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Many people
dread meetings for being time consuming, pointless, and boring.
The primary
reason for meetings is to share or brainstorm information or to develop
action steps toward accomplishing a goal. Period. But if this were the
result of most corporate meetings, people wouldn't moan and groan when
they learn that another meeting is going to be held. From our experience
facilitating and attending meetings, we've found that bad meetings have
similar traits regardless of the industry, company, or project:
Poor
meetings lead to poor project results
Most meetings
create at least one unwanted result, such as more meetings, frustrated
participants, or unclear expectations. All of these lead to poor performance
or no performance at all. People aren't converting decisions into action
because often no decisions were made or articulated. Culture plays a
part in how meetings are perceived, too. For example, Americans consider
meetings a place where decisions are made; in contrast, the French use
meetings to share ideas, allowing the decision makers to review their
newly gathered information and come to a decision.
Signs of bad
meetings are participants arriving late, leaving early, unnecessarily
attending by phone, not participating when at the meeting, canceling
altogether, spending hours and hours in a meeting, or leaving without
a clear idea of why the meeting was held and what the outcome was.
The long-term
results of poor meetings are more damaging. Low morale, ineffective
time management, high project turnover rate, unavailable employees,
and zero headway will doom a project and frustrate participants, leading
to wasted company funds and talent.
Facilitators
turn poor meetings into productive work sessions
Have someone
facilitate your meetings. Yes, it must be someone who knows the essentials
of good facilitation -- or your meetings still won't improve -- but
it's well worth the investment. Here are some thoughts that every facilitator
should keep in mind when preparing for, running, and following up on
a meeting:
- Create an agenda
and stick to it.
Going into a meeting with the nuts and bolts of what the group wants
to discuss, agree on, and accomplish increases the chances that participants
will make actionable decisions within a set time frame. Without an
agenda, people will bring up loosely related subjects that aren't
critical to achieving the meeting goals -- that distract from the
main issue. Great ideas and beneficial tangents will occur with an
agenda and artful facilitation.
- Watch the clock.
Meetings that are too long can cost a bundle. The
Center for Continuous Quality Improvement at the Milwaukee Area Technical
College surveyed its 130-person management council to find out how
much time its members spent in meetings. Multiplying the time spent
by members' salaries, the survey found that the college was spending
$3 million per year on council meetings!
A good facilitator
will chart out periods of time for each discussion and will help
the group decide how best to use the remaining time allotted if
an agenda item requires more discussion. He or she will also give
participants checks on time and keep the meeting on track.
Curious how much your
meetings cost? Calculate the per-hour salary of each participant
and add up the fees. Doing so will inspire you to trim unnecessary
meeting time.
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Turn ideas and decisions
into action.
Meetings can be so vague that participants don't know what they're
supposed to do next. Bad meetings can cause two people to do the
same task while another task sits idle. Because the capacity for
misunderstanding is limitless, good facilitators should get agreement
on every decision, help the group develop an action item associated
with every decision, and assign a person responsible for the action.
The meeting minutes reflect these assignments.
- Have fun, but don't
mismatch activities and people.
Meetings are work. But that doesn't mean participants can't have
fun. Allow joking, small talk, etc., if it makes the group more productive.
(Know when to cut chatter, too, like when no one has focused on the
issue at hand for a couple of minutes.) Make the environment one in
which people are comfortable -- both physically and emotionally --
but watch out for inappropriate games or exercises.
For example, you might
avoid a "touchy-feely" get-to-know-you game for an IT group. Many
technologists are not very extroverted and might crawl into a nonparticipatory
shell if confronted with such an uncomfortable task. Also, don't
plan an activity that involves an inappropriate invasion of space,
such as sitting on a stranger's knees while he guides you with his
hands on your hips (as was the case in a recent meeting I attended),
unless you know for a fact that all attendees will be comfortable
with that level of physical contact. Know your meeting participants,
including cultural interaction issues, and always give people the
option of not participating.
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Speak
plain English. You can't make decisions and accomplish
goals if no one knows what you're talking about or if what you've
said allows for multiple interpretations. Eliminating meaningless
corporate jargon allows for more natural conversation and a better
understanding of what's expected -- leading to better ideas and
realistic action items.
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Learn from your
mistakes.
At InnoVision Communications, we're always looking for ways to improve
our facilitation skills. After each meeting or workshop we conduct,
we review what worked and what could have been improved. Good facilitators
reserve the end of a meeting to get feedback from the group and
learn from that feedback.
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Take
responsibility. Participants
can also use facilitation techniques in a meeting, whether asking
for clarification on a point, checking the time, using language
that everyone will understand, or getting the discussion back on
track. If you see symptoms of a poor meeting, put the onus on yourself
to cure
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