How to run effective meetings in the era of hybrid work - Work Life by Atlassian (2024)

5-second summary
  • If you’re calling a meeting to make a decision or have a discussion that’ll be faster in real time, that’s cool. If you just need to broadcast information, share it in writing.
  • Choosing participants with diverse perspectives helps you see the topic from multiple angles, and therefore, get the most out of your meeting.
  • When leading meetings with both in-person and virtual attendees, make sure each group is participating equally so nobody checks out.

Subscribe to Work Life

Get stories like this in your inbox

If I told you that only 50% of meeting time is used effectively, would you believe me? (Don’t answer. I can hear you nodding from here.) There’s evidence that virtual meetings score even lower.

And get this: an ineffective meeting can derail productivity even after it’s over. A recent article in the MIT Sloan Management Review details something called “meeting recovery syndrome” where attendees lose work time while they mentally recover from a bad meeting.

Most of us don’t have formal training in meeting management skills, but anyone can learn to do it well – whether your team is in the office, fully distributed, or hybrid.

What makes an effective meeting?

It’s important to distinguish between effective and efficient.

An efficient meeting starts promptly, stays on track due to good time management, includes as few people as possible, and achievesthestated objective.

Job done, right? Wrong.

Efficiency is a superficial quality. It says nothing about whether the right people were included for the right reasons, or whether the meeting generated any value.

Aneffectivemeeting brings a thoughtfully selected group of people together for a specific purpose, provides a forum for open discussion, and delivers a tangible result: a decision, a plan, a list of great ideas to pursue, a shared understanding of the work ahead. Not only that but the result is then shared with others whose work may be affected.

Successful meetings have a clear purpose

Most of us want fewer meetings on our calendars. It’s easy to fall into the trap of thinking that meetingsare the one and only way to collaborate. That knee-jerk tendency gets us into trouble and gives meetings a bad name.

First, determine whether you really need a meeting

You don’t need a meeting to broadcast information– that’s whatemail, chat, and company intranetslikeConfluence are for.Department and company all-hands meetingsare a notable exception. They provide a unique chance to hear directly from executives and other decision-makers – and, if they include time for Q&A (which, they should), they get to hear from you.

If your meeting features a productive discussion that will be more effective in real time than asynchronously via emails or comment threads, then it’ll be worthwhile. Examples includeteam or project retrospectives, brainstorming, andone-on-one meetingsbetween managers and their direct reports.

In the best-case scenario, a meeting’s purpose is to decide or create something collaboratively. Project planning, mapping out customer journeys, setting goals, solving a problem, choosing X vs. Y … all these are situations where holding a meeting is probably the most effective way to collaborate. And thanks to Trello boards, Miro boards, and Zoom’s virtual whiteboarding feature, you don’t even need to be in the same room to get it done.

How to run effective meetings in the era of hybrid work - Work Life by Atlassian (1)

Next, choose meeting participants who can make a unique contribution

Meetings are expensive, so be thoughtful about who you invite. To be sure, you want to invite the minimum number of people needed to achieve your goal. But you also want the group to bring diverse perspectives and knowledge, especially if the purpose of the meeting is decision-making or brainstorming. Sadly, there’s no magic formula for balancing cost against the potential for creativity, so you’ll need to use your best judgment.

Tip

Try thismeeting cost calculatorfrom Harvard Business Review next time you’re running a meeting. It’ll make you think twice about your attendee list!

How to run effective meetings in the era of hybrid work - Work Life by Atlassian (2)

Related Article

The psychological ingredients of high-performing teams

By Jamey AustinIn Teamwork

Last, craft and share an agenda

Few things are more irksome than the person who sends a meeting invite with no indication of what will happen, and therefore no clue as to why you’re being invited. Don’t be that person. Include your agenda in the invitation so people can determine whether they need to be there and, if not, decline the meeting or suggest someone else.

Your meeting agenda might have just one item. That’s fine! The point is to have an agenda that speaks to the result you want – e.g., “Brainstorm 10 or more ways we could reduce customer churn 10% by the end of the year.” If you can’t describe what you’ll be doing in actionable, results-oriented terms, that’s a sign holding the meeting would be a waste of time.

Tip

Include a 5-minute agenda item at the end to capture any open questions or follow-up tasks and assign owners for them. Don’t skip this! Better to cut a discussion short than to leave loose ends dangling.

Effective meetings keep attendees engaged

It’s okay to start the meeting by setting the expectation that everyone is 100% present and focused. Let the group know that if someone has work that is so pressing they’d be tempted to multi-task, they have permission to go do that work and catch up on what happened in the meeting later. They’ll produce better work, and you’ll have more engaged participants. Win-win.

