The purpose of your non-profit is to take action, not hold meetings. Yet, meetings seem to take up a lot of time, eat into productive work hours, and are often an excuse to go over history or conversations that could be shared more effectively and efficiently in other ways. There are three main reasons to hold a meeting: information-sharing, problem-solving and decision-making. However, whatever the reason, a good meeting has a purpose and resulting action(s).
There are many good reasons for a meeting, but just as many bad ones. According to www.effectivemeetings.com, there are a number of different types of meetings:
No matter which type, a meeting needs a purpose/goal, and some form of outcome or objective. If the main purpose is information briefings – determine if a memo or an email would be a more appropriate method of sharing this information. The main purpose of a board meetings is normally decision-making, so executive directors should be sure the meeting is needed and preparation is ready for decisions to be made.
Before scheduling your next meeting, answer the following question.
The purpose of this meeting is to _________(pick from the list)____________ ___
so that our organization/work group/team is able to _________(objective)_________ by the date of ______(when will action take place)____________.
The main purpose of a board meetings is normally decision-making, so executive directors should be sure the meeting is needed and preparation is ready for decisions to be made.
Now that you have your purpose and objectives, you can begin your meeting preparation. Pre-planning your meeting is like preparing for a play. You need a script, a cast that know their roles. You need a set and props, a director and an audience in attendance.
An agenda is the simple most important element to keeping a meeting on track and on time. Consult with key leaders and members who are coming to help prepare the agenda. Important considerations include:
When you are planning a meeting, the purpose of the meeting will help you decide what equipment you will need, as well as the seating arrangements, and other factors to consider.
What equipment will you need?
Have you ever gone to a meeting where there wasn’t enough room? Have you been at a boardroom table where you couldn’t see the speaker? We all have. Ensure the facility matches the size of the group. Ideally, everyone is able to see other participants.
Show up early and get materials in place. Determine where the chair will sit or stand, where screens or flip charts can be placed, and how others can be seated for maximum communication.
Identify where the washrooms, coatracks, coffee and refreshments are located. Determine if extra tables are required for additional materials.
To set the mood, include some “group identification” in the room. Post the organizational logos on walls or team-building wisdom posters. Add candies or promotional items to tables. Play welcome music or start with an icebreaker activity.
One of the biggest pet peeves of meetings, is waiting for people to arrive so a meeting can start. People’s time is important, so don’t make those that arrive on time wait. Start the meeting and others will have to catch up.
Everyone at a meeting has a role. Being clear on people’s roles helps keep people engaged. The following are some examples of meeting roles:
1. Meetings are too long. Assign start and end time
2. Too many people. A pre-site visit and planning will eliminate this one.
3. Interruptions:
4. No ground rules. Chairperson makes them at beginning of meeting.
5. No agenda. Chairperson should send out for agenda items in advance.
6. No agenda sequencing. Chairperson's responsibility for flow.
7. Inappropriate location, time and or materials. Planning by Chair.
8. People don’t show up. Follow up after the meeting by Chair.
9. Purpose of meeting not clearly defined. Participants don't know why they are there.
10. Unclear level of authority/decision making at meeting. Chair should know this in advance.
11. Unresolved conflict of personnel or meeting content and process. Chair must control.
12. Poor facilitation, pacing, leadership. These are the responsibility of the Chair.
13. Nothing ever gets resolved. The agenda plays an important role. Chair has major role.
14. No record of meeting. If there are no minutes, you didn't have a meeting.
15. No follow up after meeting. This is part of the control process by the Chairperson.
Content for Board Liability was reprinted with permission in 1999 by SaskCulture as part of the SaskCulture Handbook for Cultural Organizations. Updated March 2014'
At the end of the meeting, review the decisions you’ve made. This is a chance to clarify actions. Make sure someone has the responsibility for each action, and a deadline.
At the end of each meeting, ask each person to name one thing they liked and one thing to change at future meetings. Everyone is entitled to their opinions, so don’t argue with anything, just move on to next individual.
Answer these questions:
Did we do what we wanted to do?
Did the meeting build the organizations?
Do the leaders, members and staff all feel more ownership in the organization after this meeting?
What did we learn?
The Chair should follow up with individuals who missed the meeting; give them a chance to explain their absence. Tell them what happened at the meeting and any actions where they can assist.
Also talk to new people, or guests, who came to the meeting. Did they like it? Did they have any suggestions? Remind them about the next meeting and invite them to return if appropriate.