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(", MEETING MANAGEMENT) - Coggle Diagram
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3 ROLES
1 Leader
1 Clarifies meeting’s purpose, objectives, constraints, and scope of authority
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3 Scribe
1 Captures the key points, ideas, and decisions resulting from the meeting, ideally on a flip chart or whiteboard
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5 Expert
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2 If not a regular member of the team, may not participate in other aspects of the meeting
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4 YOUR ROLES
As a meeting leader, you might fill numerous roles during a meeting to address challenges that can arise.
1 Gatekeeper
Ensure that the agenda is followed, that everyone who wants to speak gets the opportunity to do so, and that no one dominates.
2 Devil’s advocate
Challenge a consensus that may be emerging prematurely, without sufficient thought.
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3 If the purpose of the meeting is to rally the troops, go for 1,800—or more.
4 If the purpose of the meeting is for you to provide updates, invite however many people need to receive the updates. If everyone attending the meeting will be providing updates, limit the number of participants to no more than 18.
MEETING MANAGEMENT
1-PREPARE FOR A MEETING
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2-DO YOU NEED A MEETING
If you’re like most managers, you spend a bigger chunk of your workday in meetings than you’d like. Meetings interrupt your workflow and eat up hours you could be spending more productively.
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I 3 Rotate leadership of the meeting -setting the agenda, preparing materials, and introducing topics. It’s a great way to inspire ownership of the meeting.
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I If there are impediments, the team is made aware and can contribute to removing them.
1 WHEN TO MEET
1 Need a group to take part in making a decision, solving a problem, providing updates, or brainstorming ideas
2 Want to provide updates to a group—project status, a success, a concern
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2 WHEN NOT TO MEET
1 The subject is a personnel issue that’s better handled one-on-one, such as an employee’s poor performance
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3 Your group members are upset over a conflict or other problem and need time apart before being ready and able to address the situation
4 Another method of communicating—email, phone, text message—would work as well or better
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3-CREATE AGENDA
create an agenda: determine agenda items, the length of the meeting, sequence the discussion appropriately, and specify logistics.
1 AGENDA ITEMS
1 To determine your agenda items, consider the meeting’s purpose
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3 Include only as many agenda items as the group can realistically handle in the time allotted for the meeting.
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3 SEQUENCE AGENDA ITEMS
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3 Separate information-sharing issues from problem-solving, decision-making, or brainstorming ones.
4 During long meetings, such as off-sites, address the most difficult issues at a time when participants are at their most focused
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4 LOGISTIC
in your meeting agenda, indicate logistics such as:
1 Date, time, place, and length of the meeting
2 Name of the person calling the meeting, names and roles of participants, or name of the group that’s meeting
3 Anything unusual about the meeting format, such as the fact that the meeting will be held online or at an offsite location
4 Any background materials participants will need to review or prepare before taking part in the meeting
some careful thought can help you schedule your meeting so that people arrive on time and have the energy to focus on your agenda. *
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2 Avoid meeting first thing in the morning, when people are rushing to get to work; and the end of the day, when people are tired.
3 Avoid scheduling a meeting right before vacations, when people are rushing to finish their to-do lists, not yours.
4 Provide snacks to keep everyone’s energy levels up if you need to schedule a just- before-lunch or end-of-day meeting.
5 Try to limit the meeting time to no more than one hour. If there’s really that much to cover, break the information into several smaller meetings.
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