Friday, July 15, 2011

Meeting Menace

Recently one of my friend was complaining about how meetings keep getting dragged without any outcome from the meetings. I was in a workshop with some people around how to write job descriptions and many of them wanted to write one of the key responsibilities of their job was "to attend meetings".

Most managers that I have spoken to have always complained about too many meetings in their jobs across various kinds of organisations. To me having too many meetings are indication of not enough work in the system for the people or not enough clarity on who is responsible for what.

One of the things we did in our organisation to cut down on the wasted time was to do a simple thing. We would ask ourselves two simple questions, did we achieve anything out of the meeting ? Could we have done this better any other way ? Over a period of time we realised that we could have dropped many of our meetings that we were doing on a regular basis and get more work done from the same time.

So all you people who suffer the meeting menace, force people to answer these two questions after every meeting and you will suddenly find that the number of meetings would have to go down as most of them were not serving any purpose.

5 comments:

Victoria Kats said...

n many orgainsations, more than 50 percent of an executive’s time is spent in meetings. They are the primary communication tool of leaders and, consequently, the arena where leaders showcase their management skills.

Cynthia Kincaid said...

A person whose actions, attitudes, or ideas are considered dangerous or harmful: When he gets behind the wheel of a car, he's a real menace.

Katherine Noto said...

Meetings with managers generally happen in any company....

Sarah said...

Something that causes harm to a person..

Andriana Albert said...

It is a danger signal i guess..