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How to run a Meeting

Don’t be the person who schedules a meeting that should’ve been an email.

Preparing a meeting notes document can help keep you honest, and at the very least ensures that the meeting itself is productive.

Here is what goes through my head when I feel like I need to have a meeting…

What problem, goal, or outcome do I need to schedule the meeting for?

Articulating on paper what seems obvious in my head can be shockingly difficult!

Writing it down helps me:

What discrete topics do I expect to cover during the meeting?

Agenda items, time boxed.

Listing the topics to cover helps me:

Who do I think needs to be involved?

List each person. Inviduals can be specified as required or optional.

This helps me:

Share the meeting note document ahead of time

Given the proposed agenda, this allows the invitees to:

During the meeting

Some things to consider while I’m having the meeting.

I hate to say this but Ice breakers, while cheesy, are also helpful because they actually “break the ice” and force a bit of socializing which is especially important in a remote or hybrid meeting. (The hard part can be keeping them lean!)

There are three active roles a well-formed meeting should have, and each role should be designated to a separate person.

Roles and responsibilites:

As the facilitator I think it helps to point out that me or the timekeeper may interrupt conversations (rabbit holes) for the sake of the greater meeting.

Action items

If I just had a meeting, we probably wrote down things we want to do.

Each item needs three things:

Scrutinize the action items and make sure they’re important and help achieve the meeting’s goals.

Meeting Notes Template

Anatomy of a Meeting Notes document:

  1. Title/summary
  2. Date/time
  3. Attendees
  4. Goals/outcomes
  5. Agenda (time boxed topics)
  6. Action items

The Confluence Meeting Notes template is not a terrible place to start.