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Too Many Meetings Suffocate Morale & Productivity

Too Many Meetings Suffocate Morale & Productivity
Too Many Meetings Suffocate Morale & Productivity


Early stage companies have many demands on an employee’s time. From getting the product built to marketing for new customers to getting the capital lined up, it is a never ending battle to fit in all that work in a limited amount of time. But what is often the case, productivity gets squeezed by early-stage entrepreneurs scheduling way too many meetings, which gets in the way of employees having enough time to do their actual jobs. And when productivity slows, the company’s bottom line suffers and employees start looking for the door in frustration. Let me explain further.

Why So Many Meetings Get Scheduled

There are many reasons to schedule a meeting. Some are recurring meetings between bosses and their direct-reporting employees, for weekly check-ins and collaborative needs of the team. Some are one-off meetings for non-recurring items, like annual strategic planning, putting out a client fire or team building events. But most get set because entrepreneurs are inexperienced and don’t know any better. That is largely related to their not trusting the team to do their jobs or their needing to control every single decision that is made. It is this last category that is the killer.

The Negative Impact on Employees

Employees get frustrated when a couple things happen around meetings. First, they think it is a waste of time, and they are not even sure why they are needed in the room (so don’t invite everyone to every single meeting, only invite the ones that actually need to be there). Second, they get frustrated they are sitting in a meeting, and not sitting at their desk getting their actual work done in a more timely fashion (so maximize their time at their desks, not yours). Or, third, they get offended that they are not trusted to do their job, by a boss that feels they need to keep tight oversight on all of the decisions (so empower your people to make decisions without you). All of this is a recipe for a disaster, often having employees looking for the exit, where the resulting employee turnover can be crippling to a young company needing to race full steam ahead, as quickly as possible.

Case Study

A CMO was once getting started as an interim executive at a new client and was given a team of people to manage. On his first day he was handed a calendar of all the weekly meetings that he needed to participate in with his team. He looked at the long list and realized that about 40% of his time was in meetings, many of which that he deemed as unnecessary, a legacy process from a prior manager. He didn’t have two days a week to lose in getting his job done.

So, he pulled the team together and asked what each of the meetings were trying to accomplish, and they agreed they didn’t need as many, merging many of the meetings into one. And, he asked each of the employees to look at their own personal schedules, and to cut out any unnecessary meetings. One of those persons said they were being included in meetings that were eating up a whopping 80% of his time each week. The CMO asked how he got any work done at all? The employee said he didn’t!!

The employee said, it was mandatory that he be in those meetings, and he didn’t have a choice. To which the CMO replied he needed to cut his meeting time down to a cap of 20% of his time, shedding 75% of his meetings. The employee turned white as a ghost saying that was impossible. The CMO dug in and said it was not only possible, but was required by the end of the week. After a bunch of rethinking his time, the employee prioritized only the most important meetings, cut his meeting load down to the target, and actually started getting his own work done, reversing years of complaints that he was the bottleneck to others in getting their work done.

How Many Meetings Should Be Scheduled

As a suggestion, try to cap your recurring weekly meetings at 20% of your time. One one-on-one meeting with each of your direct reports, one meeting with the person managing you, one meeting with the persons you are managing as a group, and one meeting with your peers to collaborate on needs between departments. That leaves plenty of other time for the one-off meetings that come up during the normal course of business, again which should be capped within this 20% framework. This keeps you efficiently working on the most important work that needs to get done, and keeps your team efficiently working on their most important work. And when people start checking projects off their to-do list, they feel a sense of accomplishment, the business moves forward and a healthy vibe is maintained in the office.

Flat Organizations Thrive Best

So, as an appeal to all you entrepreneurs out there, don’t suffocate the life out of your companies with too many meetings. Hire smart people, trust them to do their jobs, and get the heck out of their way, so they can do the jobs they were hired to do. You don’t have to micro manage every single decision. Empower your team to make their own decisions in a flat organizational structure. Even if they make mistakes, that is fine, they will learn from them. But the team will be moving twice as fast at getting things done, than if they were burdened with a bunch of meetings. And as we know, speed matters with startups.

Concluding Recommendations

Challenge yourself and every employee in your company to cap their recurring weekly meetings at 20% of their time. That is one day a week, or 8 hours in a normal working day. That is up to 16 thirty-minute meetings they can schedule, so plenty of slots to work with. Yes, I said thirty minutes, efficient meetings don’t need to be longer than that. So, that means come to the meetings organized with a set expectation on how they are going to be run each week. And if there is nothing new to update on this week, there is nothing wrong with cancelling meetings. Give your team the flexibility to only do meetings that they feel are absolutely needed.

As you can probably tell, I am not a fan of scheduling too many meetings. It often leads to combatting issues like analysis paralysis, management by committee, micromanagement, disgruntled employees and an overall loss of business productivity. So, instead, take more of a hands-off role in managing your team, kick your business into the next gear and start getting all those unnecessary meetings off of everyone’s calendars. You will be shocked how much more work will actually get done!!

George Deeb is a Partner at Red Rocket Ventures and author of 101 Startup Lessons-An Entrepreneur’s Handbook.

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