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Suggestions
for Meeting Leading
The primary
reason for conducting meetings should be to improve productivity
and increase teamwork in an organization. A major question,
then, should be, "Is there a better way of doing things
or accomplishing these tasks?"
1.
Have a definite reason (outcome) for every meeting.
2. Develop and distribute agendas in advance of the meetings.
3. Question every item on the agenda regarding its appropriateness
for group deliberation.
4. Structure the agenda for productivity:
1.
information
2. action
3. discussion
4. review/followup
5. renewal
6. reports
b.
Time allowed - each item should have a specific time allotted
and STICK TO IT!
c. Expected results
d. Responsibility
5. Be sure participants know the purpose of the meetings in time
to prepare for it.
6. Schedule meetings as the last thing before the end of the shift
or before lunch. This way they are sure the end on time.
7. Start
on time regardless of late arrivals.
8. Do not reward tardiness. Indicate in the record of the meeting
those arriving late. Reinforce positive performance of those
punctual.
9. Experiment with stand up meetings. Meetings without chairs
force expediency.
10. Experiment with regular meetings to determine necessity.
Skip one or cut its time in half. If things function normally
without it, try reducing their frequency.
11. Keep group size small to foster effective communication.
a. Who
NEEDS to be there?
b. Who NEEDS NOT to be there?
12. Train
members in effective group skills.
a. Active
listening
b. summarizing
c. paraphrasing
d. accountability
e. follow-up on agenda items
13. Eliminate
or control interruptions.
a. Reduce
or limit coffee breaks
b. If visitors are allowed, require appropriate decorum
c. Hold all phone calls DEFINE WHAT AN EMERGENCY IS!
d. Don't spend time bringing late arrivals "up to speed".
This is their penalty for being late
e. If a member must leave early, have them indicate to the
chair in advance and quietly leave without excusing themselves
to every member
f. Keep to the agenda, don't allow members to "get off
the subject"
14. Control
time wasters such as:
a. Reading
out loud during meetings what is written
b. Passing out papers
c. Not announcing time limits
d. Not making purpose clear
e. Allowing the wrong people to attend
f. Lack of follow-up on previous decisions
g. Not keeping minutes
h. Not assigning accountability
i. Same old "tired" formats
j. Excessive "one way" communication
k. No evaluation of meeting productivity
l. Same person always in charge
m. Inadequate physical facilities
n. Unplanned seating arrangements
o. Take
turn speeches
p. Wrong time allocations for most important items
q. Prior planning which does not allow adequate preparation
r. "Hidden
agendas" of various group members
s. Ego needs of leaders calling for regular, routine and
monotonous meetings
t. Wandering from agenda by "bird walking" on side
issues
15. Always
appoint a recorder to take down discussion points and discussion
needs.
16. Deal
appropriately with "problem members".
a. Overly
talkative, show-off, eager beaver or just plain gabby:
i. Cut
across his/her talk with a summarizing statement and direct
a question to someone else.
b. Highly
argumentative, combative personality, professional heckler
or upset by emotional problem:
i. Try
to find merit in one of his/her points and get agreement
on it; then, move on to get his/her cooperation for future
meetings.
c. Quick-helpful,
has right answers but keeps others out:
i. Cut
across him/her tactfully by questioning others. Suggest,
"let's get several opinions", use him/her to summarize.
Be sure he/she understands that you appreciate his/her help.
d. Rambler,
talks about everything except subject or gets lost:
i. When
he/she stops for breath, thank him/her, rephrase one of
his/her statements and move on. Ask direct questions of
others. Indicate in a friendly manner that he/she is off
the topic.
e. Side
conversationalist, talk may be related but is distracting:
i. Pause
and let others listen, it may be pertinent. Call him/her
by name, then draw him/her into the discussion by asking
for his/her opinion. Ask by direct question if he/she has
something to add to the general discussion.
f. Poor
voice or choice of words, voice not clear, can't find right
words, ideas may be good by can't convey them;
i. Repeat
the ideas in your own words, but say "let me repeat
that," rather than "What you mean is..".
Protect him/her from ridicule.
g. Obstinate,
won't budge, is prejudiced or may simply not see the point:
i. Try
to get others to help him/her see the point. If time is
short, tell him/her frankly that it is necessary to get
on with the meeting.
h. Griper,
pet peeve, professional griper, BMG or may have legitimate
complaint:
i. Tell
him/her the problem is how best to operate under the present
system. Direct attention to topic of discussion. Indicate
pressure of time.
MAKE THEM OFFER A SOLUTION!
i. Wrong
subject or off the beam:
i. Direct
attention to topic of discussion. You might say "something
I said may have thrown you off the subject, but the question
we are considering now is..".
j. Definitely
wrong, completely off the beam:
i. Say,
"that's one way of looking at it," and go on.
Ask additional questions such as "Would we be able
to reconcile that with...?" but don't embarrass him/her.
k. Personality
clash, a clash between two or more members:
i. Emphasize
points of agreement as much as possible. Cut across with
direct question of topic. Bring a sound member into the
discussion.
l. Superior
attitude, not disposed to help, attitude is "I had to
find out the hard way, you do the same":
i. Sell
him/her on the fact that the meeting is a cooperative effort.
Flatter him/her by telling him/her how much others could
benefit from his/her experience. Don't overdo it or the
rest of the group will resent it.
m. Won't
talk, bored, indifferent, hesitant, insecure, afraid:
i. Try
to determine what is motivating him/her then find his/her
interest. Call on him/her for experience or opinion. Use
direct provocative questions. Ask for his/her agreement.
Compliment the sensitive person the first time he/she talks,
be sincere.
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