Schedule for maximum engagement

In our age of globally distributed companies and remote work, a bit of thought around timing is key to effective meeting management. As much as possible, avoid scheduling your meeting during someone else’s lunch hour, or at a time when they’d otherwise be reading their kids a bedtime story. When that can’t be avoided, at least check in with the people who’ll be inconvenienced to get their buy-in in advance. (Depending on your company culture, that might not be strictly necessary, but it’salwayspolite.)

Even for co-located participants, meeting time can make a difference.Our capacity for creative thinking is the highest right after sleep, so schedule that brainstorming session first thing in the morning. By contrast,we solve problems best later in the day when our minds are a bit tired. Our focus relaxes, and we can see more opportunities and connect more dots. Plus, we’re less likely to be distracted by a looming list of tasks.

Encourage participation – and make it hard to zone out

If you’re meeting in person, laptops should be closed and phones should be off the table (unless you’re taking notes). “Oh, but I can focus on the topic at handandcheck my email simultaneously,” some might say. Please allow me tocall bullsh*t on that. Besides, for every person with a laptop open, there’s a person sitting next to them distracted by their typing or peeking to see if they’re just cruising social media.

If you’re meeting virtually, ask people to enable video so they’re more likely to stay actively engaged. Of course, exceptions always apply, so be understanding if some participants have to opt out of video occasionally. People may need to tend to children, they may not feel “camera ready” if the meeting falls at an odd time of day, or they may not feel comfortable broadcasting their bedroom to coworkers.

Tip

Use the meeting notes template in Confluence to save time and structure your notes for easier reading.

Make it remote-friendly, even if you’re in the office

Even if everyone in the group typically works from the office, there’s always a chance somebody will end up working remotely that day to care for a sick child or let the electrician in. So set up a virtual meeting link just in case.

If you have a remote participant, consider asking the entire group tojoin remotelyfrom their desks. It puts everyone on a level playing field and encourages more balanced participation.Plus, nobody likes being the giant head on the TV screen at the front of the conference room.

Effective meetings provide a safe space for divergent thinking

A bit of divergence goes a long way when you’re looking for creative ideas, puzzling through solutions to a problem, or exploring options. You don’t have to put a specific brainstorming exercise on the agenda, but you do have tomake the group feel comfortableexpressing opposing opinions or offering up off-the-wall ideas.

Build trust in the room

People need assurance that stepping outside the norm won’t be a career-ending move. Known as psychological safety, this is one of the leading indicators of a high-performing team. (And what is a group of people in a meeting, if not a temporary team?) As the meeting organizer and facilitator, you have a chance to lead by example and be the first to broach a controversial topic or offer an unusual perspective or idea.

You can alsobuild trust by asking questions that prompt a deeper discussion, even when you think you know the answer. Questions like “Why do we think that’s true?” or “Can you expand on that?” or “How could we measure that?” demonstrate humility and curiosity on your part, which sets the tone for the rest of the group.

How to run effective meetings in the era of hybrid work - Work Life by Atlassian (3)

Related Article

How to counteract 3 types of bias and run inclusive meetings

By Hilary DubinIn Teamwork

Be inclusive

If you’ve done a good job gathering a group with diverse knowledge and perspectives, everyone will be “the odd one out” in one way or another. The only introvert, the only person from finance, the person who just started last week. Your job now is to take advantage of that diversity by making sure everyone is (andfeels) heard.

Ask the new hire how things look from their still-fresh point of view.Draw out the introverttoward the end of a discussion by asking whether they see points the group hasn’t considered yet. Encourage the lone representative from finance to share how the decision would affect their team. If one person starts to dominate the meeting, ask them to take over capturing notes on the whiteboard. This transitions them into listening mode and gives the rest of the group a better chance to discuss their perspective.

If your meeting includes a mix of in-person and virtual attendees, pay attention to whether participation seems balanced. It’s easy for the in-person group to dominate the discussion without realizing it. Make a point to ask the virtual attendees for input proactively throughout the meeting so you get the full benefit of their expertise.

Effective meetings produce real, shareable results

You know the meeting’s purpose because you’ve thought it through. You crafted an agenda designed to achieve the goal. Now stay the course! Be mindful not to meander off-topic or dive too deep into technical discussions. (Just how long is “too long” and how deep is “too deep” is up to you as meeting facilitator to decide.)

Tip

Create a “parking lot” on your whiteboard, your shared Confluence page, or your Trello board to capture ideas, topics, and questions outside the meeting’s scope. The catch is that you’re honor-bound to follow up on them, or you’ll lose the group’s trust.

