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Making Meetings Matter -  James Ware

Making Meetings Matter (eBook)

How Smart Leaders Orchestrate Powerful Conversations in the Digital Age

(Autor)

eBook Download: EPUB
2016 | 1. Auflage
200 Seiten
Indie Books International (Verlag)
978-1-941870-52-5 (ISBN)
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It is common to feel that corporate meetings are a waste of time. Time that could be better spent getting 'real work' done. But it doesn't have to be that way. This book is dedicated to the proposition that meetings can be meaningful, productive, and even fun-all at the same time. We need to bring business meetings into the digital age in the same way that we have reinvented business planning and written communication. In a technology-rich world filled with people working flexibly, remotely, and across multiple time zones, the way we lead meetings is out of alignment with 21st-century organizational reality. This book is all about reinventing the business meeting. It offers advice and guidance for streamlining and strengthening all kinds of corporate conversations; but it focuses where it should, on the formal meetings that fill up over 50 percent of most managers' calendars.
It is common to feel that corporate meetings are a waste of time. Time that could be better spent getting "e;real work"e; done. But it doesn't have to be that way. This book is dedicated to the proposition that meetings can be meaningful, productive, and even fun-all at the same time. We need to bring business meetings into the digital age in the same way that we have reinvented business planning and written communication. In a technology-rich world filled with people working flexibly, remotely, and across multiple time zones, the way we lead meetings is out of alignment with 21st-century organizational reality. This book is all about reinventing the business meeting. It offers advice and guidance for streamlining and strengthening all kinds of corporate conversations; but it focuses where it should, on the formal meetings that fill up over 50 percent of most managers' calendars.

