Most
leaders consider a person's ability to lead a meeting when making
decisions about promotions. Here are ten tips will that will help you
look like a leader by holding effective meetings.
Here are ten things that you can do to make your meetings more effective.
1) Avoid meetings. Test the importance of a meeting by asking, "What
happens without it?" If your answer is, "Nothing," then don't call the
meeting.
2) Prepare goals. These are the results you want to obtain by the end
of the meeting. Write out your goals before the meetings. They should
be so clear, complete, and specific that someone else could use them to
lead your meeting. Also, make sure they can be achieved with available
people, resources, and time. Specific goals help everyone make
efficient progress toward relevant results.
3) Challenge each goal. Ask, "Is there another way to achieve this?"
For example, if you want to distribute information, you may find it
more efficient to phone, FAX, mail, E-mail, or visit. Realize that a
meeting is a team activity. Save tasks that require a team effort for
your meetings.
4) Prepare an agenda. Everyone knows an agenda leads to an effective
meeting. Yet, many people "save time" by neglecting to prepare an
agenda. A meeting without an agenda is like a journey without a map. It
is guaranteed to take longer and produce fewer results. Note, without
an agenda, you risk becoming someone else's helper (see tip #6 below).
5) Inform others. Send the agenda at least a day before the meeting.
That helps others prepare to work with you in the meeting. Unprepared
participants waste your time by preparing for the meeting during the
meeting.
6) Assume control. If you find yourself in a meeting without an agenda
walk out. If you must stay, prepare an agenda in the meeting. Collect a
list of issues, identify the most important, and work on that. When you
finish, if time remains, select the next most important issue. Note:
you can use a meeting without an agenda to recruit help for your
projects.
7) Focus on the issue. Avoid stories, jokes, and unrelated issues.
Although entertaining, these waste time, distract focus, and mislead
others. Save the fun for social occasions where it will be appreciated.
8) Be selective. Invite only those who can contribute to achieving your
goals for the meeting. Crowds of observers and supporters bog down
progress in a meeting.
9) Budget time. No one would spend $1,000 on a ten-cent pencil, but
they often spend 40 employee hours on trivia. Budget time in proportion
to the value of the issue. For example, you could say, "I want a
decision on this in 10 minutes. That means we'll evaluate it for the
next 9 minutes, followed by a vote."
10) Use structured activities in your meetings. These process tools
keep you in control while you ensure equitable participation and
systematic progress toward results.
Steve Kaye helps leaders hold effective meetings. He is an IAF
Certified Professional Facilitator, author, and speaker. His meeting
facilitation and leadership workshops create success for everyone. Call
714-528-1300 for details. Visit www.stevekaye.com for a free report.