If the meeting centers on a decision, don’t let your team members off the hook and settle for a “maybe.” Push for that decision or recommendation so people can start pursuing action items as soon as they walk out of the room. You might not reach full agreement, but that’s OK. Effective teamwork means agreeing to trust each other enough to rally behind the decision once it’s been made.

Consider using the DACI method to clarify each person’s role: driver, approver, contributor, or informed.

Chances are, your meeting will generate some kind of artifact: an action plan, a collection of ideas, acustomer journey, a list of next steps, etc. Atlassian meetings typically capture all that stuff as a page in Confluence (the wiki-flavored intranet tool we make) and share the page with everyone on the invite list and other relevant people. Sharing via email and Google Docs works fine, too.

Err on the side of sharing with more people than is strictly necessary. It’s really hard to keep track of exactly what everyone around you is up to, or how the outcome of your meeting will intersect with their work. Sharing broadly reduces the chance you’ll discover conflicts late in the game, and might even lead to joining forces with a team doing complementary work.

If the meeting isn’t effective, change it!

The fact that you’re still reading means you’re committed to running a great meeting. Yay! Turns out, though, that you’re not the sole judge of whether the meeting was productive or not.

Discuss the experience with your fellow attendees, and solicit feedback with questions like these:

  • Did this meeting result in something of value to the business?
  • Did we include the right people? If not, who should or shouldn’t be included in the future?
  • Were the meeting’s purpose and agenda clear?
  • Was it easy for you to contribute to the discussion?
  • For recurring meetings: are we holding this meeting on the right cadence? If not, how should we adjust?

Even if the meeting was a one-off, this feedback helps you make your next meeting better. And if (ok: when) you start to feel like your calendar is overloaded with commitments, run the Ritual Reset play from the Atlassian Team Playbook to see if you can streamline any meetings or eliminate them altogether.

Keep an ongoing, open dialogue amongst the people you meet with most frequently, and emphasize progress over perfection. Continuous improvement for the win!

Subscribe to Work Life

Get stories like this in your inbox

How to run effective meetings in the era of hybrid work - Work Life by Atlassian (2024)

FAQs

What are the 4 P's of effective meetings? ›

Use this template to identify and explain the 4 Ps required to run an effective meeting: Purpose, Product, People, and Process.

How do you run effective team meetings? ›

12 tips on how to lead effective team meetings
  1. 12 ways to run a great meeting with your team. ...
  2. Prioritize teamwork, not reporting. ...
  3. Assign meeting roles. ...
  4. Ask your team for input. ...
  5. Create a meeting agenda. ...
  6. Protect everyone's chance to speak. ...
  7. Vary your meeting agenda order. ...
  8. Ask questions that encourage discussion.
11 Mar 2022

How do you conduct effective meetings? ›

Here's how to conduct a meeting:
  1. Set a clear objective. Prior to the start of the meeting, make sure you have a clearly defined purpose and objective for holding the meeting. ...
  2. Consider your attendees. ...
  3. Start and end the meeting on time. ...
  4. Follow your schedule. ...
  5. Follow up.

What are the 5 P's of effective meetings? ›

The Five P's of Productive Meetings.
  • Purpose. Every productive meeting must have a clear purpose. ...
  • Preparation. Preparation is key to productive meetings. ...
  • Process. Productive meetings have a clear process, which is defined by an agenda. ...
  • Participation. ...
  • Progress.
19 Jul 2014

How do you run effective meetings 10 top tips? ›

10 Tips for Effective Meetings
  1. Decide if you really need the meeting. Before setting up a meeting, ask yourself if it's really needed. ...
  2. Plan and structure meetings. ...
  3. Choose your audience wisely. ...
  4. Organize the information. ...
  5. Start on time. ...
  6. Have engaging meetings. ...
  7. Keep meetings on track. ...
  8. Finish on time.

What are the 3 types of meeting? ›

Three kinds of meetings
  • Information. This is a meeting where attendees are informed about what is happening (with or without their blessing). ...
  • Discussion. This is a meeting where the leader actually wants feedback or direction or connections. ...
  • Permission.
4 Mar 2009

How do you make a meeting more effective and productive? ›

  1. 7 Steps to Make Workplace Meetings More Productive. ...
  2. 1 – Determine if a meeting is really necessary. ...
  3. 2 – Have an agenda. ...
  4. 3 – Invite only those who will contribute to your success. ...
  5. 4 – Communicate your objectives and desired outcomes. ...
  6. 5 – Start on time. ...
  7. 6 – Stay focused. ...
  8. 7 – Summarize and assign responsibility.

