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Running More Productive Meetings
Merlin Mann | Feb 21 2006
I very much enjoyed Ethan's recent post about avoiding "vampire meetings" and thought I'd share a few of my own tips for getting the most out of your meetings -- primarily from the perspective of being the organizer and facilitator. For the love of God, please respect your poor colleagues' time.
Aside: Understand -- this is coming from a man who often was compelled to spend the better part of one day a week on a bi-coastal video conference call with two dozen people. Staring. Wishing death. Listening to the CTO opine at length about how exciting it would be to build and sell a national yellow pages app from scratch. If there had been cyanide capsules on the table instead of M&Ms, I don't think I would have hesitated to indulge. "Boil the ocean" business models and long meetings are the cocktail for making Merlin wish harm upon himself. 57 Comments
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Definitely do not agree with...Submitted by Maxine (not verified) on February 26, 2006 - 1:38am.
Definitely do not agree with Robert Mercer. If a meeting is important enough for him to attend, someone can deputise for him "back at the ranch" while he is at it. If it isn't important enough, he need not attend. There is nothing worse than trying to make progress in a meeting (whether you are running it or attending it as a participant) than what RM says : "if you see one of your attendees thumbing their blackberry, then apparently your content is not terribly important, relevant, or interesting. You want me to stay off my email, then improve your meeting." If attendees are doing this, then they are not concentrating and no progress will be made. If the meeting is not good enough, then instead of checking email, the participant can say "I think we are getting off track here/taking too long/can we move on" etc. Mentally switching off and doing something else while half-listening is not only rude it is a huge waste of collective time. » POSTED IN:
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