Ten Meeting Management Issues to Watch Out For
Meetings are valuable components of organisations. Yet they need
process, discipline and leadership/facilitation to work best.
Here are some indicators to watch out for to highlight where
things may be going wrong.
1. No Agenda When there is no agenda, there is no opportunity to
prepare, no framework for the meeting and no purpose. When this
happens a lot, there is a tendency for 5 below.
2. Wrong people there Ever been to a meeting where there was no
logical purpose for you to be there? Meeting time is valuable
and it is important for efficiency and effectiveness that as few
people attend as purposeful. People should appreciate that
non-attendance at a particular meeting is OK and get used to it.
3. Overrun Those times when you sit in a meeting and watch your
life slip away, are those that happened with poor meeting
management. There is nothing worse than unkept promises (and
meetings are just that - a contract to the participants time)
and must be honoured. Everyone has a role here.
4. Indiscipline Many meeting participants do not know how to
behave. These are things about them and their ego, lack of
self-confidence and poor behaviours (out side the meeting too).
Lack of courtesy, understanding and space for others to say
their piece is inexcusable and not constructive for the outcome.
5. The Leader Leads Here the meeting is at the beck and call of
the leader or chair who really is holding court for themselves.
This sort of meeting is about them showing that they are
democratic, but they are nothing of the sort. This is a
rubber-stamping meeting and is of little or no value.
6. The Leader Doesn't Lead Here there is free-for-all, with no
leadership from the chair. Poor behaviours, timekeeping and
outcomes riddle this sort of meeting, with and end no-result and
frayed-tempered, frustrated people.
7. Environment Too hot, too cold, no water, no breaks, too big,
too small. Have you ever been in one of those meetings? And
aren't they awful, so awful in fact that you can't do your best.
This is a meeting where the organisers do not respect the
participants.
8. Nothing Happens A lovely chat, a few disagreements and 'see
you next month'. This is the nice-to-have meeting which does
nothing and goes nowhere. As Peter Drucker said, 'Meetings are a
symptom of bad organization. The fewer meetings the better'.
9. Side-tracked/New Stuff With an agenda, people know what the
meeting will be about - or will they. Even with the best
agenda'd meeting weak processes tend to leave to new issues,
side-tracking and wasted time. This is solvable with effort from
the facilitator.
10. No Review and Growth Meetings come and go and are always
awful. They are unproductive, boring, overrun and people are
there who shouldn't be. If there is no review of just how good
or bad the meeting has been, there will be no improvement. The
leader/facilitator can add in meeting feedback as the first
agenda item and stick to it - tough at first but gets easier.
Just ten things to watch out for - maybe a sign, or maybe
something deeper about you, your organisation or your people?
Were does the responsibility lie for changing that for the
better?