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Meeting Managment

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    Meeting Management

    Elements of Effective Meetings

    1. The plan

    2. The facilitation/focus

    3. The conclusion

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    The Plan

    1. Determine desired outcomes: what are the tangible results that you need toaccomplish by

    the end of the meeting. Desired outcomes should be measurable and fit into your overall

    group

    process.

    Examples:To determine a strategy to approach our communication problem

    To establish a timeline for the program.

    To delegate tasks to each member.

    To decide on a supply vendor.

    2. Determine the necessary agenda items and arrange the sequence of the agenda items.

    A. Break down the outcome statement(s) to determine what activities/discussions need to

    take place at the meeting in order to accomplish them. These are your agenda items.

    B. Next you need to determine what the best sequence is for the agenda items.

    Remember, some may be dependent on the completion of other items.

    C. Give careful analysis to how long each agenda item will take.

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    3. Determine who needs to attend. Make sure the people who are directly involved or who

    have necessary information/skill are in attendance. Do not have people attend who dontreally need to be present.

    4. Decide where and when the meeting will be held. Make sure all necessary people can

    attend. Make sure the location is suitable and is reserved if necessary.

    5. Determine who will bring necessary pieces of information and/or equipment and who

    will lead discussion for each task item. This is a critical step in the planning process. Many

    meetings fail because information and other resources that are critical to the task and

    outcomes

    are not available at the meeting. Determine who is best suited to lead each task area.

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    6. Distribute agenda to participants in advance. This ensures members can come

    prepared tomeeting, assures time and location are communicated, and allows for task items

    to be added if

    necessary.

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    The Facilitation:

    Start on time Give a quick overview of the desired outcomes.

    Refer to the task items on the agenda and remind members who are leading in each of

    those areas to adhere to the time frames.

    Establish a bin-list for items or issues brought up that do not coincide with this

    meetings objectives but are of relevance to be discussed at a later time.

    Remind members how the process will work. Make sure someone is taking notes

    Summarize and establish a delegation worksheet.

    End on time

    The Conclusion:

    Summarize what has been accomplished.

    Make sure your outcomes have been met.

    Identify unfinished business and agree upon how to deal with them.

    Determine who will plan and facilitate the next meeting.

    Complete the Delegation Worksheet.

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    Meeting Agenda

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    Establishing Meeting Procedures

    Who is responsible for meeting productivity?

    The chairperson should be in charge of planning, and he or she may delegate some

    duties to other individuals. But everyone who attends the meeting should be prepared to

    participate and contribute to the business at hand.

    Ideally, a meeting should have a standard scheduled date and starting time. The length of

    the meeting may be fixed (that is, have a specified ending time), or it may be determined

    by the volume of business to conduct. At its first meeting, the group should decide

    whether to set an ending time. It is important that the

    leader adhere to these times in subsequent meetings.

    One of the most important parts of meeting planning is preparing the agenda. The

    agenda is a helpful tool for guiding discussion. (For more information about developing an

    agenda

    The chairperson may have one or two members summarize the discussion to ensure that

    all meeting participants clearly understand the decisions made. When decisions and/or

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    recommendations have been made, everyone needs to support them. For this reason,

    unmistakable

    communication is critical. Members not only need to speak clearly, but they also need to beactive listeners.

    Repeating or summarizing someones contribution can be beneficial to the groups

    efficiency.

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    Selecting a Meeting Site

    In addition to planning the agenda, the leader shouldmake sure the meeting site has a favorable environment.

    Meeting participants will contribute to and get more

    from the meeting if they are comfortable. There are

    several factors to consider.

    Remember the Americans with Disabilities Act

    (ADA), and make sure there are no barriers to

    discourage or prevent some individuals from

    participating. Parking and room location also need

    to be considered. If the meeting site is an unfamiliar

    location, give directions and parking instructions as

    necessary. Moreover, make sure that others at the

    location know about the meeting.

    How tables and chairs are arranged can help or

    hinder meeting effectiveness. If people can see one

    anotherin particular, if they can see facial

    expressions or body languagethey will

    communicate more readily and clearly. Once the

    meeting has ended, be sure to leave the room and

    facilities as they were found.

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    The acoustics, lighting, temperature, and noise level

    of the room also affect the participants comfort.

    Furthermore, the meeting room should have

    capabilities (such as electrical outlets, projection

    screen, and the like) that will allow for operating

    any equipment that might be needed.

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    The 6 Golden Rules of Meeting Management

    Meetings are unpopular because they take up time--usually that of many people.

    However, there are good meetings and there are bad meetings. Meetings can be an

    excellent use of time when they are well-run. Unfortunately, the converse is also true, and

    it seems that time-wasting, poorly run meetings are far too common.

    This article describes 6 rules of meeting management that can help make meeting more

    productive and less frustrating. Each of the rules requires commitment from all

    participants.

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    Golden Rule #1: Run your meetings as you would have others run the meetings that you

    attend.

    This is the most fundamental Golden Rule of Meeting Management. Running an effective

    meeting--or being a good meeting participant--is all about being considerate of others.

