How to Fix Meetings
eBook - ePub

How to Fix Meetings

A Productivity Ninja Guide

Graham Allcott, Hayley Watts

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  1. 304 Seiten
  2. English
  3. ePUB (handyfreundlich)
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eBook - ePub

How to Fix Meetings

A Productivity Ninja Guide

Graham Allcott, Hayley Watts

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'An accessible thought provoking book that offers something of interest to anyone responsible for organising (or participating in) meetings.' Jackie Weaver, Chief Officer of the Cheshire Association of Local CouncilsZoom fatigue? Calendar full of meetings that could just be an email? Online and offline, too much valuable time is wasted in meetings. Often little advance planning takes place, resulting in productivity drains rather than productivity gains. Providing realistic and practical advice, productivity professionals Graham Allcott and Hayley Watts show how to reduce the amount of time you spend in meetings, and ensure that the ones that you do attend are genuine opportunities to collaborate and get things done.Learn how to hold and attend meetings where the focus is on the outcome; get to grips with the 40–20–40 Continuum, so that only 20 per cent of your attention for each meeting is spent in the meeting itself – the rest is in the preparation and the follow-through; and understand when it's necessary to say that you won't be attending – and how best to do so.

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Information

Jahr
2021
ISBN
9781785784767
1.

WHY MEETINGS
ARE BROKEN

THE PROBLEM WITH MEETINGS

‘Let’s have a meeting.’ Four short words that conclude many a work conversation. What follows is often a sinking feeling. ‘Ugh. Another meeting. There goes another hour of my life that I’ll never get back, and another hour of my productivity down the drain.’
Well, the mission of this book is to spark change. Our goal is that the next time someone says: ‘Let’s have a meeting,’ your immediate reaction is: ‘Fantastic! What a brilliant opportunity to get things done!’
For the last decade or so, our company Think Productive has been working with some of the brightest and best organisations in the world, helping them to make space for what matters. That includes cutting down on unnecessary meetings and making sure that when a group of people do need to meet, it’s as efficient, dynamic and productive as possible.
Our philosophy is pragmatic. We don’t believe in four-hour work weeks or magic silver bullet solutions. We know that meetings can be important spaces to change the world, and that not every meeting is a waste of time. But we also know that every meeting has the potential to waste our precious time if it’s not done right.
Productivity is about clearing the clutter to make space for the things that truly add value. So we start this book with two simple premises:
  1. Meetings matter. Some of the most satisfying, company-changing, pace-setting or productivity-boosting moments we can remember in our working lives came in the middle of a well-executed meeting. You can probably think back to some of the defining ‘moments of truth’ in your own career and see the power that came from a group of people together (physically or virtually) identifying a solution, or hitting on an idea, finally reaching consensus, or having that painful discussion so that you could all move on. Good meetings create a momentum that email and collaboration tools often cannot. And great meetings can even be powerful, life-affirming moments of human connection. If you can’t think of a meeting you’ve experienced that fits that description, we know you’ll start to see this in action by the time you’ve worked through the exercises in this book.
  2. Lots of meetings don’t matter at all. You can probably quite easily recall a great many moments spent in someone else’s boring, frustrating and unproductive meeting. We know that most of the organisations we work with have too many meetings, and clients don’t miss them when we help to cut a good chunk out of their schedule. Strangely, having fewer meetings also has a positive effect on the meetings that are left, giving everyone the time and headspace to make them more useful and fulfilling.

BAD MEETINGS WASTE OUR TIME

If you’re tired of your diary being full of back-to-back, sub-optimal meetings, then you’re not alone. A Harvard Business Review survey of senior managers in a range of industries found that 65% of people said meetings kept them from completing their own work, 71% said meetings were unproductive and inefficient, 64% said meetings came at the expense of deep thinking and 62% even said that meetings missed the opportunities to bring the team closer together (which is probably the number one argument you’ll hear from back-to-back meeting apologists).1 Reclaiming even just a small amount of those hours for you and your team members would be a huge productivity boost.
As so much time is wasted in meetings, it’s no wonder that enthusiasm isn’t at its highest when we get an email invitation for the next one – meeting fatigue is real. And it’s a downwards spiral: the busier everyone becomes, the less time there is to make the next meeting any different, and the less effort you want to put in.

