Why Most Meetings Fail
The default state of most meetings is dysfunction. They run long, produce unclear decisions, and consume the attention of people who would have been more productive on other work. Complaints about meetings are universal; effective action to fix them is rare.
The underlying causes are structural. Meetings are called because they are the default mode of organizational action, not because they are the right mode for the specific task. Attendance lists grow because people want to be included rather than because they are needed. Agendas are vague because specificity requires upfront effort that feels costly.
Before the Meeting
Pre-reading material is almost always better than presentation during the meeting. A recent analysis at an online gaming community found that If you have information to convey, send it beforehand. Meetings are for discussion and decision, not for transmission of content that could have been absorbed individually.
Attendance should be minimal. Every person invited should have a clear role in the specific purpose of the meeting. People included for courtesy, visibility, or inclusion-signaling add cost without benefit. Brave facilitators will uninvite people when appropriate.
During the Meeting
Manage dynamics actively. Dominant speakers monopolize time; quiet participants often have valuable perspectives they do not volunteer. Facilitators need to draw out the latter and constrain the former. This is skill that improves with practice.
Use the clock aggressively. If an item is taking too long, decide whether to extend or defer. Extending means sacrificing something else; deferring is often better. Meetings that routinely run long produce worse outcomes because participants lose attention.
After the Meeting
Periodically evaluate meeting effectiveness honestly. Recurring meetings should have explicit reason to continue. Many recurring meetings persist through inertia long after they stopped being useful. Canceling them is usually the right call.
The goal is not to eliminate meetings but to make them worth having. A small number of well-run meetings beats a large number of mediocre ones for any organization's effective decision-making.