What is the most effective use of a team meeting? ›

At its core, the purpose of a team meeting is to share information efficiently and to provide scope for discussion around what is being shared. A good team meeting helps teams align on the topics of discussion, air any concerns or obstacles, and have clarity on future actions.

What are the 7 steps in planning a meeting? ›

7 Step Meeting Process
  • Clarify Aim/Purpose.
  • Assign Roles.
  • Review Agenda.
  • Work through Agenda.
  • Review meeting record.
  • Plan Next Steps and Next Agenda.
  • Evaluate.

What are effective meeting skills? ›

A productive and effective meeting is one that is conducted in a disciplined manner, with active participation from all representatives resulting in clear action items, an evaluation of the meeting, an agenda for the next meeting, and a sense among the members that their time was well spent.

Which virtual meeting platform is best? ›

2. 11 Best Virtual Meeting Platforms for Teams
  • 2.1 Microsoft Teams. 'Ideal for businesses that need robust & secured remote solutions' ...
  • 2.2 Skype. 'Best video meeting platform for easy and free interaction' ...
  • 2.3 Google Meet. ...
  • 2.4 Zoom Meeting. ...
  • 2.5 Intermedia AnyMeeting. ...
  • 2.6 Ringcentral Meeting. ...
  • 2.7 Zoho Meeting. ...
  • 2.8 Click Meeting.
20 Jul 2022

What are the 5 elements of a meeting? ›

5 elements of good meetings
  • A clear agenda and objective. A message from. ...
  • A pared-down list of participants. Often, meetings are derailed by too many cooks in the kitchen. ...
  • A point person or moderator. ...
  • A device policy. ...
  • Actionable next steps.
13 Oct 2022

What is 5p quality? ›

Purpose, Participants, Process, Product, Preparation. Purpose, Preparation, Process, Participation, Progress.

What are three tips for running effective meetings? ›

So, it really is critical that time dedicated to meetings is time well spent.
...
Three tips for running efficient meetings
  • Write down topics beforehand. ...
  • Comment only if you've read the documents. ...
  • Discuss topics for five minutes at most.
20 Jul 2022

How do you structure a team meeting? ›

8 tips to help you create an effective team meeting agenda
  1. Find a team meeting agenda template that works for your team. ...
  2. Ask your entire team to contribute to the agenda. ...
  3. Communicate the purpose of the meeting. ...
  4. Be clear with your agenda items. ...
  5. Assign an amount of time for each agenda item. ...
  6. Confirm who is leading each topic.

What are meeting formats? ›

A meeting format is the methodology behind the way a meeting is run, which seeks to promote active listening and encourages questions to be asked. This is a method that generates new ideas and solutions you might not have thought about as a manager.

What is a meeting in communication skills? ›

A meeting is a group communication in action around a defined agenda, at a set time, for an established duration. Meetings can be effective, ineffective, or a complete waste of time.

What elements does an effective team meeting need to ensure? ›

So to ensure your meetings are effective there are four important elements to implement:
  • Define the purpose. You need to have it really clear in your head what the purpose of that meeting is. ...
  • Create an agenda. ...
  • Set a time limit. ...
  • Limit the number of attendees.
18 Jun 2014

What topics should be discussed in team meetings? ›

14 helpful topics for team meetings at work
  • Recent victories. Team meetings can acknowledge recent successes, whether of individual employees or teams. ...
  • Challenges. ...
  • Recent changes. ...
  • Improvements. ...
  • Short- or long-term vision. ...
  • Employee health conversations. ...
  • Leadership roles. ...
  • Collaboration skills.

What is a meeting checklist? ›

Write the purpose of the meeting and determine necessary, active discussion points. List decisions that must be made during the meeting. Include space for meeting notes, next steps, and task assignment in your agenda. Create an agenda and share a link to it in a calendar invite.

How do you practice effective workplace behaviors in meeting? ›

If you're running a meeting, be crystal clear on the agenda and on what you want to accomplish, but then it's time to be quiet and let others speak. If you share your thoughts first, you're likely going to look around a table of nodding heads, with people saying they completely agree with your instincts.

What is the main factor that makes a meeting a success? ›

Consistency is a key component to holding successful meetings. It's important to hold meetings at the same time, keep them short—ideally a half hour—and focused. Having guidelines in place helps ensure that meetings are valuable for everyone.

