Meetings are an essential component of any organization’s operations. However, their effectiveness can vary significantly depending on how they are structured and managed. A well-run meeting can enhance communication, foster collaboration, and lead to decisive actions, while poorly managed meetings can waste time and resources. This article delves into how leaders can schedule meetings effectively, ensure productivity, and provide tips on conducting quality meetings that achieve their intended outcomes.
This article expands Week 32: One More Voice in the Meeting. That article was written to help the supporters build productive meetings. Now we are going to examine how a leader can have impactful meetings. Leaders can set the pace, promptness, and timing for meetings. It falls on them to ensure meetings achieve their goals, whether to inform or make a decision and a meeting incorporates all relevant viewpoints. First, we should look at how you are scheduling meetings.
Sources for this Article:
Edmondson, A. (1999). Psychological safety and learning behavior in work teams. Administrative Science Quarterly, 44(2), 350-383. https://doi.org/10.2307/2666999
Lehmann-Willenbrock, N., Allen, J. A., & Kauffeld, S. (2013). A sequential analysis of procedural meeting communication: How teams facilitate their meetings. Journal of Applied Psychology, 98(3), 457-467.
Luong, A., & Rogelberg, S. G. (2005). Meetings and more meetings: The relationship between meeting load and the daily well-being of employees. Group Dynamics: Theory, Research, and Practice, 9(1), 58-67.
Nettles, S. The Dreaded Meeting. rmagency.com.
Rogelberg, S. G. (2019). The surprising science of meetings: How you can lead your team to peak performance. Oxford University Press.
Scheduling Meetings Properly.
Proper scheduling is a fundamental step in creating productive meetings. Leaders should avoid the common pitfalls of scheduling meetings without clear purposes or at inappropriate times. Research shows that meetings scheduled too early or late in the day can result in reduced energy and attention among participants (Luong & Rogelberg, 2005). Instead, mid-morning or early afternoon time slots are often optimal, allowing participants to be more engaged and focused.
In my experience, putting meetings at 9:30 AM or even at 10:00 AM allows supporters to gather their materials, thoughts, and energy. When you were starting your work day at 9:00 AM and straight into a meeting, I found that the meeting was less effective. Also, many of my meetings that I ran that fell at 4 or 5 PM would be just as ineffective, and I have had meetings run from midnight to 4:00 AM. I have also known leaders who preferred meetings at specific time slots and if you interrupted that, it was not productive. The time and length of your meeting can impact the effectiveness.
Another consideration is placing meetings back to back. I had a leader who was loquacious or chatty in his meetings. He was well known to go hours over time, not exaggerating. The executive calendar was a management nightmare and people learned how to wait or reschedule. I gained a viewpoint of not making the mistake of placing meetings in a row with no buffer between them. To support my leaders, I anticipated meeting times to accommodate extensions or cancellations as best as I could. Making a conscious effort to understand what types of meetings usually caused extensions and what types of meetings allowed for quick turnaround.
Luong and Rogelberg also found in their study that the number of meetings you throw in a day can have a negative effect on well-being (Luong & Rogelberg, 2005). Showing in their study that meeting length and frequency can impact your employees. “However, meeting frequency was not related to feelings of productivity” (Luong & Rogelberg, 2005). This means that employees attending more meetings did not reflect improved productivity in their minds.
On my last tour in Afghanistan in 2017, most of my days were tied up in meetings. My calendar, on most days including the weekends, were meetings from 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM. This forced me to look at my multiple email sources before 9:00 AM and after 5:00 AM. I would also need to do actual work before and after my meetings, during meals, or late into the night. Once a month, as I stated above, I would attend a meeting at midnight and this made the next day less productive. It also made going to my meetings difficult to concentrate.
This shows that leaders should also consider whether the meeting is truly necessary. Many employees feel that a significant percentage of meetings could be replaced by emails or memos (Rogelberg, 2019). Therefore, leaders should ask themselves whether the meeting will add value, whether its objectives can be achieved more efficiently through other means, and whether all invited participants are essential to the discussion. Organizations improve when there is a routine quarterly meeting to discuss whether meetings are worth their time.
If I were honest with myself, I would agree that many of the meetings I had to attend in Afghanistan, including the ones I ran, were not necessary. The quarterly meeting I mentioned above helped codify which ones to keep, alter, or eliminate. I eventually attempted to replace meetings with touring around my area of responsibility where I could. Individual meetings can be shorter and more directive but take generally more time to get around and are repetitive for you. This also does not work if your team is remote or dispersed.
Generally, I found that some meetings could not be canceled. It becomes a leadership challenge I think we have all faced before, whether to cancel it and deal with the ramifications or make that meeting more productive. This is no easy decision but in most cases, you are better off saving that meeting. I have found that if you make your meetings more productive, you will benefit in the long run.
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Ensuring Meetings Are Productive.
Continue reading this full article at: https://open.substack.com/pub/thedavarkgroup/p/week-41-leading-a-good-meeting?r=385ucj&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web