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How to Make “Meeting Days” Work for You, Too

Try the following holistic approaches to reduce the quantity and improve the quality of your meetings.

1. Cancel any meeting that doesn’t have an agenda with a clear meeting outcome.

Sound extreme? It’s just practical. Many of my clients share that defining a meeting’s desired outcome, or what they intend to achieve in a meeting, is the most helpful meeting practice they’ve ever adopted. Status update meetings and recurring meetings often lack the desired outcome: People meet out of habit instead of thinking critically about the event.

If you’re not the meeting leader and you receive a meeting invitation without the desired outcome, be proactive and ask the meeting leader to provide one. Remember: If a meeting leader can’t clearly articulate the outcome she’d like to achieve in a meeting, the meeting will likely be a waste of time.

2. Encourage team members to decline meetings if it’s not the best use of their time.

One advantage of a No-Meeting Day is that it gives employees permission to decline a meeting. If a meeting is not the best use of one’s time, allow a team member to decline the meeting and offer alternative ways to contribute. For example, you can ask team members who will miss a meeting to provide thoughts in advance via email or chat.

3. End every meeting with a wrap-up.

A meeting wrap-up clarifies what was — or wasn’t — accomplished. Capture the next steps, decisions and key learnings so what was agreed upon in the meeting does not get forgotten or lost, and there is follow-through on tasks. Wrap-ups provide an opportunity to solidify alignment and celebrate the meeting’s results. Allocate three-to-five minutes on your agenda for the meeting wrap-up.