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Master the Team Meeting

| By Julia Austinhbswk.hbs.edu |

No matter how much we hate going to meetings, there’s a generally accepted best practice that teams should meet with their managers on a regular cadence. More often than not, unfortunately, I hear leaders and their staffs dreading these get-togethers. Shouldn’t these meetings be looked forward to? That we felt they were time well spent with our colleagues and added value to our roles in some meaningful way?

There’s no reason you have to suffer or make your teams suffer through another tortuous hour or more. A while back, I shared pro tips on mastering the 1:1. Now, here are my tips on mastering the team meeting.

Meeting Purpose

Set a clear purpose for your team meeting. What do you want your team to get out of the time spent together? Do you want them to stay informed about larger topics in the organization? Get to know each other and their respective work better? Talk with your team about what they want out of the session. This time is much more about their needs than yours, so align the purpose with their goals. A fun way to get this dialogue going is to ask each team member to complete this sentence: “My favorite meeting of the week is my manager’s team meeting because…” What would they say?

Agenda

I believe that if a meeting is important enough to have, it should have a time-boxed agenda and always be followed up with notes and action items (AIs).

Meeting Engagement

No one wants to listen to a monologue and no one wants to be in a meeting with other people who are checked out. Several pro tips can help to avoid this:

Tactical Stuff

The time of the meeting and who attends is just as important as the agenda and the content. Pro tips:

Most important, don’t set it and forget it. If you do change things up, be clear on why you’re doing it and give it time to settle. Starting or overhauling your meeting process won’t necessarily show positive results the very next meeting, and changing it too often could cause unrest, and even distrust if the rules of engagement keep changing. Have at least four to six meetings for a new routine to set in and then evaluate whether the changes are effective and adjust as needed. Solicit feedback from your team regularly, too. After all, it’s their meeting!

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