We Have To Stop Meeting Like This...

 

When we ask employees about their least favorite activity at work, two items are the most frequently cited: ‘Performance Review’ holds runner-up status for most dreaded work task (given the nature of the activity, one can imagine the possible reasons for its positioning.) But way out front---consistently, year after year---the undisputed winner is ‘meetings.’ Staff meetings, in particular, are cited with undisguised contempt.

One thing that antipathy toward staff meetings most definitely is not is a secret! In fact, even those who do not cite meetings as their least favorite activity at work are generally able to predict that response as a top misery-maker for friends and colleagues. Given that, a few questions pop immediately to mind: Why are staff meetings the source of so much annoyance and frustration? And, in the face of almost universal disdain, why do we continue the practice?

We hypothesize that we have not let go of having staff meetings because there is something that feels fundamentally right about a team having regular opportunities for connection and communication.

Without question, most enterprises have missed the mark in execution on this one. What is important here, however, is not to throw the baby out with the bath water: Members of high performing teams want and need predictable, well-delivered opportunities for connection and communication. If the enterprise has the goal of building a strong team to deliver on its strategy, then it must ensure that those activities occur consistently and well.

There is, unfortunately, no “spontaneous combustion” to generate high performing teams: they don’t just happen. Creating a local environment to deliver on this promise typically requires strategic efforts on the part of the team’s leader. But they don’t have to be onerous!

“Let the structure do the heavy lifting” is one of our favorite pieces of Smarter Wisdom. With something as important as team connection and communication, good leaders will put a structure of support in place: for most teams, a plan for regular, effective staff meetings can function the cornerstone of this architecture.

Whether you are rebooting a less-than-satisfactory staff meeting set-up or initiating regular staff meetings from scratch, the likelihood of success will be enhanced by some foundation-laying pre-work, specifically engaging the team in designing the end-product. Try an “if we built it now” approach (another Smarter Wisdom time-tried idea) to shake loose any negative baggage about staff meetings that haven’t worked, and empower team members to consider what would. Try this simple, two-step process:

STEP ONE:

Assemble your team in a quiet space. Have a flip chart or white board and markers at hand. Pose the following questions and have team members take turns scribing the responses so that they are visible to all:

If we had staff meetings that were highly valuable to you, that encouraged excellent inter-team connection and communication, what would those meetings be like?

What else would you like from those meetings/what would make them even more valuable?

What would be the meeting length and frequency? Preferred timing?

Who would be expected to attend? If anyone works remotely, would they participate, and how?

Would these meetings be considered everyone’s top priority? What would be the team’s expectations about attendance?

What would the format be? How would the meeting be led? What would the component parts be?

If we were to pilot an effort that reflects our new staff meeting criteria, how long a tryout period would we want?

STEP TWO:

Take the responses to the questions above off-line and convert them to a proposed staff meeting description that collapses the team’s answers and represents, as well as is possible, the team’s preferences. (This may be done by the team leader or a small sub-group of volunteers including the team leader.) Share the draft of the description, asking for comments by a specific date.

STEP THREE:

Team leader reviews comments, creates and shares final version of pilot staff meeting initiative. Rollout begins!


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Marcie Hirsch