- Authors
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- Name
- Brian Dodridge
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So after reading my last post you implemented all the components to a great meeting (right?). Your meeting engaged people’s interest by compelling and mission-minded work, you spent time developing them, everyone had input, and you even spent time in laughter.
So now you’re wondering, “Is that enough for a great meeting?”
The answer, “Not quite.” While the components of the meeting I wrote about last week are critical to the actual meeting, a good meeting begins before you cover the first agenda item but doesn’t end when you complete the last agenda item.
A meeting worthy of people’s time and organizations’ energy has two other parts. They’re the bookends to an excellent meeting. They are: 1) the advanced agenda and, 2) the meeting output document.
The Advance Agenda
The advance agenda adds value to the meeting in several ways. Here’s what an advanced agenda can do:
- Signals to participants the importance of their engagement
- Allows you as meeting leader to prepare
- Provides more efficiency to the actual meeting time
- Provides “minutes” to the meeting. It reflects substantive conversations and decisions. It becomes an archive of what’s determined.
- It clearly assigns who’s responsible for what action items.
- It allows the meeting leader clarity about what was done and what’s to be done.
- It provides a template for the next meeting.