Guest-blogger and co-author of ‘Meeting Together’ Lois Graessle shares some thoughts on mess, meetings and what we can all do to transform our world. These thoughts were part of the keynote speech she gave for a Bucks New University graduation ceremony at which she received an honorary degree.

When I was growing up in Jacksonville, Florida, we had the chocolates called M&Ms at all of our family celebrations. Little did I know then that M&Ms would take on a whole new meaning in my adult and working life.

Today when I think of M&M’s, they stand for two things I’m on a mission to change: ‘Mess’ and ‘Meetings’.

The challenge
We have made ‘mess’ and ‘meetings’ into monsters, usually groaning at the mention of either. Yet they are what we do as human beings – we make messes and we meet to try to sort them out. We are not bad. That’s what we do.

I want to offer you a simple way to turn mess and meetings – and messy meetings – from monsters into a satisfying challenge. And I want to show you their link to world peace! So I am going to share with you a secret agenda for meetings, tell you a story – and give you a little bit of homework.

These are difficult times. Public services are in a particular mess. There is chaos and confusion and uncertainty in most services and in the policies about services.

In this situation, many of us are overwhelmed – we may feel hopeless, powerless, depressed and cynical.

Yet it is often in the most challenging times that we step up as our best as human beings. ‘Mess’ can be the raw material out of which we create new ways of living and working together. And the instant communities we call ‘meetings’ are where we come together to do this.

If we can transform a meeting, we can change a world.

The secret agenda
At the heart of what I have learned in all these years is the secret agenda, no matter what the official agenda. It is the agenda that will help you develop your own potential and find your distinctive contribution.

It will help you avoid a sense of powerlessness and cynicism in these circumstances – because I think they are waste of your precious life energy.

This agenda will help you with job interviews too: they are another kind of meeting!

This three- part secret agenda is a simple way to tap into your true power:

1 Meet yourself first.
Meetings are opportunities for your own personal and professional growth In preparing for a meeting – no matter what the business, face yourself, honestly. Ask yourself: what one thing can I do to develop my own potential and contribute effectively to this group?

2 Connect with someone.
Meetings are a gathering of people: connect first and only then get on with the business.

Before the meeting starts, connect with someone else. It could be a person you have been avoiding, someone who really irritates you – or simply a colleague you haven’t talked with for a while. Greet them.

3 Keep your promises.
After the meeting, reflect on what you learned about yourself. Keep your promises – to yourself and to the group.

This review is critical – your aim is to make this portable and secret agenda a habit for each and every meeting – no matter what the business.

The story
Let me tell you a story about how a colleague did this.

Tuyen was a refugee from Vietnam, one of the boat people. Her husband and child had died on that journey.

As a community worker for Refugee Action, she supported women and children. She had to go to many meetings with local authorities and health authorities. In one particular meeting, she told me, she always left feeling patronised and ignored and never able to get her point across. She felt intimated by several members of the group and humiliated that she was not doing right by the women and children she worked with.

Tuyen said she realised that these meetings were as new a culture to her as Great Britain had been – and that she needed to learn this other language and culture in order to know how to work more effectively.

This is what she did. She decided that before each meeting, she would go up and greet one of the people who was most intimidating. Doing this, she observed, let her move from fear to the strength of her dignity. This courage to face what intimidated her the most also made her more effective in the meeting.

She found her way.

Remember, this was the agenda she used:

- before the meeting, face yourself truthfully
- at the meeting, start by genuinely connecting with someone else
- afterwards, review what you learned about yourself and keep your promises.

Yesterday I was talking with a team leader and asked her what she found the most difficult thing about managing staff. Instantly she replied: “people who do their job properly – but without heart”.

Teachers and healers, your true agenda is people, their hearts and minds.

I hope this helps you.

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If you’re looking for effective meeting training, our ‘Making Meetings Magic’ workshops offer the basics on how to implement these ideas and are available in-house to your company or also through our public workshops across the UK.

Time Management Training has changed! Click here to find out about our productivity-focussed Time management workshops, email training and facilitation training.

 

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When people walk into a room for a meeting, they’ll pick up lots of things in the first few moments. They will only be conscious of a few of them but all will make a difference to how they feel and what they say and do when they’re in the room. If you’re the person chairing the meeting that matters a lot. So … be there a bit early so you can prepare the space:

remove old coffee cups and papers left over by the previous occupants of the room have a kettle boiling with hot water or prepared flasks so people can be welcomed with a cup of something warming;

Open the window if it’s stuffy, close it if it’s noisy;

Put chairs so there’s one for everyone you expect to come; if you’re not sure who’ll turn up, have some spare in the corner;

If there’s a flip chart, write up the name of the meeting, with the day and date maybe adding ‘welcome’ – so that when people arrive they can relax because they know straightaway that they’ve made it to the right place;

If you’re facilitating an awayday, you might bring some flowers to put in the corner or some chocolates to share round.

These kind of things will give people the message ‘you matter’. So if you really do think they matter, let people know – by the subconscious messages they receive. And if they know that you think they matter, they’ll probably be more forthcoming in the meeting – because they’ll know that you think what they say matters too.

Think Productive provide workshops in chairing meetings training. Our workshops are designed to help you get the most out of your meeting, our goal is to help you making meetings magic

See Time to Think – listening to ignite the human mind; Nancy Kline; Ward Lock Chapter 11

Meetings are all too often the part of our workday that we feel is wasted, but it doesn’t have to be that way. Our Making Meetings Magic workshop teaches a range of techniques that you can use both as a participant and as a chair in order to do just that: it’s like Facilitation training but with a practical approach that uses participants’ actual meeting planning to really make a difference whilst embedding the learning. We focus on the time management aspect of meetings, but also on the politics, the nuances and the logistics too. Magic!