Why have a meeting anyway? Why indeed? A great many important matters are quite satisfactorily conducted by a single individual who consults nobody. A great many more are resolved by a letter, a memo, a phone call, or a simple conversation between two people. Sometimes five minutes spent with six people separately is more effective and productive than a half-hour meeting with them all together.
How to Run a Meeting
At critical points things may go wrong, but here are ways of putting them right.
From the Magazine (March 1976)
· Long read
Summary.
Why is it that any single meeting may be a waste of time, an irritant, or a barrier to the achievement of an organization’s objectives? The answer lies in the fact, as the author says, that “all sorts of human crosscurrents can sweep the discussion off course, and errors of psychology and technique on the chairman’s part can defeat its purposes.” This article offers guidelines on how to right things that go wrong in meetings. The discussion covers the functions of a meeting, the distinctions in size and type of meetings, ways to define the objectives, the preparations, the chairman’s role, and ways to conduct a meeting that will achieve its objectives.
A version of this article appeared in the March 1976 issue of Harvard Business Review.
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