Blog: My Unusual Road of Life....
by kerminator

Please Stop Using These Phrases in Meetings

Rae Ringel is the president of The Ringel Group, a leadership development consultancy specializing in facilitation, coaching, and training.

Date:   1/20/2022 2:44:11 AM   ( 31 mon ) ... viewed 1045 times


Meeting management

by Rae Ringel

January 11, 2022
Juan Moyano/Stocksy
Summary.

Some New Year’s resolutions are more attainable than others. Even at a time when so much is beyond our control, we remain in control of our own speech patterns. And so, as leaders and employees continue to rethink what the modern workplace should look like,...


It’s 50 minutes into an hour-long meeting. The final agenda item has been resolved, and it’s clear that we’ll be wrapping up early. Others may be pleased by this turn of events, but I cringe, bracing for the line that I know is coming: “I’m going to give you 10 minutes of your life back!”

Some version of this cheerful declaration seems to cap every meeting that ends with a few minutes to spare. It’s couched as welcome news, this unexpected gift of time. But language is generative, and the way we talk about our meetings comes to define what happens in those meetings. By framing a few extra minutes as an opportunity to give people their time “back,” as though that time had been wrongfully pilfered, we undermine our collaboration. We unwittingly send a powerful message that our organization’s gatherings take from team members, rather than contributing to our team’s collective accomplishments.

Even at a time when so much is beyond our control, we remain in control of our own speech patterns. And so, as leaders and employees continue to rethink what the modern workplace should look like, including how we gather, perhaps it’s an opportune moment to banish certain phrases from the “meeting-speak” lexicon. To learn what refrains others would be happy to never hear again in a meeting,

I did a bit of crowdsourcing on social media and among colleagues. Here are some of the responses that resonated the most.
We’re going to wait five minutes for everyone to join.

Often among the first words uttered by an online meeting host, this practice dishonors the time of those who joined on time and does nothing to establish a culture of punctuality for meetings. At the same time, there are legitimate reasons why an individual may be late to a Zoom meeting (or an in-person one).

To make the most of those inevitable few minutes when you’re waiting for stragglers, one idea is to start with brief tone-setting exercises. I often start by asking everyone to remove one distraction. That may mean moving something off their desk, opening a window in their room, or closing a window on their computer. Another exercise I like is asking everyone to write down their intention or objective for the meeting.

This isn’t something that will be shared publicly, but the practice of thinking about one’s objectives before a meeting begins can be grounding.
You’re on mute.

To be sure, these words quickly signal that a speaker needs to click the unmute button.

But the phrase — often uttered by multiple people at once — has become notoriously grating. It also makes the person on the receiving end of the comment feel silly, as though (two years into widespread remote work) they still don’t know how to locate the button with the microphone icon.

A colleague of mine suggests the gentler, more affirming, “If you’re speaking, I can’t hear you.” Instead of making the silent speaker feel silly, this reframing shows them that you truly want to hear what it is they have to say.
We’re building the plane while flying it.

A friend who works in humanitarian disaster response (and therefore has a keen sense of what might happen if you actually did this) offered up this pet peeve. “If that’s the case, your plane will crash!” he notes.

Many of us have heard this metaphor in many a meeting. But what is the speaker actually saying about the initiative being described? Is it flying at so quick a speed that we can’t be expected to understand or question its flaws?

Is this turn of phrase an excuse for haphazard execution? If not, perhaps we can be more specific by identifying the pieces of the project that we’ve figured out, what we’re still working on, what we don’t know yet, and how we plan to make adjustments based on what we learn.

Let’s take this offline.

Without a clear, quick mention of how and when this “offline” conversation will take place, this is a jargony way to dismiss someone’s idea and put them off indefinitely. And since any meaningful follow-up will likely take place online, it also no longer makes sense. Why not go with something like this: “That’s an important topic that’s beyond the scope of this meeting. I’ll email you when we wrap up.”
I’m going to give you 10 minutes of your life back.

