Communications are required in
all organizations and the old truism that you can’t communicate too much is
indeed true but sometimes communications are ineffective and become time
wasters. Remember, managers communicate by what they:
·
Say
·
Don’t say
·
Do
·
And don’t do.
Make sure
your actions are consistent with what you say because you can’t explain away
behavior inconsistent with what you say. It’s also important to remember that
you cannot satisfy all communication desires and it’s not effective to try. In
this lecture I address how meetings can be effective communication tools and
how to keep meetings from becoming time wasters. This is a long lecture and
there are a lot of concepts presented. I recommend that you read through it a
couple of times to make sure you capture all the concepts. I have divided the
lecture into two halves, 21A and 21B, with exercises at the end at the end of
each.
Too Many Meetings
In large complex enterprises
many meetings are necessary to ensure effective communications. If managers
aren’t cautious unnecessary meetings creep into everyday use and become time
wasters. Typically what happens is there are too many meetings within a
functional area and too few meetings across functions. If you observe yourself
or your subordinate managers holding daily meetings with most of your/their
direct reports you should suspect that many of these meetings are unnecessary.
Typical causes of too many meetings include:
·
poor meeting discipline,
·
poor information systems,
·
insecure or incompetent managers.
If a
subordinate manager is holding too many meetings you must investigate and take
action quickly. The manager holding too many meetings must change or be changed
to avoid the organization becoming ineffective due to the workers not having
enough time free of meetings to do productive work.
The first step is to determine
the reason the manager is holding so many meetings. If the reason given for too
many meetings is due to meetings being so long that additional meetings are
called to complete agendas from previous meetings then the problem is meeting
discipline. Solve the problem of poor meeting discipline by teaching the manager
better methods and insist that the better methods be followed to reduce the
number of meetings and the time per meeting.
Methods for effective meetings are described in the last section of this
lecture.
If the reason is poor
information systems then work with the manager and others responsible to fix
the problems. Sometimes poor information systems can be fixed within the
organization using quality improvement techniques discussed in later lectures
and sometimes professional help is needed to augment the group’s efforts,
particularly if the system is software based. Changing software based
information systems can become a costly quagmire. There are always those that
argue that available information systems don’t fit the organization’s
requirements and therefore a new system must be developed that is tailored
directly to the organization’s special needs. Be wary of such arguments. In my
experience such thinking leads to long and costly efforts to develop systems
that still aren’t effective for the organization. Whenever possible it is
advisable to use or adapt an existing commercial system.
Insecure managers should be
mentored or coached carefully until they are secure in their job or you
determine that they are not ever going to be secure with limited meeting time
with their staff. Everyone isn’t suited for management and the sooner you
replace someone found not to be suited to the job the better for your
organization.
Managers that lack
understanding of their organization’s work, lack effective interpersonal skills
or insist on excessive meetings in order to micromanage their staff are
incompetent managers and must be replaced as rapidly as possible. In some cases
sending them to special training, assuming it is available, may work but in
most cases it’s better to replace them. You do not have enough time to train,
or retrain them yourself, (and some are not trainable) and perform well in the
rest of your management responsibilities.
Electronic Communications in
Lieu of Meetings
Today electronic communications
are used effectively by top management to communicate training, policies and
plans directly to all employees. This removes most of the need to pass down
communications from top management and therefore reduces the time needed for
staff meetings. However, it is important for you to acknowledge communications
from top managers and give your staff an opportunity to ask any questions they
have. Don’t assume that just because senior management has explained new ideas,
policies or plans in emails that everyone understands what is expected of them
and how to respond. Remember, it’s your job to ensure your staff understands
and is correctly supporting the policies and plans of your superiors; otherwise
you are creating an ineffective environment.
If your superiors are pursuing
what you and/or your staff believes is a dumb policy or plan it’s your job to
work with your staff to figure out how to make the policy or plan effective in
your organization. This topic was discussed in an earlier lecture. If you are
still unsure how to handle bad policies or plans of superiors please review the
earlier lecture again.
Whereas electronic
communications do reduce the time needed for meetings and even the need for
some meetings don’t let email or an equivalent replace all face to face
meetings. As an extreme example, a college dean that I know found that one of
his department chairs was using email to conduct annual performance reviews of
the professors in the department. Remember this case when you are communicating
electronically to your staff and ask yourself; is this topic suitable for an
electronic communication or is it so personal or so important that it should be
handled face to face?
An important function of an
effective leader is informally walking around the organization’s work area and
having brief personal interactions with workers. Don’t let electronic
communications replace walking around and talking with workers. The primary
reasons are to gather information and to demonstrate that you care about the
workers, their work and their work issues. Often it is easier for a worker to
bring up a problem with the boss when the boss drops by just to say hello or to
ask a question. You learn important things by walking around that you do not
learn in formal meetings or via email. If you find yourself sitting for long
periods at your desk doing email or some other tedious task break up the task
by taking time out to walk around for 15 minutes. It not only clears your mind
and gets your circulation going it helps keep your workers motivated.
