Another Use for Meetings
Every meeting is a laboratory where you can observe and learn
important things about the people who attend. In fact, you can
use meetings to identify people who merit being promoted into
leadership positions. Watch for:
Is it planned? Effective leaders always begin with clearly
defined goals and then prepare plans for achieving them. They
have the courage to set a direction and then make changes as new
information becomes available. They communicate with candor
knowing that people perform at their best when they know what is
expected. Thus, did the person who called this meeting prepare
an agenda? Was the agenda distributed before the meeting? Did
the agenda tell you everything that you needed to know to work
effectively in the meeting? If so, this serves as a positive
indication of effective leadership planning.
Is it efficient? A meeting is the culminating step in a larger
process. It begins by setting goals and preparing an agenda.
Then the chairperson should have contacted key participants to
inform them of their roles in the meeting, told everyone how to
prepare for the meeting, and alerted people who may be asked to
accept responsibility for action items. All of this work before
the meeting assures that the meeting will progress smoothly,
efficiently, and effectively. So, how is the meeting going? Is
there evidence of this attention to detail?
Is it logical? Pay attention to what people say during a
meeting. Do their ideas contribute toward achieving the goals?
if so, this shows that they're working as part of a team to help
find solutions. Do their ideas build upon what others just said?
If so, this shows that they're paying attention to the dialogue.
Do their ideas demonstrate originality, creativity, and
knowledge? If so, this shows they