• Home
  • About
  • Contributors
  • Write for Us
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Women on Business

Business Women Expertise, Tips, Advice and More to Build Winning Careers and Brands

You are here: Home / Leadership / Are Staff Meetings a Waste of Time?

Are Staff Meetings a Waste of Time?

July 21, 2014 By Virginia Ginsburg

With more and more high-tech ways in which to communicate, some business owners are wondering whether face-to-face staff meetings are worth their time and energy. After all, can’t a text, e-chat or email accomplish the same thing in less time?

The Value of Face-to-Face Meetings

The fact is that many specific actions can be accomplished through digital interactions, but at the end of the day, voice-to-voice and face-to-face meetings will accelerate your business faster than purely digital interactions. This is because:

1. We Are Human

While technology continues to develop at lightning speeds, human beings are still wired to connect with each other personally. When we fail to provide human interaction, especially face-to-face when possible, we fail to enable our employees to connect with each other on a primal, critical level. Remember that up to 80% of communication is non-verbal, including posture and tone of voice. Even if all of your meetings are via phone, you will be better off than if they are all via email.

2. Creativity Needs Space

While digital communication spurs action, meetings foster spontaneous, non-task-oriented communication, which is where creativity thrives. While I’m not advocating unstructured meetings, I do recommend planning creative space in every meeting for casual conversation about problems and opportunities facing the company.

3. Trust is Essential

Companies can only grow quickly if there is a high level of trust between you and your employees, team members, and departments. Meetings build trust and understanding and can speed up interactions and problem-solving. By observing each other, and you, in meetings, employees learn to trust each other and believe in the company’s direction and potential.

4. A Culture of Execution

Well-managed staff meetings communicate clearly to your employees that you are in control and that they can trust that the company is efficiently managed. Being able to hold yourself to executing regular disciplined meetings is the foundation of building a culture of execution among your employees.

5. Leadership

Meetings are the main place where you establish your leadership in the company. This is your opportunity to show your employees that you know how to manage your company, yourself, and them. Don’t hide behind managers and delegate the responsibility of your meetings to others, because they are the No. 1 way for you to build your leadership profile.

First Steps to Remove Wasted Time from Staff Meetings

Of course, the problem is that many meetings are run inefficiently. This means that meetings get a bad rap. But don’t blame the method, blame its execution. You can harness the power of meetings to increase efficiency and productivity and help propel your company forward.

I recommend a weekly staff meeting and weekly individual department meetings. As the business owner, you need to set the schedule and keep everyone on track. I work with my clients to help them schedule their meetings so they can see that just a few hours per week are all they need to manage their team.

Here is one structure I sent a client:

meeting schedule example virginia ginsburg

Immutable Laws of Ensuring Meetings are not a Waste of Time

But I can hear you groaning already. You have probably tried to have meetings, but they always run over, or are unproductive, or waste time. Here are the immutable laws of making sure your meetings aren’t a waste of time:

1. Consistency

Set a regular day and time for every meeting, and stick to it. Don’t reschedule for at least the first three months to establish consistency. After that, only reschedule when absolutely necessary. Your employees need to be able to trust that when you say something will happen, it does.

2. Agenda

Create a regular agenda for your meetings. This may be based on departmental updates, specific tasks to be completed, market groups, or anything else that makes sense. Make sure your agenda is simple. When in doubt, use these three simple questions: 1) what’s working?; 2) what’s not working?; 3) what should we do about it?

3. Time-Keeping

Part of the problem with meetings is that they lose structure and get messy and unproductive. When you are establishing a new meeting system, it is critical that you manage the time carefully. Let people know when a topic needs to be discussed at a later time, or if you need to move on to keep everyone on schedule. You will get push-back, but it is the only way to make sure your meetings continue over the long-term.

4. Follow-Up

Ideally, your meetings will solidify some tasks to be completed by specific people. Assign a system for tracking follow-up on actions. A simple list on the whiteboard or on GoogleDocs can accomplish this task. Just make sure that the next time you meet, you are able to review assignments and hold team-members accountable for following through on their commitments.