Types of Effective Meetings
I can’t give you an exact list
of what meetings are needed or not needed in your organization. You have to use
your experience and judgment to determine the cost/benefit of each meeting that
you control. Here are some meetings that are useful in most organizations:
•
Staff Meetings
•
Vertical Staff Meetings
•
All Hands Meetings
•
Crisis Meetings
•
Work Meetings
•
Problem Solving or Brainstorming Meetings
Staff Meetings
The one meeting that managers
control is their staff meetings. The cost/benefit analysis of staff meetings is
subtle because the meetings are rituals and deeply wound up in an
organization’s culture. Some of your direct reports expect a staff meeting and
feel cheated somehow if you don’t hold regular meetings. Others feel they are a
waste of time and only attend begrudgingly. I believe staff meetings are
necessary for the staff to feel involved and therefore committed. In my
experience it is best to discuss candidly with your direct reports what you
intend to include in staff meetings and why. Ask them what they want to include
regularly on the agenda. Hold staff meeting regularly; weekly or biweekly. Have
an agenda and commit to limiting staff meetings to an hour or even 15 minutes
if you can complete your communications in no more than 5 minutes.
Limit your comments to items
not suitable for e-mail or personal conversations. This can include explaining
new policies, new directions, etc. It is also wise to fully explain new things
you or your boss wants. Take time to celebrate successes and give credit to
those contributing to successes (remembering what was said earlier about the
dangers of rewarding individuals). The rest of the agenda can be what your
staff wants. Always leave 5 to 10 minutes at the end to let each person comment
on anything they think the group needs to hear. This helps some feel involved
and contributing.
Vertical Staff Meetings
Vertical staff meetings are a
manager’s way of finding information that is not in regular communications
channels; particular information that subordinate managers neglect to report.
These meetings also help ensure that the manager’s views are flowed down and
understood. A vertical staff meeting
includes the manager plus 5 to 12 workers and subordinate managers with no
direct supervisor of any attendee present. The reason for excluding direct
supervisors of other attendees is to enable workers to speak freely about
things that they see as problems but their supervisor is ignoring.
The manager uses a third to
half the time to explain the ground rules for the meeting and to communicate
his vision, near terms goals or other relevant information that the group needs
to hear directly from the manager without it being filtered by subordinate
managers. The remainder of the time is for questions by the group and answers
by the manager. All questions are fair and the manager must commit to answer
all questions in the meeting or in a follow-up communication within a day if
possible. No question or comment by members of the group is to leave the room
without consent of the person asking or commenting. The group should be
encouraged to share everything the manager says with the rest of the
organization.
Hold vertical staff meetings
regularly so that everyone in the organization attends once every year or at
least every two years. Hold over lunch if lunch can be provided for the
attendees. Keep the time limited to one hour and encourage workers to share
their concerns. You find out problems exist that you haven’t heard about any
other way. If these meetings aren’t successful at first keep holding them. If
the ground rules are followed over time trust develops and workers begin to
communicate freely. Problems due to a subordinate manager that are disclosed in
a vertical staff meeting without the subordinate manger being present must be
handled discreetly without embarrassing the subordinate manager. Otherwise you
will lose the trust of the subordinate manager.
All Hands Meetings
Hold one hour all hands
meetings monthly if possible. These meetings are to build the trust of
employees in their management and the organization, which in turn builds
commitment by the employees and effectiveness for the organization. All hands
meetings can be held at lunch time if lunch is provided or before work if
coffee, juice and donuts are provided.
This is because many organizations do not like to see the overhead
expenses associated with all hands meetings during working hours. I am
convinced that these meetings are cost effective but proving it is difficult as
the numbers are “unknowable”. These meetings are primarily downward
communications. A sample agenda includes:
·
Status of the organization’s annual plan
·
Status of any special projects
·
Introduction of new employees with time for the
new employees to tell about their background
·
Celebration of successes and acknowledgement of
defeats
·
Brief Q & A period
It is
important to share real information, including financial data, in order to
build trust. Employees are trusted to keep trade secrets and other proprietary
information that is more valuable than financial data so there should be no
hesitation to share financial data. Withholding such data implies that
management does not trust workers and therefore the workers reason that if they
aren’t trusted they shouldn’t trust management.
Exercises
1. Jot
down a list of all the meetings you led over the past week. Then think about
each one and answer the following questions:
·
What would the regrets be if the meeting was not
held?
·
Did the meeting accomplish your objectives for
it?
·
Was the meeting efficient and effective or was
time wasted with off the track discussions?
·
Do you think the other attendees left the
meeting believing it was efficient and effective?
2. Are
you communicating with your organization via effective staff meetings? Vertical
staff meetings? All hands meetings?
3. Is
your use of electronic communications sound or are you using emails where face
to face meetings should be used?
If you find that the pace of blog posts
isn’t compatible with the pace you would
like to maintain in studying this material you can buy the book “The Manager’s Guide for Effective
Leadership” at:
or hard copy or for nook at:
or hard copy or E-book at:
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