3 Tips For Managing Too Many Meetings

Episode 445 | Author: Emilie Aries

What you can do when the meeting melee becomes unmanageable.

How many meeting invites did you accept this week?

The discussion around excessive meetings has been a hot topic lately. Recent research shows that 70% of all meetings are keeping employees from completing their tasks, rather than providing the information and connection necessary for stronger work. On top of that, a 2022 article in Harvard Business Review reported that “ineffective meetings that waste our time can negatively impact psychological, physical, and mental well-being.” Yikes!

Turning down a meeting is easier said than done. Your organization’s established company culture and concern for professional relationships, among other factors, can make it anxiety-inducing to even consider clicking anything but that little “yes” box. However, figuring out how to navigate this field can not only win you back some of the time you lose to endless check-ins and stand-ups—it can also help turn the tide on how your company as a whole approaches meetings. 

On today’s episode, I cover three steps that can help reduce the number of meetings you’re beholden to. 

#1: Respectfully request more information

Chances are, most of your meeting invites come with just three details: when, where, and with whom. The description field is too often left empty, which leaves you with next to no information about what you’re being called to attend.

The first step to tackling your meeting surplus is to figure out which meetings are actually necessary. The best way to do this is to reach out to the coworker who sent the invite and request an agenda, a reason for your inclusion in the invite, or simply a bit more context. If you have a bit of the people pleaser about you, you can frame this as wanting to ensure you’re properly prepared.

In her book The Art of Gathering: How We Meet and Why It Matters, Priya Parker says that whatever the get-together—be it a conference, baby shower, or team meeting—if the objective isn’t clear from the start, then it hasn’t been developed with intention. If whoever invited you doesn’t have an answer to your very reasonable question, it’s time to consider step two.

#2: Dare to decline

As much as some company culture edicts want us to believe it, clicking the “no” option in your meeting invite won’t cause your computer or your company to explode. If you don’t think you will contribute to the meeting or you don’t think it’s a productive use of your time, it’s ok to decline! And if the mere thought of that ramps up your heart rate, you can always click “maybe.”

Dreading the decline is completely understandable. We all want to be team players and appear supportive, especially when invites roll in from someone more senior. When step #1 proves a lack of forethought behind the invite, though, your “meeting” issue turns into one of relationship management.

By actively managing key relationships with your boss and other stakeholders in the company, the concept of saying no starts feeling less like a threat. You can frame your questions or veto as a newfound focus on bringing agendas to all your meetings or as a sign of your goal to amp up your productivity to deliver 110%. However you approach it, broaching the discussion around no longer having meetings for meetings’ sake can lead the way to a significant positive impact on your organization. 

#3: Transition from micro to macro

Questioning the meeting culture in your company is an act of leadership in and of itself, and it can certainly take a lot of social capital to feel comfortable doing this. But once you’ve started putting steps 1 and 2 into practice, you can start to increase the reach of your initiative.

Take a look at all the repeating time blocks on your calendar. How productive are those daily, weekly, or bi-weekly meetings? Often, they’re essentially status updates, which suggests an inefficient transfer of information across teams. Solid project management software or a well-run dashboard can largely take their place, outlining the key performance indicators (KPIs) and making it possible for you (or the team supervisor) to see where everyone is at any given moment.

All this is not to say that meetings are pointless. There is undoubtedly a time and place for the cross-pollination of ideas and face-to-face (digitally or IRL) team-building time. But it’s vital—to your company’s bottom line and employee wellbeing—to drill down on what’s essential and cut anything that doesn’t meet the mark.

Is your workplace guilty of too many meetings? If you’ve taken, or are considering taking, these or any other steps, visit our Courage Community on Facebook or join us in our group on LinkedIn. Share what’s holding you back or how your approach to curbing meeting immoderation played out!

Related Links From Today’s Episode:

Harvard Business Review article, “Dear Manager, You’re Holding Too Many Meetings”

The Art of Gathering: How We Meet and Why It Matters by Priya Parker

My LinkedIn course, “Asserting Yourself: An Empowered Choice 

Bossed Up Accelerator - Level Up  

Bossed Up Courage Community

Bossed Up LinkedIn Group

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