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How To
Prepare For Meetings
- Try to invite people on two to three different occasions
to ensure their attendance;
- Make a formal invitation, usually in person or by telephone
at least two weeks in advance.
- Send a follow-up confirmation note and agenda after attendance
has been confirmed.
- Try for a reminder. Have an assistant call to remind
attendees about the meeting, or mention it to them yourself, in conversation.
- As the chairman, preparing an agenda in advance helps
you to;
- Determine what items you want to cover;
- Communicate to participants what is to be considered
and what is expected of them;
- Create order and control at the meeting;
- Establish standards by which the success of the meeting
can be measured.
- Circulate your agenda in advance. If you can't, write
it on a flip chart or white board before participants arrive. The agenda
should include:
- The purpose of the meeting, stated in one succinct
sentence;
e.g. "To review and agree details of the annual budget";
- The start time and finish time;
- Meeting location, including street address, floor,
room number and map if necessary;
- A list of who will be attending, and their titles;
- Individual items to be covered, and action items on
each
- Put simple announcements at the beginning of the meeting,
to warm up the group.
- Start and finish the meeting with positive items.
- If someone else is preparing the agenda, approach them
beforehand to make sure your items are on the list for discussion.
- Consider starting meetings at oddball times, such as
10:08 am.
- Schedule a meeting for late in the day if you want
it to be short. Business has a tendency to move quickly as it approaches
five o'clock.
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