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Don t End a Meeting Without Doing These 3 Things

Bob FrischCary Greene

April 26, 2016

When a sports team finishes a game, they usually don t gather up their gear and

immediately leave the court, rink, field or locker room. The players and

coaches take a few minutes for a post-game meeting a ritual that s just as

important as the pre-game warm-up.

In our view, participants in business meetings can benefit from the same

exercise. A quick post-meeting wrap-up with attendees before they leave the

room goes a long way to ensuring the gathering achieved what it set out to, and

that future get-togethers will also prove successful. Here are three steps to

take at the end of each meeting though you can, of course, dial up or down each

component as the situation warrants. Once you ve done this in person, make sure

to follow up in writing, as well.

Confirm key decisions and next steps. Recap what was decided in the meeting,

who is accountable for following through, when implementation will occur, and

how it will be communicated. You want every attendee to leave the meeting with

the same understanding of what was agreed, so there s little chance of anyone

reopening the issues later. One client we ve worked with preps for this

end-of-meeting review by writing down decisions as they are made on a flip

chart so nothing is forgotten or overlooked. He also notes action items,

including who is responsible, when they should happen and how status will be

reported back to the group.

Develop communication points. If a colleague not at the meeting asks an

attendee What happened? he or she should know what to say. So before you wrap

up, put the question to the group. What are the most important things we

accomplished in our time here together? As the group responds, capture the key

points on a flip chart or whiteboard and briefly summarize them. Once you have

alignment on what should be communicated to others ask everyone if there are

any parts of the discussion that they wouldn t want to be shared. Some

information might be confidential; perhaps some ideas aren t quite ready for

dissemination. Be as specific as possible here so everyone clearly understands

what is off limits. Then, as soon as possible after the meeting, send your

agreed-upon talking points to everyone in an email. The goal of this exercise

is not to give people a script to read from. It s to provide guidance on the

key messages they should convey, and what they should keep to themselves, if

asked, so the rest of the organization gets a consistent picture of what went

on. After a recent strategy meeting of the top 30 executives at a major

technology company, for example, the group decided on these communication

points:

This was not a one-time event, but the beginning of this group coming together

as a senior leadership team.

We talked about our strategy, which is to build a collection of great

businesses in strong categories.

We agreed that each business should focus on driving its own growth, but, where

it makes sense, units and functions should leverage each other s best practices

and capabilities. We captured some ideas for how to start doing this and talked

about opportunities for leaders to grow and take on new boundary-spanning

roles.

Gather session feedback. Especially if your group will meet regularly, ask

attendees for feedback on the session while it s fresh in their minds. This is

an oft-missed opportunity to learn both what people liked and what they would

change. Instead of asking a broad question like What feedback do you have? ,

which often yields equally vague and unhelpful responses, break the discussion

into what we call roses (positives) and thorns (negatives). Start with the

latter. Tell attendees to think about everything they have received or done

related to the meeting from the time they were invited to the review, including

any prereads, prework and aspects of the meeting itself, such as location, time

quality of the coffee, etc. Then ask, What could be improved? Avoid debating

the suggestions raised, but do ask questions to clarify what s being said.

Finally, turn to roses. Ask the group What went well? What should we be sure

to do again in the future? Coming on top of the recap of decisions, next steps

and talking points, this last discussion helps you end the session a positive

note.

When you embed a regular post-meeting debrief that incorporates these three

elements into your meetings, you can help your team dramatically improve its

play.

Bob Frisch is the managing partner of the Strategic Offsites Group, a

Boston-based consultancy, and author of Who s In The Room? How Great Leaders

Structure and Manage the Teams Around Them (Jossey-Bass, 2012) and coauthor of

Simple Sabotage: A Modern Field Manual for Detecting & Rooting Out Everyday

Behaviors That Undermine Your Workplace (HarperOne, 2015).

Cary Greene is a partner of the Strategic Offsites Group, a Boston-based

consultancy, and co-author of Simple Sabotage: A Modern Field Manual for

Detecting & Rooting Out Everyday Behaviors That Undermine Your Workplace

(HarperOne, 2015).