INTRODUCTION
Thank you for picking up Making Meetings Matter. If you are like most of us, you spend way too much time in bad meetings and other conversations at work that go nowhere.
How long has it been since you were in a meeting you felt was totally unproductive? Have you ever wished you had a Star Trek pocket communicator you could command to “Beam me up, Scotty” just to get away from yet another meaningless meeting? How long has it been since you led a meeting like that?
Be honest; it’s happened to every one of us.
Do you spend time in meetings thinking about the “real work” you are not getting done, or holding your smartphone in your lap and sneaking a peek at your e-mail inbox to see what’s going on out there in the real world? Or have you ever sent a surreptitious text asking a colleague to call you out of a meeting for some fake crisis or phone call from a “client” that just can’t wait?
Well, I’ve got a simple message for you: it doesn’t have to be that way.
This book is dedicated to the proposition that meetings can be meaningful, productive, and even fun—all at the same time.
Here’s why that is so important.
Not only has the world changed in the last twenty years, but the nature of work itself has changed too. Yet many organizations are still operating as if their employees just came from the farm to the city and need to be told what to do as they take their place on the assembly line. We’re still applying nineteenth-century industrial-age management practices in a twenty-first-century age of networked knowledge.
As a result, millions of people are unhappy at work, organizations are operating well below their potential, leaders like you are frustrated, and almost everyone feels stressed out. In spite of the recent uptick in the economy, no one I know believes things are working the way they should be.
At one level the problem is simple: the world has changed, but the way we lead and engage people has not. There is a terrible misalignment between the work and the workforce, on the one hand, and our leadership models and practices, on the other.
As Fast Company founder Alan Webber pointed out over twenty years ago, conversation is at the very heart of knowledge-based work. Yet most of us don’t recognize how dependent we are on conversations for learning, for making sense of our experiences, for building relationships, for innovation, and for sorting out how we feel about ourselves and our work.
My basic goal is to enhance organizational performance, but my passion is to improve the daily experiences of those millions of people who feel unhappy, disengaged, and under-utilized at work.
The beauty of the way knowledge-based organizations operate is that the more engaged—and the more respected—workers are, the more productive they are, and the happier their customers are as well. And almost all successful organizations today are knowledge-based; even retail stores and factories depend on people who are well-educated, computer-literate, and self-directed.
The best way to improve the work experience—and to enhance productivity, increase engagement, and make work fun again— is to change the way all those meetings are designed, led, and experienced.
You’ve heard all about low employee engagement and excessive employee turnover as organizations struggle to create attractive work environments and opportunities for satisfying work.
The best, most effective way of addressing those serious organizational challenges isn’t by attacking them directly. It is by rethinking and transforming those millions of meetings and other corporate conversations that take place in hallways, offices, and conference rooms around the globe.
Too many of us don’t know how to talk to—make that “talk with”—each other about things that matter. We don’t know how to listen thoughtfully, and we don’t know how to blend diverse insights, ideas, and experiences into coherent and creative solutions. Frankly, we aren’t very good at encouraging others to engage with us in meaningful conversations.
Let me amend that: most of us already do know how to talk with each other. We do it all the time at home, at social gatherings, in pubs and coffee houses, and wherever we meet each other outside the workplace.
Curiously, however, we don’t seem to have the right conversational mindset at work. We may have a conversational skillset, but we don’t use it effectively to draw out the latent talent, ideas, and insights that are locked inside the heads of our fellow employees.
In my experience, most team and meeting leaders seem to believe their primary role is to tell their staff what to do.
But telling isn’t leading. Yes, part of the role of a leader is to articulate a compelling vision of the future, and to guide the team towards that goal; but in a world that’s swimming in information and filled with knowledgeable people, leadership is really about enabling collaboration and group decision making on a grand scale. That means engaging people in meaningful conversations. As my friend
David Isaacs likes to put it, collaboration is the art of blending a collection of individual intelligences into a collective intelligence.
We Need New Rules—and Cool Tools—for the Digital Age
A senior Japanese technology executive and I were speaking about the future of work. In typical American overstatement I blurted out “Technology is changing everything!” He responded immediately, “Then we have to change everything about the way we manage.”
I think about that exchange often, because at the time I thought he was exaggerating (and of course I knew I was). But now, in hindsight, I don’t think either one of us realized how insightful that conversation was.
As I have already suggested, the world has changed so much that we have to change the way we lead organizations, teams, and especially the conversations we engage in on a daily basis. In this book I propose a number of “rules” for generating engaging conversations and productive meetings.
Some of them, especially those that take digital technologies into account, are new, but many have been around for decades. I will also suggest several new—and very cool—tools that can make your conversations soar.
However, this is not a book about technology. I have no desire to see technology replacing thoughtful leadership or meaningful conversations. Yet in this world of networked knowledge, where we connect with others halfway around the world as easily and inexpensively as with our colleagues across the hallway, we have become highly dependent on technology to make those connections come alive. So it is important that we apply technology thoughtfully.
Like any other tools, collaborative technologies are only as helpful as we choose to make them.
Strength in Numbers
If there is one foundational principle I want you to embrace, it is this: No one—no single individual—is smarter than everyone.
I first heard that assertion from former business executive and author Rod Collins, and I will be forever grateful to him for that wonderful way of capturing such an important idea. We are far more capable as members of a cohesive team or a collective “hive mind” than we are as individuals. There is strength in numbers. It does take a village. We can accomplish so much more together than we can separately.
One more time: the way we work has changed, fundamentally and forever. Technology has transformed the way we access and publish information, as well as the way we communicate with each other and form relationships. But that’s only the beginning: work itself has changed as well, and so have the people doing that work.
As Father John Culkin, SJ, of Fordham University, suggested many years ago in a conversation with Marshall McLuhan, “We shape our tools and then our tools shape us.”
Except that, as I believe, habits built during the industrial revolution have become so ingrained that most organizational leaders don’t seem to recognize how much the world has changed. They are failing to take advantage of the new tools that are reshaping how we communicate, how we work, and how we learn. Worse, their beliefs and attitudes are actively preventing their organizations from thriving in this new age of networked knowledge.
Father Culkin wasn’t wrong; he just didn’t realize how long it would take for these new tools to reshape us.
Don’t let yourself be, or remain, an industrial-age leader. From this day forward embrace the new economy, take advantage of the new tools, and come with me on an exciting journey into the future of work.
We must learn all over again how to enable constructive conversations in this age of networked knowledge. But let’s go way beyond merely rethinking those conversations. Until we transform the way we engage with each other at work we are doomed to continuing anger, frustration, and subpar organizational performance.
Your Leadership Opportunity—and Your Obligation
As an organizational leader you have an incredible opportunity— and an equally...

Erscheint lt. Verlag 5.2.2016
Sprache englisch
Themenwelt Wirtschaft
ISBN-10 1-941870-52-X / 194187052X
ISBN-13 978-1-941870-52-5 / 9781941870525
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