How using a shared meeting agenda will 10x your one-on-ones
You’ll share context before the meeting
In our 2019 State of one-on-ones report, we learned than 49% of managers have one-on-ones weekly and 57% of managers meet for 30 minutes. It’s easy to spend those 30 minutes playing catch-up. If you have, “What was done last week?” on your weekly meeting agenda, and spend 5-10 minutes discussing it in your one-on-one, that’s 1/3 of your time together—poof, gone.
With a shared agenda, your direct report can share all of the pertinent updates well before the meeting, saving valuable time in your meeting together to discuss things like feedback, growth and development. Another way to put it is that shared agendas enable you and your employees to do “pre-work” before your one-on-ones.
You’ll create a two-way dialogue
If you’re a manager that finds you’re constantly dominating the conversation in one-on-ones, you’re not alone. Many managers find themselves filling the silence in meetings, often with status updates. A big reason why this happens is because the manager unintentionally hoards the agenda. Making the agenda a collaborative effort, will naturally open more two-way dialogue.
22% of managers say their biggest challenge when it comes to one-on-one meetings is getting their direct reports to contribute to the agenda.
When you have a shared agenda that both the manager and employee can contribute to, then you give your direct reports more power over the conversation. If you’re hiding meeting agendas in calendar invites and notebooks, how can you expect employees to add to the discussion?
You’ll have more focused conversations
Having a shared meeting agenda will not only allow you to better prepare before the meeting, but it will drive more focused discussions. Going into any meeting without an agenda results in tangents, but when you only have 30 minutes together weekly—that time is precious.
Knowing what’s on the agenda before coming into the meeting, you can prioritize your agenda items and allot the appropriate amount of time for each topic. Maybe you’ve got a stacked one-on-one meeting and need to schedule a 15-minute follow-up, or maybe your agenda is on the lighter side and you finally have time to review the peer-feedback you’ve been sitting on for a month.
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