11.2 Managing meetings and committees
The management and the effectiveness of meetings are areas of management that are greatly criticised. I have heard colleagues complain that they are frequently forced to endure boring presentations, waste valuable time discussing a decision that somebody else should have made, or interrupt an important task to attend a meeting with no clearly defined purpose. You can probably relate to these types of complaints.
Certainly, committee meetings have become to brunt of office jokes. It is unfortunate that this management tool has been so poorly used. The purpose of this section is to acquaint you with the common problems in managing meetings and committees and to provide some suggestions for improvement.
Managers constantly encounter situations for which they must make decisions about their work units and their employees. Generally, there is the option of involving or not involving employees in these decisions. Obviously, there are a number of levels or degrees of participation in decision-making. For example, some managers ask for group involvement in generating ideas, but make the final decision themselves, whereas others allow the group to make the decision.
In your text
Bartol, K M; Martin, D C; Tein, M H and Matthews, G W (2001),
pages 472-475.
The meeting cow
Meetings have become the practical alternative to work. People aren't at their desks anymore; no one's answering the phone; no one's doing any actual work because they're all in meetings. Staff meetings, goal-setting meetings, 'everybody on the same page' meetings, meetings to jump-start the project, meetings to wind down the project, conferences committees - you get the point? Managers spend 40 to 60 per cent of their time sitting around talking to each other.
Change-ready thinking: Halve your meeting time and double your productivity.
Adapted from: Hriegel, R and Brandt (1996). Scared cows make the best burgers. Harper Collins Publishers: USA .
Reading 11.5
'Meeting management'. About the Human Internet . URL: http://www.management.about.com (accessed 2001, 3 April). [2 pages]