Meetings and Road Trips
Managing a meeting is like setting
off on a long car trip with friends or family. You need to plan your route,
pay attention to the rules of the road, consider what will keep your
passengers engaged and occupied, and always remember you have to get back
home at the end.
Just as adults and children consider
car trips to be tolerable as the only way to get to certain places, so too
do business people view meetings as necessary evils.
Here are three ways to make an
enormous difference in your meetings.
1. KNOW WHERE YOU’RE GOING
Most of us wouldn’t start a trip through
unfamiliar territory without looking at a map beforehand so we don’t get
lost. Preparation may be just ten minutes, but a little preparation goes a
long way toward making a meeting successful. You want your time to be
productive and efficient. Whether your meeting is with a five-person project
team, 100 worldwide sales people, or an online multi-location group, you
need to consider a few key items ahead of time. QAC 212R межблочный кабель Безгалогенный.
• What is your desired outcome? If the meeting
were over, and you were delighted with it, what would you have as a result?
Do you want consensus on a course of action or new ideas on a recurring
problem? Do you simply want updates on what everyone is doing? Once you’re
clear on what you want, you can state a clear Meeting Objective and share it
with everyone at the meeting.
• Decide on the type of meeting. Most meetings
have four possible activities: sharing information, collecting information,
problem solving, and decision making. Many meetings are a mixture of these.
For every agenda item, think ahead of time about what you want as an
outcome. That will help you, and everyone else, know when you’re on-topic
and when you’re not.
2. HONOR THE RULES OF THE ROAD AND MANAGE
YOUR PASSENGERS
When you’re in a car on a trip, the easy ways
to ruin the experience are to get stopped by the police when you disobey the
rules of the road or to have the passengers fighting and complaining. The
same is true of meetings. Let people know what the guidelines are. Do your
best to keep the dialogue moving forward. Listen to all viewpoints, but
don’t let one view dominate the others. Manage the time and discussion so
that speakers change and participants are engaged. If you’re bored, so are
others. If you’re tired of a particular voice, you’re not alone. Use the
following guidelines to keep the meeting lively.
• Be an effective chairperson. Be even-handed.
Make and maintain good personal connection with your group. If you want
active participation, avoid evaluating what people say until it’s time to
make a decision. Keep the information and dialogue flowing. And when you get
to a decision point, say so publicly. State the decision (whether it’s
consensus or a decision to get more info or a selected course of action),
then go on to the next steps on that decision or to the next topic.
• Manage airtime. Manage the meeting like a
good traffic cop – give everyone his or her turn. Enforce brevity. If
someone rambles on and on, paraphrase his or her point and then turn to
someone else in the meeting. Draw out the quiet individuals.
• Handle conflict. The majority of conflict in
meetings arises from misunderstanding between two or more people. Be sure
each position is clearly articulated (without value judgments about opposing
viewpoints) and understood.
3. END OF THE TRIP
There’s something anti-climactic about getting
home from a long car trip. The ride home seems endless when the anticipation
is gone. This happens in meetings also. So end your meetings with a bang,
not a whimper. Here’s how:
• Finish on time. Honor the time commitment you
made to participants. If you consistently end meetings later than promised,
people will either make excuses not to attend your next one or find a reason
to leave early.
• Identify next steps. A very frustrating
aspect of meetings is the perception that nothing changes as a result of
them. A way to ensure something indeed will happen is to identify and write
down next steps – the agreed-upon actions to be taken after the meeting.
Include what has to be done, by whom, and when. Do this on a flipchart or in
some other visible way. And make sure attendees get the notes of the
meeting.
• Finally, follow up on the next steps after
the meeting. Let people know it matters that they were in the meeting. Check
in. See how it’s going. Ask if additional resources are needed. If
appropriate, see if a follow-up meeting makes sense as a way to chart
progress. Keep people informed.
Again, a little planning goes a long way in
making meetings productive and even enjoyable. You probably already spend a
lot of time now, clarifying decisions after the meeting or even trying to
remember what decisions were made! Consider the cost of meetings when
everyone leaves and remembers the tangents and not what actions will be
taken. In this case, the meeting itself was ineffective and no one’s
behavior or subsequent action was changed. That’s wasted time – a real dead
end.
Peg Kelley, MBA, has been a professional meeting
facilitator for 25 years & is co-author of the booklet “39 Secrets for
Effective and Enjoyable Meetings” available for $6.00 at her Facilitation
Plus website at
www.meetingswithmuscle.com. She publishes a free e-newsletter on Meeting
Management Tips. Send your email address to her at
Kelley@facplus.com if you want to
receive it.
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