    All the other Golden Rules of meeting management flow from this principle.

    Golden Rule #2: Be prepared and ensure that all the participants can be as well.

    Distribute the meeting agenda a day before the meeting and make sure everyone has

    access to any relevant background materials. Participants, of course, have the obligation

    of reviewing the agenda and background materials and arriving at the meeting prepared.

    If the meeting organizer has not provided information about the objectives of the

    meeting, the participants should take the initiative to ask. No one should arrive at a

    meeting not knowing why they are there and what is supposed to be accomplished.

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    Golden Rule #3: Stick to a schedule.

    Start the meeting on time and end it on time (or even early). Starting on time requires

    discipline by the organizer and the participants. Arriving late shows a lack of

    consideration for all those who were on time. But if all participants know that the

    organizer is going to start the meeting right on time, there is a much greater likelihood

    that everyone else will make the effort to be punctual.

    Finishing in a timely manner is also crucial. If everyone agreed that the meeting would

    last an hour, the meeting should not run any longer than that. Keeping the agenda realistic

    is important, of course. Finally, if only 20 minutes are required to accomplish the meeting

    objectives, the meeting should end after only 20 minutes. It would be a waste of

    everyone's time to let it go on any longer than that.

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    Golden Rule #4: Stay on topic.

    Most groups have at least one person who tends to go off on a tangent or tell stories

    during meetings. Whether this is the organizer or one of the participants, all meetingparticipants have the responsibility of gently guiding the meeting back to the substantive

    agenda items. This should not be done at the expense of all levity, of course, as that is an

    important ingredient for esprit de corps. Also, storytelling can be very useful if it is being

    used deliberately as a coaching or teaching tool. As a rule, however, someone needs to

    guide the discussion back to the agenda if the meeting becomes clearly off track.

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    Golden Rule #5: Don't hold unnecessary meetings.

    Carefully assess how often routine meetings really need to be held. For example, if you

    have daily staff meetings, how productive are they? Can they be held less frequently? Or,

    perhaps, can they be held standing up someplace and kept to a few minutes? Staff

    meetings are crucial vehicles for maintaining good communication in the office, but it is

    important to find the right balance between good communication and productive uses of

    time.

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    Golden Rule #6: Wrap up meetings with a clear statement of the next steps and who is to

    take them.

    If any decisions were made at the meeting (even if the decision was to "study the issuemore") the meeting organizer should clearly summarize what needs to be done and who

    is going to do it.

    If the organizer fails to do this, one of the participants needs to speak up

    and request clarification of the next steps. This is crucial. If the participants leave the

    meeting and no one is accountable for taking action on the decisions that were made, thenthe meeting will have been a waste of everyone's time.

    These simple rules can go a long way in making meetings more productive.

    Implementing them is not always easy, as they require preparation and discipline, but

    doing so can make a huge difference to the productivity of your organization.

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    What Makes a MeetingWork?

    There are two important ways to evaluate the success of a

    meeting. The first is to review the what. What were the resultsof the meeting? Did the group accomplish the meetings

    purpose? What did you get done? The second way is the

    how.

    How was this meeting worthwhile? How were the decisions

    made? How did people get along and work to accomplish

    the meetings purpose? How do people feel about thetime spent working together? How were people encouraged

    to be involved and innovative? How long did it take to meet

    the meetings objectives? How worthwhile was the time? What

    contributed to the success of the meeting?

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    How to Get Good Results from a Meeting

    Have a clearly understood and agreed-upon purpose.Dont meet unless you can state the purpose

    in a sentence.

    Be clear about who should attend the meeting and

    how they can benefit from as well as contribute to

    the meetings goals.

    Define roles in writing. Who facilitates? Who

    records? Who prepares?

    Have an agenda that is available to everyone before

    the meeting. Mail or e-mail it with the minutes of the

    previous meeting.

    Review the agenda at the beginning of the meeting,

    and make any changes.

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    Stick to the agreed-upon time frame. Adjourn early if

    you finish early. If your habitually run out of time,

    seek agreement to meet longer in future or form subcommitteesempowered to deal with specific issues.

    Consider various ways for sharing information during

    the meeting: flipcharts, whiteboards, overheads,

    computer presentations.

    Develop a decision-making process. Voting? Consensus?

    Majority rules? When to sleep on it? Put

    these decisions in your bylaws.

    Refocus tangential conversation. Relate the group

    process to the purpose.

    Define clearly decisions that are made. Establish the

    need for follow-up. Promote and expect accountability.

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    How to Support the Process ofWorking Together

    Establish criteria for attendance, share them with the groups members, and put them in

    the bylaws.

    Communicate clearly and multiple times, if possible, the date, place, time, and purpose of

    each meeting.

    Plan the meetings physical environment. Consider parking, access, room arrangement,

    room temperature, noise, lighting, food, etc. Pay attention to special needs (see the

    chapters on learning styles and promoting consumers involvement).

    Acknowledge the value of everyones time and effort. Be positive about the meetings

    purpose. Invite participants to engage themselves fully in the process. Make participants

    all knows one other. (Name tags or name tents may

    be helpful.)


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