I’ll close by coming back to this line, because it remains the one I’d be happiest never to hear again. This is not to say that I’m opposed to meetings that end early. But if they’re well-structured, well-run, and surprisingly concise, we should celebrate the fruits of our collaboration and look forward to our next gathering.

The next time you find yourself tempted to offer your teammates a few precious “minutes of their life back,” consider saying, “Wow. Because everyone was so productive, we’re done 10 minutes early. Thank you so much for your presence and participation. Have a great day.” This simple rephrasing has the power to reframe your work.


Read more on Meeting management or related topics Interpersonal communication and Management communication

Rae Ringel is the president of The Ringel Group, a leadership development consultancy specializing in facilitation, coaching, and training. She is a faculty member at the Georgetown University Institute for Transformational Leadership and founder of the Executive Certificate in Facilitation program.

Add This Entry To Your CureZone Favorites!

Print this page
Email this page
DISCLAIMER / WARNING   Alert Webmaster


CureZone Newsletter is distributed in partnership with https://www.netatlantic.com


Contact Us - Advertise - Stats

Copyright 1999 - 2024  curezone.org

0.053 sec, (2)

Back to blog!
 
Add Blog To Favorites!
 
Add This Entry To Favorites!

Comments (20 of 340):
Re: It is one thin… steve… 33 d
Re: What are the t… sarah… 4 mon
Re: Interesting PO… #3013… 5 mon
Re: It is one thin… desty… 7 mon
Re: Choose well or… madma… 7 mon
Re: Marriage is mu… jungl… 7 mon
Re: “Archaic Torso… jungl… 7 mon
Re: It is one thin… float… 7 mon
Re: It is one thin… tendo… 7 mon
Re: Truth is alway… noter… 8 mon
Re: It is one thin… Angel… 8 mon
Re: General Health kellyb… 9 mon
Re: Designed think… mike8… 9 mon
Re: Please Stop Us… colla… 9 mon
Re: Key vitamins e… willi… 10 mon
Re: What are the t… hemim… 10 mon
Re: Becoming bette… Vasqu… 11 mon
Re: Protein is a k… Calis… 11 mon
Re: Super-humans, … Ranbo… 11 mon
Re: Interesting PO… Sindu… 11 mon
All Comments (340)

Blog Entries (12 of 1932):
Please Stop Using These Phra…  31 mon
Often we do not understand o…  31 mon
Conquer Your Greatest Challe…  31 mon
What is the whole story on C…  31 mon
Spanish galleon San José  31 mon
Most of us are between a roc…  31 mon
Do you have the body you rea…  31 mon
How to do what you should!  31 mon
How to beat the CORONAVIRUS  31 mon
The First Lesson of Marriage…  31 mon
Here is the answer on how to…  31 mon
There is always a proper ans…  31 mon
All Entries (1932)

Blogs by kerminator (6):
My Quest for the Truth of Lif…  31 mon  (310)
Absolute Truth Some Wisdom an…  3 y  (291)
Ya’ think??  3 y  (275)
Brain Boot Camp or Mindset Ma…  26 mon  (224)
Southern Etiquette or life in…  3 y  (212)
Forgotten Words!  27 mon  (120)

Similar Blogs (10 of 185):
Superior WordPress …  by HowdyT  6 mon
Fassessor  by MargaretWagner  6 mon
Computer Hardware W…  by #300041  7 mon
Ann Taylor’s Ultima…  by HowdyT  7 mon
My News  by DetLew  7 mon
John Aube  by John Aube  7 mon
Criffy  by Criffy  8 mon
Situs Judi Online  by Jack306  9 mon
A Dive into MotoPre…  by HowdyT  9 mon
Canada Travel Blog  by opencities  9 mon
All Blogs (1,019)

Back to blog!
 

Lugol’s Iodine Free S&H
J.Crow’s® Lugol’s Iodine Solution. Restore lost reserves.



Kidney Stones Remedy
Hulda Clark Cleanses