Wednesday, November 13, 2019
Ways to keep your next meeting from going off the rails
Ways to keep your next meeting from going off the rails Ways to keep your next meeting from going off the rails Meetings: You have to live with them in corporate America, which means you canât live without them. So, when youâre not the one calling the shots, itâs easy to feel like you have no control over how meetings play out - or how long they end up being.Hereâs what both managers and employees can do to make the meeting culture easier on everyone.Shut down that person who talks too muchFrancesca Gino, an author and professor at Harvard Business School, writes in the Harvard Business Review about a way to cut down on interruptions - to âenlist the group.ââIf youâd prefer to avoid embarrassing the interrupter, you can address the whole group without pointing fingers. Ask the group to reflect on whether you are communicating effectively together and what could be improved,â she writes. âThis strategy would allow every member, including you, to raise their awareness of challenges facing the group, a first important step in addressing problems like this one.âDoes someo ne keep stopping by your desk for a mid-day chat, when youâre knee-deep in all the work you have to do? Try using the FlowLight so others know how youâre doing, and whether or not itâs a good time to come over and talk.Donât let it go into overtimeHallie Crawford, a certified career coach, author, and founder, writes in U.S. News World Report about how having a brief agenda can help a meeting from going on for too long, and that points can include âyour main objective,â the âorder of importance of your talking pointsâ and âhow much time you should allot for them.ââTrying to fit too much material into a meeting is another sure way to run over. Instead of cramming a lot of talking points into one meeting, plan on talking for only half of the allotted time,âCrawford advises. âFor example, if you have planned a 45-minute meeting, determine which two to three items on your agenda you really need to discuss with your employees, and which items could wait until next time or possibly even be resolved via email.âAn agenda is only as useful as you make it, though, so try not to stray from it.Picking up the pieces after a heated exchangeThis happens all the time and can get pretty awkward once the dust settles.After an argument, managers should take the time to see where both parties are coming from, and what could work for each person going forward. Donât be afraid to jump in when you feel like things are heading south - just be sure to appear composed and use every word deliberately to moderate the situation thatâs unfolding.Soon enough, team members will be onto the next meeting or back at their desks and before you know it, theyâll have moved on from the heated interactions that spiraled out of control during this meeting.
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