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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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This are very cogent and...Submitted by Kim Reist (not verified) on February 22, 2006 - 5:41am.
This are very cogent and useful tips. I plan conferences for a living, and one of the building blocks of a large conference is the small team meeting, usually several of them. I spend a fair amount of time in both kinds. One thing I have noticed in all of these blog posts is a very low level of patience for what the individual deems as "wasted time" in a meeting. Everyone is very clear in their minds about what wastes their time in a meeting, and that usually boils down to being forced to listen someone's else's commentary that they deem unworthy. Yet the reality for the person talking is not that they are consciously wasting anyone's time; they are portioning out priceless drops of their own limited quantity of space-time to share. I would also add that I cannot count the number of times that words I deemed "wasted breath" in a meeting came back me later with a kind of urgent meaning that made me wish I had paid more freaking attention at the time. So I guess I would like to see attendees work on shoring up their patience, and stop spending the entire meeting qualifying (usually negatively) each moment as it occurs. The value is not always as apparent as the plate of danishes. » POSTED IN:
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