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facilitation [2023/02/27 11:54] – brad | facilitation [2023/02/27 15:11] (current) – brad | ||
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The art of healthy group conversations. | The art of healthy group conversations. | ||
- | ===== Practices ===== | + | ===== Better |
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+ | This is a list of practices I believe contribute to healthy and effective meetings. I don't do all of these consistently yet, and taken together they can sound rigid, even grognardy. But my best meeting experiences involved many of these at once and I find the structure frees us all up for collective thought. Note, these are focused on small meetings (up to 12 people) and are not necessarily appropriate for meetings with an " | ||
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+ | === Everyone knows the purpose of the meeting. === | ||
+ | |||
+ | //Why:// The time of our employees is our most valuable resource. A meeting with no purpose is a waste of time for everyone. A meeting with an //unclear// purpose also wastes time, because attendees may steer the meeting in unproductive directions, or stay when they are not needed. Also forces organizers to ask, " | ||
+ | |||
+ | //How:// | ||
+ | * The purpose must be clear in the meeting invite. A title is often insufficient, | ||
+ | * Restate the purpose aloud at the start of the meeting, so folks can nope out or ask clarifying questions. | ||
+ | * Meetings should only include people necessary to accomplish their purpose, but in practice this is difficult to judge and as an inclusive practice organizers will invite more people than strictly necessary. Therefore, attendees may choose not to attend, and should be welcome to leave at any time if, in their own judgment, they are neither contributing to nor benefiting from the meeting' | ||
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+ | === The meeting follows an agenda. === | ||
+ | |||
+ | //Why:// If a purpose is " | ||
+ | |||
+ | //How:// | ||
+ | * The agenda should be shared ahead of time, usually in the meeting invite or a linked notes doc for easy reference. | ||
+ | * If the agenda is open for submissions, | ||
+ | * Every agenda item needs an assigned presenter/ | ||
+ | * Especially in certain kinds of meetings, it can also be helpful to label agenda items (Inform / Consult / Decide). | ||
+ | * When you reach the end of the agenda before time is up, ask "is there anything else this group needs to discuss?" | ||
+ | * A meeting without an agenda should be cancelled or rescheduled. | ||
+ | |||
+ | === The meeting generates artifacts. === | ||
+ | |||
+ | //Why:// Concretizing meeting outcomes with writings, drawings or other artifacts creates clarity, even if you never fully read through your archive of notes. It converges attendees' | ||
+ | |||
+ | //How:// | ||
+ | * Most meetings have //notes// for future reference and for the benefit of those who did not attend. Assign a note-taker, but anyone should have permission to edit the notes. Notes should be archived, easily found and searched. | ||
+ | * How to take good notes is a separate topic and may depend on agreed norms. | ||
+ | * Most meetings also have //action items//. All action items should list a responsible individual and a deadline. | ||
+ | * The organizer may send key takeaways and action items in a followup memo, so that they don't get lost in the notes that we won't consistently reference. | ||
+ | |||
+ | === Everyone knows the norms. === | ||
+ | |||
+ | //Why:// We think as a group through wide participation and productive disagreement; | ||
+ | |||
+ | //How:// Agree on norms up front that establish accepted conduct in the meeting. In some meetings the group can borrow from company or team norms for this. In other meetings it is helpful to establish norms for the conversation at hand. | ||
+ | |||
+ | * Some norms I prefer to always have in place: | ||
+ | * Criticize ideas, not people. | ||
+ | * Assume good intentions. | ||
+ | * Be curious and ask clarifying questions. | ||
+ | * Bring a growth-oriented mindset. | ||
+ | * Help one another identify our group' | ||
+ | * Prefer " | ||
+ | * Some norms I find helpful in some settings, but not all: | ||
+ | * What's shared in the room stays in the room / no attribution in notes. | ||
+ | * Raise hands to indicate a desire to speak / no interruptions. | ||
+ | * Everyone must speak up at least once. | ||
+ | |||
+ | I want to give special attention to encouraging participation. I've heard many leaders use the mantra " | ||
+ | |||
+ | * Free-form discussion | ||
+ | * Giving everyone an explicit chance to speak, or facilitator calling on people. | ||
+ | * Asynchronous discussion in the notes doc or meeting chat (careful to be inclusive) | ||
+ | * Open pulse-check votes or anonymous polls. | ||
+ | * The parking lot - have a shared space (whiteboard, | ||
+ | |||
+ | A skilled facilitator has a lot of power to encourage participation. From the old HBR article, "draw out the silent... protect the weak... come to the most senior people last." | ||
+ | |||
+ | === All necessary roles are filled. === | ||
+ | |||
+ | Clear roles also help keep things moving and minimize unproductive conflict | ||
+ | * The // | ||
+ | * The // | ||
+ | * The // | ||
+ | |||
+ | === Other sources on meeting practices | ||
[[https:// | [[https:// | ||
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[[https:// | [[https:// | ||
+ | ===== Types of meetings ===== | ||
+ | |||
+ | (TODO) team meetings, workstream meetings, project meetings, issue meetings, leadership meetings, planning meetings, retrospectives... | ||