Leadership for Saints: Part 50
Ingredients of a Great Meeting
by Rodger Dean Duncan and Ed J. Pinegar
Every great meeting begins
with smart planning. Ask
yourself a series of simple questions.
For example:
·
Why are we having this ward council or presidency meeting? Is it only because it’s 8:00
o’clock on Sunday morning and that’s just what we do on Sunday mornings?
·
What is the core purpose of our meeting? If inviting people to come unto Christ is our
purpose, specifically what are we trying to do that will help
advance that cause?
·
What are the desired outcomes of our meeting? As a direct result of the gathering, what do
we want people to know, to feel and to do?
·
What can we do to ensure that the Spirit is an active participant
in our meeting?
·
What can we do to generate sincere energy in what we’re doing?
How can we breathe life into the “routine” and be reminded
of its linkage to soul development?
·
How can we ensure that this meeting provides spiritual enlightenment
and causes participants to have a great desire to live their
religion, to come unto Christ, and to want to be like
Christ?
·
What can we do to ensure that every person who attends the meeting
is inspired, edified and strengthened?
How can we manage the meeting so that all participants
are glad they came and are eager to attend next time?
If great meetings result
from great planning—and they do—it makes sense that
the planning has structure.
A good way to ensure structure is to use an agenda.
We suggest that every meeting
should have an agenda. Where
possible, the agenda should be given to each participant in
advance, even if it’s only at the beginning of the meeting.
An agenda doesn’t need to be an elaborate document. In fact, it should be relatively simple with
the appropriate “guideposts” to keep the participants (and
the leader) on track. The
agenda can be typed and printed.
It can be hand written on a chalkboard or flipchart.
If there are only two or three items to be covered,
it can be communicated orally.
As leader of a meeting,
you need more agenda detail than the other participants. For instance, you should have a rough time allocation
for each item. This
helps you gauge the progress of the meeting and know when
it’s time to come to closure on a particular item.
Regularly scheduled meetings
seem to be the most common violator of the agenda requirement. One way to overcome this is to take five minutes
at the beginning of the meeting to develop and post an agenda. If your agenda contains several items, prioritize
them so you can deal with the most important ones in the time
available.
It’s best, of course, to be
so focused on purpose and desired outcomes that you can produce
an appropriate agenda in advance.
A good agenda helps participants funnel their thinking
and energy. It emphasizes
unity of purpose over division of labor. It underscores accountability for results.
It helps us make the best use of that precious commodity
called time.
A common challenge for
our meetings is that the right subject is sometimes addressed
in the wrong forum. For
instance, the appropriate forum for planning the details of
a ward social is the Ward Activities Committee, not
the Ward Correlation Council. The Ward Council members may be asked to provide
general guidance and assistance, but the nitty-gritty details
of the planning and preparation should fall on the shoulders
of the Activities Committee.
Likewise, a discussion on helping Brother Wilson upgrade
his employment is more appropriate for Welfare Meeting or
a quorum presidency meeting or in an interview with Brother
Wilson’s home teacher than it is for a meeting of the Activities
Committee.
A well-conceived agenda
helps us ensure that the right subject is addressed in the
right forum to produce the right results and outcomes.
The following ideas will
help you plan and lead great meetings.
Timing
Time is a precious, finite
resource. We all have
the same amount of it and we are rightfully protective about
how it is used. In planning and leading our meetings, we must
be constantly sensitive to the amount of time we ask people
to invest.
In terms of time, your
first decision is “when” the meeting should occur. Considerations in selecting a meeting time include
your availability, the availability of other participants,
the availability of an appropriate meeting place, and the
preparation time required.
After the “when” decision
has been made, you might consider using an odd time strategy
to encourage promptness.
Here’s what we mean.
If you were driving along
a highway and saw this sign, “Speed Limit, 24.5,” you would
likely think something like “Hmmm ... that’s odd.
The police must really mean business.
That’s an awfully specific speed limit.
They must mean ‘24.5.’
I think I’ll slow down.”
In the same way this sign
catches attention and encourages compliance, announcing meetings
that have unusual and very specific start—and finish—times
can help tighten up your meetings and reduce time wasted.
Let’s say your regular
meeting has been scheduled for 8:00 o’clock. It’s probably a safe guess that some of the
participants have regarded that time as “8-ish” and have routinely
straggled in at 8:05, 8:10 or even later.
This is disruptive to the meeting as well as disrespectful
of the underlying purpose (inviting people to come unto Christ).
If you have sometimes delayed
the start of the meeting beyond the 8:00 o’clock announced time—so that
the stragglers can be present for the beginning—your misplaced
courtesy has actually penalized the people who arrived on
time and reinforced the behavior of those who are tardy.
Try announcing the starting
time of your meeting as, say, 7:58, and then absolutely start
the meeting at that time even if several people are missing. They will eventually come, and they will quickly
learn that the meeting starts promptly at 7:58 rather than at some imprecise
“8-ish” time.
Also, be sure to end
your meeting promptly at a pre-announced time. Meetings
that drag on and on are usually lacking in good organization,
preparation and management. This is another point in
favor of having a well-conceived agenda.
It helps keep meeting participants on track and on
time.
Speaking of your agenda,
be sure that it helps you maintain a good “pace” in the meeting.
Avoid placing all the “administrative stuff” in one block
of time on the agenda. Sprinkle throughout the agenda items requiring
decisions or specific action assignments. Pre-assign a spiritual
thought. Given at the
beginning of the meeting, a spiritual thought lends context
and perspective to all that follows.
Given at the end of a meeting, a spiritual thought
energizes people for action and sends them off on a definite
high note
Beginning on time, managing
on pace, and ending on time is a great way to demonstrate
respect for your meeting participants and to produce great
results for the people you serve.
Quotes Worth Remembering
It is only when we get beyond the administrative
details of our callings and focus our attention on the principles
of ministering to God's children and bringing the blessings
of the gospel into their lives that our Church offices take
on their full meaning, and we experience the fulfilling joy
and satisfaction to be found in rendering significant service
in the kingdom. – M.
Russell Ballard
One of the most effective means by which
any leadership accomplishment can be brought about is the
habitual use of a good, well-planned agenda…. if those conducting
an important meeting do not have a well worked-out agenda
in writing, the meeting may not be nearly as productive. Those
present may then have to guess at the pertinent facts and
depend upon their memories, which may not be very dependable. – Sterling W. Sill
…you should see that the written agenda
for each executive meeting, especially on the ward or quorum
level, focuses mainly on people rather than programs—and then
make sure that you follow your agenda. –
M. Russell Ballard
When the secretary of President George
Washington tried to excuse his lateness by saying his watch
was slow, Washington replied, "Then you must get a new watch or I another secretary." Isn't it quite likely that God may
feel the same way about us when we continously
and habitually violate this first law of order, which is punctuality?
– Sterling W. Sill
The question is not one of managing the
clock, but one of managing ourselves with respect to the time
we have. As Peter Drucker, the distinguished
management consultant, has said, time is "man's most
perishable resource," and unless it is managed, nothing
else can be managed. (Peter F. Drucker, Management (New York: Harper and Row, 1974), p. 70.)
Each minute is a little thing and yet, with respect to our
personal productivity, to manage the minute is the secret
of success. – Joseph B. Wirthlin
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