Meeting strategies
Contents |
Abstract
A meeting is a formal or informal event where individuals meet either face-to-face or virtually (by the use of audio or video conference tools). In projects, groups of people need to discuss, align, inform etc., hence there exists numerous purposes and needs for meetings. They are essential for collaboration and decision making in a project and revolve around key project management activities such as cost, scheduling and quality.
Research reveals that even though managers spend more than 50% of their time in meetings, many meetings fail[1]. Project managers often need to not only participate frequently in meetings, but also plan, facilitate and evaluate meetings throughout the entire project life cycle and especially during the execution phase. Project Managers can use this as an opportunity to implement strategies for creating and managing effective meetings.
The purpose of this article is to provide a framework and guidelines for project managers to consider and implement in projects. In order to develop an in-dept framework, this article builds on state-of-the-art research and studies on meetings from leading universities and standards on project management from PMI BOK.
Meeting guidelines and methodology is based on contributions and experience from the construction and pharmaceutical industries. Research is conducted through interviews and data provided by industry managers such as: construction managers, and project managers from both industries. Is it the aim of this article, that the methodology provided is applicable in other industries too.
The key benefit for a project manager when planning an approach to meetings is that it identifies the approach to communicate most effectively and efficiently, both internal in the project team and with stakeholders. Developing a strategy for meetings can save the project time and costs and on same time keep project team members motivated.
Too many meetings fail
“Meetings are often unnecessary or badly run” claims the authors of “Kill bad meetings”. They support this statement with industry research, scientific studies and conducted by the authors themselves.
Unnecessary meetings: They’ve found that up to half of the content in meetings is not relevant to participants or could be delivered in other, more simple ways.
Badly run meetings: many meetings that need to happen fail to deliver outcome effectively and does not encourage participation (kilde).
When investigating the truth in this statement similar examples from other sources show similar results: - In a study made by Microsoft 69% of the 38.000 participants felt meetings weren't productive [2] - People spend an average of 2 days per week in meetings and 50% of it is wasted [kill] - A 2012 survey by salary.com found "too many meetings” to be the #1 timewaster at the office, with 47% of votes, up from #3 in 2008 [salary.com]
The last analysis points towards that either the quality of meetings is worsening, or that the amount of meetings is increasing. A Harvard Business Review-article from 2016 “Collaborative Overload by Cross, Rebele and Grant” claims that over the last 20 years the time spent by people in collaborative activities (meetings, calls, emails etc.) has increased by 50% or more.
The effect of bad meetings are many and can turn into inhibitors in projects: - Meetings are huge costs in projects. Example: a managerial / professional person in Europe or the USA costs around $100,000 to employ (at 2017 prices). $40,000 of this is spent directly in attending meetings. Preparation for meetings is in addition to this, and internal meetings are also a major driver of business travel costs (kilde). In addition to this, time spent in meetings is also time not spent on individual work – many meetings and interruptions can postpone important tasks for an individual. - People attending meetings perceived as ineffective are affected at the end of the workday and it affects their overall job satisfaction. Employees feel stress, dissatisfied with their jobs and the study reveals that they are more likely to leave their job.“The Science and Fiction of Meetings” These two reasons are big challenges for a project manager. Reaching overall goals: deliver projects on time and under budget within scope is threatened and the risk increases when there is no control.
Causes for bad meetings vary, but general causes include: - In many project organizations, the whole field of “meetings” is unmanaged. Who call, run and attend meetings and how often is often not agreed. - Unmanaged meetings generate unmanaged costs. In the example earlier, more than 40% of one resource’s cost and time is spent in meetings. Is less than 60% time enough to manage / work individually on a project? - Today, development projects are becoming more complex within product and service development. Higher complexity often needs people with different specialties and big project organizations. This can also result in more unmanaged meetings. (reference for complexity: course lit)
Project lifecycle in phases
Splitting up a project into phases allows project management to plan and control progress throughout a project lifecycle. In this article, the partition of projects will simplify when the load is highest and when strategizing needs to be done, in order to succeed with managing meetings.
