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Home › Self Healing › Organizing
 

Drive a Tight Agenda, Don't Let it Drive You

 

Author: Lonnie Pacelli

A colleague of mine was responsible for running a bi-weekly two-hour team meeting. He took great care to develop a very full, detailed agenda. As we would get into the meeting, it would only take us getting to agenda item one before the meeting was behind schedule. During the entire time that my colleague ran these meetings, we never got more than halfway through the agenda before adjourning. The team got so used to not making it through the agenda that there wasnt even an attempt to try to stay on schedule. The agenda and associated times were completely unrealistic and were worthless as a meeting management tool.

An effective agenda goes beyond start time, location, topics, and durations. Effective agendas do the following:

* Support the meeting purpose

* Set the expectations of attendees as to what will be discussed

* Inform attendees of any preparation that will be required prior to the meeting

* Give the meeting leader a roadmap for driving the agenda

* Permit adequate time to cover each item

* Allow the meeting leader to adjust the agenda easily if the meeting gets behind schedule

Having said all this, there is a guiding principle the meeting owner needs to follow: The meeting owner drives the agenda, not the other way around. There are times where you may have a concise meeting purpose and specific agenda items to address the meeting purpose, but the actual meeting deviates from the agenda. Be open to the agenda change; just make sure the meeting purpose is still being met. Doing this requires the meeting owner be very in-tune to what is going on in the meeting and footing it back to what is happening on the agenda. If the actual meeting is deviating from the agenda, the meeting owner needs to consciously decide if the deviation is appropriate or if it needs to be nipped in the bud. Theres no secret sauce on this; it means keeping the original meetings purpose in mind, observing what is actually happening in the meeting, and continually assessing whether the meetings purpose is being met.

So, what are some good tips to developing effective agenda? Consider these next time you have to plan a meeting:

* Have a tight, focused meeting purpose Youve called the meeting for a reason; make sure that the purpose is explicit and achievable. A good sanity check on this is that you should be able to complete this sentence: At the end of this meeting we should be able to _______.

* Cross-foot your agenda items with the meeting purpose As youre crafting your agenda items, make sure that each item is doing something to support the meeting purpose. If the items dont support the meeting purpose either change the agenda item or change the purpose. Dont confuse the attendees by having agenda items that dont support the meeting purpose

* Be realistic with allocated agenda item times Dont put overly aggressive times on the agenda that you in your heart know youre not going to achieve. Planning 90 minutes worth of meeting in 60 minutes means youll only get through 2/3 of the meeting or the meeting will run over by at least 30 minutes. Dont wish for best case; put reality down.

* Distribute the agenda at least one day before the meeting Meeting attendees want to know what is going to be discussed and if there is preparation that is needed prior to the meeting. Give them a day if possible to review the agenda and get mentally prepared for the meeting.

* Put the most important agenda items at the front of the meeting Cover your top items first. There are two reasons for this: first, youll ensure that the most important items get covered. Second, youll keep attendee attention better by covering the most important items earlier. If they are put later in the agenda then youll see some chomping at the bit as you go through lesser important agenda items first.

* Have as your last agenda item an action items review section Ive seen way too many meetings happen in my career where the end of the meeting comes, everyone leaves, but there is no agree

Author Bio:

Lonnie Pacelli

Lonnie Pacelli has over 20 years leadership expertise as an executive, project manager, developer, tester, analyst, trainer, consultant, and business owner. During his 11 years at Accenture he built leadership expertise consulting with many Fortune 500 companies including Motorola, Hughes Electronics, and Northrop-Grumman. During his nine years at Microsoft he continued building leadership expertise through development of some of Microsoft’s internal systems, led their Corporate Procurement group, managed their Corporate Planning group, and led company-wide initiatives on Continuous Fiscal Improvement and Training Process Optimization. He has successfully implemented projects ranging from complex IT systems to process re-engineering to business strategies.

Lonnie is also the creator of the Leading on the Edge™ Products which packages leadership expertise in helping today's leaders be more effective through practical skills assessment, action planning, and follow-up.

Lonnie is also the author of The Project Management Advisor: 18 Major Project Screw-Ups and How to Cut Them Off at the Pass (Prentice Hall, 2004). His next book, The Truth About Getting Your Point Across, is currently in the works and will be released through Prentice-Hall first quarter 2006.

Lonnie is also a partner with Ascend Business Solutions which specializes in back-office outsourcing, consulting, and providing leadership expertise for small businesses.

You can also reach this article by using: organizing tips, organizing your life, personal improvement plan, home organizing
 
 
 

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