How should a manager lead an effective workplace meeting? ›

How to lead a team meeting effectively
  1. Determine your purpose and focus. ...
  2. Gather input before the meeting. ...
  3. Plan your agenda and create a presentation. ...
  4. Make the meeting purpose clear to attendees. ...
  5. Share praise. ...
  6. Manage your time. ...
  7. Add value with your information. ...
  8. Incorporate different techniques.

What are the 3 characteristics of meeting? ›

In no particular order they are: physical, procedural, temporal and attendees.
  • Physical. Physical characteristics relate to aspects of the meeting setting and environment, such as seating arrangement, provision of refreshments and the appropriateness of the space, temperature and lighting. ...
  • Procedural. ...
  • Temporal. ...
  • Attendees.
10 Jan 2017

What elements are key to a positive and productive meeting? ›

Knowing the key elements of any successful meeting will help you increase your chances of impressing your boss and peers.
  • Knowledge of Your Audience. ...
  • Valuable Subject Matter. ...
  • Room and Equipment Assessment. ...
  • Agenda Organization Planning. ...
  • Prepping the Speakers. ...
  • Communication With Attendees. ...
  • Use of Helpful Visuals.

What are the 5 elements of a meeting? ›

5 elements of good meetings
  • A clear agenda and objective. A message from. ...
  • A pared-down list of participants. Often, meetings are derailed by too many cooks in the kitchen. ...
  • A point person or moderator. ...
  • A device policy. ...
  • Actionable next steps.
13 Oct 2022

What are the 7 steps in planning a meeting? ›

7 Step Meeting Process
  • Clarify Aim/Purpose.
  • Assign Roles.
  • Review Agenda.
  • Work through Agenda.
  • Review meeting record.
  • Plan Next Steps and Next Agenda.
  • Evaluate.

How do you make a meeting more effective and productive? ›

  1. 7 Steps to Make Workplace Meetings More Productive. ...
  2. 1 – Determine if a meeting is really necessary. ...
  3. 2 – Have an agenda. ...
  4. 3 – Invite only those who will contribute to your success. ...
  5. 4 – Communicate your objectives and desired outcomes. ...
  6. 5 – Start on time. ...
  7. 6 – Stay focused. ...
  8. 7 – Summarize and assign responsibility.

What is a key factor to running a good meeting? ›

However, we find these three key:
  • Have the right people at the table. Consider the meeting goal and determine who must be there. ...
  • Have an agenda that reflects the meeting goals. Let participants know in advance what will be covered and by whom. ...
  • Have a definite time limit.
15 Mar 2017

What are the key features of a good meeting? ›

The 6 Qualities Meetings Need to Have to Be Effective
  • Meetings shall have a meeting leader. ...
  • All meetings should have a stated purpose. ...
  • Meetings should be shorter, instead of longer. ...
  • Meetings shall have an agenda. ...
  • Participants shall come prepared to the meeting.
18 Aug 2017

What is the most important element to a successful meeting? ›

Consistency is a key component to holding successful meetings. It's important to hold meetings at the same time, keep them short—ideally a half hour—and focused. Having guidelines in place helps ensure that meetings are valuable for everyone.

What is a meeting checklist? ›

Write the purpose of the meeting and determine necessary, active discussion points. List decisions that must be made during the meeting. Include space for meeting notes, next steps, and task assignment in your agenda. Create an agenda and share a link to it in a calendar invite.

How do you practice effective workplace behaviors in meeting? ›

If you're running a meeting, be crystal clear on the agenda and on what you want to accomplish, but then it's time to be quiet and let others speak. If you share your thoughts first, you're likely going to look around a table of nodding heads, with people saying they completely agree with your instincts.

What are the different ways to make a meeting effective explain with examples? ›

How can you make your meetings more effective?
  • Have a clear purpose for the meeting. ...
  • Create a meeting agenda. ...
  • Keep the agenda simple. ...
  • Reduce the number of meetings at your company. ...
  • Embrace different opinions. ...
  • Take responsibility to improve the meeting culture. ...
  • Create safe spaces for discussion. ...
  • Make the most of technology.
1 Dec 2019

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Roderick King

Last Updated:

Views: 6327

Rating: 4 / 5 (51 voted)

Reviews: 82% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Roderick King

Birthday: 1997-10-09

Address: 3782 Madge Knoll, East Dudley, MA 63913

Phone: +2521695290067

Job: Customer Sales Coordinator

Hobby: Gunsmithing, Embroidery, Parkour, Kitesurfing, Rock climbing, Sand art, Beekeeping

Introduction: My name is Roderick King, I am a cute, splendid, excited, perfect, gentle, funny, vivacious person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.