‱ REMEMBER ‱

Aim to do less meetings, but do them well. Done well, they can create real impact. Done badly, they are a drain on time and energy.

THE COST OF MEETINGS

Meetings are expensive. A study by the Wall Street Journal found that the average employee spends 31 hours a month in meetings, with more hours lost to meetings the more senior they are. CEOs typically spend 27 hours of their week in meetings (and their hours are expensive!).2
There are two costs to the company: the first is each person’s salary as well as the costs of the space or online platform, the supporting infrastructure and so on; the second is the lost opportunities when more impactful work is neglected.

THE ATTENTION CRISIS

The challenge of productivity in the information age is how best to use our attention.
Do we have your complete attention right now? Take a moment to pause and contemplate that question. Be honest. We wouldn’t be too surprised if the answer was ‘no’. You have hundreds of things competing for your attention: from colleagues to phone notifications; from adverts to big ideas; from friends and family to your own inner monologue.
Attention – not time – is our most precious resource. It’s the key to high performance and productivity in both work and life.
Organising and prioritising our thoughts brings the clarity needed for action, yet managers regularly tell us they view solo thinking-time as a luxury. But in a world where everyone’s attention is so fragmented, we’d like to contend that it’s an opportunity for competitive advantage. We overcome procrastination and come up with our best ideas when we make the space to think.
The same is true for great meetings. It’s our ability to focus our attention – our hearts and minds, our problem-solving skills, our ideas – with other people that creates change, momentum and those ‘moments of truth’.
Right now, we are living through an attention crisis. Technology and information overload play their part, training our attention to be more fragmented. You may think you have a fairly balanced relationship with your phone, but the science around what they do to our brains is pretty astounding. A recent study by the University of Texas at Austin found that a smartphone can sap attention even when it’s not being used, even if it is on silent, and even when powered off and tucked away in a purse or briefcase.3 And if you think you’re good at ignoring your phone, you might be surprised to learn that even the notification noises, such as vibrations or alerts, are just as distracting for your brain as physically picking it up and using it.4 This has dire consequences. One study found that the average British adult’s attention span is now just five minutes and seven seconds, compared to twelve minutes a decade ago. It also found that younger people – traditionally thought of as having ‘fresher’ brain power – were outperformed by the over 50s, suggesting a link between lifestyle, phone usage, and wider attention span.5
What have you gained and lost over the last decade or so, as information overload has taken hold? You may love your phone and find the convenience far outweighs the negatives. You may find that you’re regularly nagging yourself to make some changes and have a healthier relationship with technology or social media. What’s clear is that the spaces in between activities are shrinking.
As a result, we have less time and space for thinking, reflection, noticing our own emotions, casual daydreaming and a myriad of other things. We’re also more afraid of empty space. A joint study by Harvard and the University of Virginia found that one of the most terrifying things for people is being alone with their own thoughts, and that 67% of men would choose to self-administer electric shocks rather than be left alone in a room with nothing but their thoughts for fifteen minutes.6
Our need to be constantly connected to the outside world, checking our messages and notifications, can cause us to struggle to pay attention to our work, including the meetings we attend and the actions we should be completing. We need to make changes to improve both our productivity and our well-being.

THE MISSED OPPORTUNITY TO CREATE MAGIC

The frustrating thing is that in a world of fragmented attention, we need good meetings more than ever. Meetings should really be the force creating clarity, change, momentum, consensus and power in your team, your organisation, and indeed in the wider world too.
In our work, we have seen profound moments where previously confli...

Inhaltsverzeichnis