Next Steps

It’s important that you know that if you structure and control your meetings, you will limit your total management time significantly. One 20-minute meeting per week can set the stage for an entire team, rather than you needing to jump in at random intervals to set the course and adjust activities.

I know this sounds like a lot of work, and it is for the first few months. You need to retrain yourself and your employees to behave in a disciplined manner. But the benefits are huge. I have seen meeting structures transform teams and organizations. One client doubled revenue in just one month of regular weekly meetings.

Virginia Ginsburg

Virginia Ginsburg, founder and chief consultant at Swell Strategies, supports small business owners and entrepreneurs in growing their businesses. She has worked with more than 100 entrepreneurs over the last 10 years from start-ups to businesses more than 30 years old. Virginia’s clients are highly creative and passionate, and have built excellent businesses in diverse industries including technology, consumer goods, and business-to-business services. She supports them in the areas of finance, hiring and managing employees, marketing and sales, and organizational structure. Virginia holds an MBA from the University of Southern California.

More Posts - Website

Follow Me:
TwitterLinkedIn

Filed Under: Leadership, Management, Productivity Tagged With: Leadership, Management, productivity, staff meetings

Comments

  1. Brigitte Kobi says

    July 22, 2014 at 3:54 am

    The table with the meeting structure is a great idea to begin with. However, the most important thing to do is (according to my experience) the next steps. Staff meetings are prone to become a bit longer every time and to losing their real value. If requires some discipline form all participants.

  2. Susan Gunelius says

    July 22, 2014 at 10:08 am

    Very true, Brigitte. And a strong leader to keep everyone on track is essential!

  3. Virginia Ginsburg says

    July 23, 2014 at 12:00 pm

    Brigitte and Susan, you are both so right! Strong leadership and follow-up are both critical. That’s why it’s so important to make the meetings recurring – there is built-in follow-up. But, of course, establishing next steps during each meeting helps so much. Disciplined leadership is really at the heart of good meetings.

Sponsors

Recommended Reading

ultimate guide to email marketing

Awards & Recognition

Categories

  • Board of Directors
  • Books for Businesswomen
  • Business Development
  • Business Executive Team
  • Business Travel
  • Businesswomen Bloggers
  • Businesswomen Interviews
  • Businesswomen Profiles
  • Career Development
  • Communications
  • Contests
  • Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR)
  • Customer Service
  • Decision-making
  • Discounts & Offers
  • Education
  • Equality
  • Ethics
  • Female Entrepreneurs
  • Female Executives
  • Female Executives
  • Finance
  • Franchising
  • Freelancing & the Gig Economy
  • Global Perspectives
  • Health & Wellness
  • Human Resources Issues
  • Infographics
  • International Business
  • Job Satisfaction
  • Job Search
  • Leadership
  • Legal and Compliance Issues
  • Management
  • Marketing
  • Networking
  • News and Insights
  • Non-profit
  • Online Business
  • Operations
  • Personal Development
  • Politics
  • Press Releases
  • Productivity
  • Project Management
  • Public Relations
  • Reader Submission
  • Recognition
  • Resources & Publications
  • Retirement and Savings
  • Reviews
  • Sales
  • Slideshow
  • Small Business
  • Social Media
  • Startups
  • Statistics, Facts & Research
  • Strategy
  • Success Stories
  • Team-Building
  • Technology
  • Uncategorized
  • Videos
  • Women Business Owners
  • Women On Business
  • Women On Business News
  • Women On Business Offers
  • Women On Business Partners
  • Women On Business Roundtable
  • Women on Business School
  • Work at Home/Telecommute
  • Work-Home Life
  • Workplace Issues

Authors

Quick Links

Home | About | Advertise | Write for Us | Contact

Search This Site

Follow Women on Business

  • Facebook
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

Copyright © 2025 Women on Business · Privacy Policy · Comment Policy