, it feels to them like the
decision-making responsibility has been taken away from them
because they didn't live up to what their leader expected."
9. No decisions, commitments, or next steps are captured.
Too often, meetings end and everyone simply goes back to
business as usual without putting anything that was discussed in
the meeting into action, or without even knowing what they
personally should do. If you keep the format for capturing what
went on in the meeting simple, you have a much greater
likelihood of getting it done and getting it distributed
quickly. There is no simpler way to record what went on than by
writing on a flip chart the WHO, WHAT, and BY WHEN of the
directives discussed in the meeting.
"Do a round robin with everyone recapping what they are
accountable for delivering," says Douglas. "Good questions for
the leader to ask to get people thinking about the impact of the
meeting include, 'Who wasn't in today's meeting who needs to
know what we decided today?' and, 'How are we going to
communicate this to them?' Once decisions have been made and
everyone knows how they will be communicated, set the date,
time, and location for next meeting, making it clear that all
will be responsible for reporting on the results of this
meeting's action items at the next meeting. And always
distribute a brief meeting summary within 24 hours of the
meeting. The meeting summary will reinforce to everyone that
results are expected."
10. No meeting evaluations are performed. For many
organizations, meetings have simply become something that
employees feel like they have to get through. They think that
all they need to do is sit through the meeting, and then they
can get back to the task at hand. A great way to ensure that
this isn't the mindset of those in your organization's meetings
is to do proper meeting evaluations.
"You don't have to wait until a meeting is over to evaluate,"
says Douglas. "A great strategy is to do a process check at
least once during a meeting. Have everyone assess the four Ps:
• Progress. Are we achieving our goals?
• Pace. Are we moving too fast or too slowly?
• Process. Are we using the right tools/methods?
• Pulse. How is everyone feeling—frustrated, satisfied,
energized?
"The process check will allow you an opportunity to get
everything back on track if the meeting isn't going as planned.
Then at the end of the meeting you can do a plus/delta
evaluation. This evaluation allows you and meeting attendees to
assess what worked well in the meeting (the plus) and what could
be improved for the next one (the delta). Don't look at meeting
evaluations as a throwaway step. They are key to ensuring that
your meetings are consistently well-organized and productive."
"I believe wholeheartedly that a team meeting can be the most
productive and exciting time in that team's life," says Douglas.
"Unfortunately, too many organizations meet for the wrong
reasons or have simply fallen into a going-through-the-motions
meeting style. By implementing a few simple tools, you can
breathe life back into your meetings. Give these strategies time
to take hold, and you'll find that your meetings can become
times of trust building, problem solving, and collaboration that
will energize your employees and give way to innovation that
will greatly benefit the organization as a whole."
___
Kimberly Douglas, SPHR, is president of FireFly
Facilitation, Inc., a firm specializing in the design and
facilitation of high-impact initiatives, including leadership
team effectiveness and strategic planning. She has facilitated
results for over 25 years in a broad cross-section of industries
and organizations, including Coca-Cola, AT&T, Home Depot, UPS,
and the U.S. Marine Corps. Kimberly holds a master of science in
industrial/organizational psychology. Prior to founding FireFly
ten years ago, Kimberly was an organization effectiveness
manager for Coca-Cola, a director with the Hay Group, and served
in HR leadership roles in the healthcare, telecommunications,
and hospitality industries. Her book, The Firefly Effect, was
published by Wiley in April 2009. She was the 2003 president of
SHRM-Atlanta, has been reelected to the board in 2009, and was
just named to the SHRM National Task Force for Performance
Standards Development. Kimberly gives back to her community
through pro bono work with such organizations as the Partnership
Against Domestic Violence, The Westminster Schools, and the
Georgia Center for Nonprofits.
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