“You still want meetings. Here’s how to make them useful.”

January 24, 2006

“Though meetings are harmful, you sometimes need to get together and work a problem out. Here are some tips to make sure nobody wastes their time.

1. Begin with a specific problem. Meetings are wild horses that always try to run off course. Yoke the meeting to a specific problem. “Improve the flow on the New Entry page” is better than “Talk about New Entry page.”

2. Meet on site. Meet at the site of the problem instead of the conference room. Get in front of the code, in front of the UI, and talk about it together. Point to real things and suggest real changes.

3. End with a solution and responsible parties. Your next action will be concrete if the problem is solved. You’re ready to go when you know what will be done and by whom. If you can’t find a concrete solution, end the meeting and come back when you understand the problem better.

4. Celebrate, shut up, and do something. Celebrate the solution. It’s good when heads come together and solve a problem. It’s great when they get back to work and build the damn thing.

Say ‘Done!’ then do it!”

from http://37signals.com/svn/archives2/you_still_want_meetings_heres_how_to_make_them_useful.php

from A systematic approach to cleaning up by Jason Womack

January 14, 2006

There are a few things I do, consistently, to get “back” to squeaky clean. One is my Weekly Overview.

Every 5-10 days, I take about an hour and a half to:

- take everything out of my briefcase and put it on my desk,

- go through my travel bags (suitcase and toiletries bag) and replace/restock anything that’s low,

- put any as-yet-unprocessed notes into the in-basket,

- review all the papers in my “Action support” file to make sure they are current,

- Check my calendar - 2 weeks back and 4 weeks ahead - to pull any reminders into my current todo list,

- Take an overview of my Projects List (my inventory of incomplete goals or deliverables) to reassess my commitment and decide an action (or several) to add to the todo list,

- Review my todo lists to check anything off that I did or add anything that has not been captured,

- open up and review the current “project folders” that I’m using (on average, anywhere from 4-8 folders) …


http://www.davidco.com/blogs/jason/archives/2004/06/a_systematic_ap.html

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