A project manager will manage meetings throughout the whole project. Some meetings such as a project status meeting or budget meeting can be recurring from beginning to end. Other meetings are only relevant in one phase and some only happen once.
In order to prepare for meetings and assess impact, the manager identifies current challenges in one phase in relation to the achieving overall project goal. A useful method for this is to identify project phases.
A project phase consists of related project activities sharing a goal. Completing activities will strive towards reaching the goal and entering next project phase. Project phases can occur iteratively. In some cases, new findings occur in the executing phase which demands project teams to make changes in scope and revisit the planning phase. There is no one-size-fits-all-model to describe project phases for every project. Projects are unique and various industries have various project models. However, most projects go through following four phases:
Initiation - Define new project/new phase of existing project - Define initial scope and finances - Stakeholders that influence overall outcome will be identified - PM will be selected - Project charter/mission statement including business case needs approval to complete this phase
Planning - Scope is refined and objectives are found - Project (core) team is established - PM-plan and project plan are created - Shared documents and platforms within project are created including documents about: scope, time, cost, quality, communication, stakeholder engagement, risks, procurement, human resources etc. - Information related to project is gathered
Execution - Other project participants might be discovered - Work defined in plan made in previous phase is performed and completed, unless severe changes are discovered. In this case, there might be a need for an iteration back to the planning phase. - People and resources are coordinated, stakeholder expectations are managed, activites of project are integrated and performed in accordance with plan. Results requiring updates and needing to revisiting planning phase include: activity durations, pricing, unanticipated risks.
Closing Completing of project include: - closing contracts - Archive data - Closeout procurement - Evaluate and note learnings and reviews.
Project activity in phases
Figure 2 shows a generic, high-level view of how the cost and staffing level evolve across the project life cycle. Cost and staffing level are low at the start, increases when the project is carried out and decreases fast in the closing phase (PMI).
This indicates that throughout the whole execution phase, knowing how to structure time spent is of high importance, since many people are involved and costs are at the highest. Creating structure and a plan for meeting management early in the project (prior to execution) helps to maintain focus and efficiency when costs are high.
Meeting strategies
Successful communication in a project underpins accurate message deliveries, sufficient communication to stakeholders, higher level of employee involvement and the ultimate success of any project.
In most projects, planning communication occurs early in the planning phase and can be included in the project management plan. This allows the manager to appropriately consider resources, such as time and costs in communication activities.
Listed below are suggestions for meeting strategies for the project manager to consider. Research relies on several scientific studies.
Avoiding unnecessary meetings
Setting up guidelines in projects for when it is ok to invite to a meeting is one strategy to avoid the meetings not creating value in projects. Indicators for when there is a need for a meeting are listed here: - when unresolved issues are inhibiting the progress of a project or interdependent projects(MIT) - a big decision needs to be made - idea generation - a compelling agenda is distributed prior to the meeting - celebration of reaching a milestone
In other cases, communication is needed but not in meetings. This can often be identified as the type of communication where only one person needs to speak. Examples are: - Updates - Delivery of information - Presentations
All the above can often be delivered in an email, via a phone call or in an informal meeting with only two people. Information can often be found in existing repositories (reports/internal knowledge sharing portals). When a person chooses to invite other(s) to a meeting to deliver information they could have found themselves, the meeting becomes costly mismanaged time for all involved. This is an example of one bad effect, when meetings aren’t managed.
In some projects, meeting free days are introduced where participants have to reject meetings occurring on their meeting free day. In other projects it is allowed for participants to select amongst meetings to attend. When selecting, a small checklist similar to figure 3 can be used (MANGLER FIGUR)
Limitations
- Cultural change: is your company ready? Time and money consuming to prepare (more) for meetings. - Team effort: it takes collective effort to change meeting norms. - Conflict with being the manager and meeting facilitator on same time: two different roles. Manager need to focus on other goals than waking people's attention in a meeting.