Meeting Myths
7 Myths That Make Meetings Miserable
Myth 1: Executives belong in meetings.
Although the demands of business cause executives to attend more meetings
than other professionals, executives need to avoid meetings. Top management
is responsible for vision, strategy, plans, and communication. That means
executives should spend most of their time thinking, learning, planning, and
communicating. Inefficient, ineffective meetings waste the time of the
company's most valuable employees.
Better: Ask probing questions when invited to make sure that your presence
will add value. For example, "What are your goals for the meeting?" "How
will I contribute to achieving those goals?" and "How can I prepare for the
meeting?" After all, you want to contribute to an effective meeting if you
decide to attend.
Myth 2: Holding a large meeting is impressive.
Actually, holding a large meeting is expensive. It can also be impressive if
it is conducted properly, which means that it will be as small a possible.
Better: Invite only those who can make meaningful contributions. The
likelihood of holding an effective meeting diminishes with groups larger
than ten or twelve.
Myth 3: Structure inhibits spontaneity.
This is true if your goal is to obtain random outcomes over infinite time.
While this may occasionally produce spectacular results, such as winning a
lottery, you can achieve predictable results faster by applying structured
activities. These help people make methodical progress toward results.
Otherwise, the group is attending a party, instead of working in a meeting.
Better: Use structured activities to keep you in control of your meeting and
make progress toward results.
Myth 4: People are too busy to prepare agendas.
Since there is always time to repeat a task, fix a problem, or make an
apology, there must be time to take the steps that avoid such dilemmas.
Overall, preparing an agenda saves time and money.
Better: Prepare an agenda or, if you are too busy, ask someone to do it for
you. Then send the agenda to the participants so that they can prepare for
the meeting.
Myth 5: Minutes are unnecessary.
This is true for any meeting where people wasted time producing nothing.
Effective meetings produce results that are worth documenting. Minutes serve
to track action items, record decisions, and inform others. If you are
planning a meeting with no results worth documenting, ask yourself why that
meeting is necessary.
Better: Record key ideas, agreements, and action items during the meeting.
Then convert these notes into minutes.
Myth 6: Meetings should last a long time.
While this may be true for some meetings, most meetings can be conducted in
less than an hour. Long, casual meetings lull people into lethargy. In
general, people are able to focus on a task for 30 to 60 minutes. Then their
attention fades and they take mental holidays to think about other things.
Better: Plan meetings where you spend time and resources in proportion to
the value of the results. That is, an effective meeting should be designed
to earn a profit. Also, plan short breaks every 50 minutes.
Myth 7: The effectiveness of meetings is a low priority.
This is true if you seldom hold meetings. Of course, if you have more than
two employees, you need meetings to make decisions, reach agreements, and
develop solutions. Effective meetings are a critically essential activity in
running a business. They harness the combined wisdom of your staff to invent
products, increase sales, improve productivity, plan strategies, and create
success.
Better: Learn how to plan and conduct meetings that make your business a
success.
About the Author
Certified professional facilitator and author Steve Kaye
helps groups of people hold effective meetings. His innovative workshops
have informed and inspired people nationwide. His facilitation produces
results that people will support. And his books show how to hold effective
meetings. Call 714-528-1300 or visit http://www.stevekaye.com for over 100
pages of information.