Meeting Mindfulness Tips
We all want to remember that the foundation for effective communication is mutual respect to be shared among members. One aspect of executive team communication is how we listen to each other in our deliberations, namely when we meet. Implicit bias towards women leaders, our uniqueness as extravert or introverts, whether we are verbal processors or data gatherers, dictates what's most helpful for us to have a meaningful exchange of information (to communicate). The primary way we communicate in work settings is by exchanging information in meetings.
As you consider your role in team meetings, consider how you might implement some of the following strategies to increase equitable opportunities for all voices to be heard, especially in meeting settings. These sorts of activities can happen when we're in virtual meetings - but we need to be a tad savvy with the whiteboard features and use of time-protected breakout rooms for reporting back out. It's a challenge, for sure! And only some meetings are planned for an hour or more, where many of these activities can more easily take place. Strengthening your communication protocols with buy-in from everyone with a commitment to practice equitable opportunities for everyone to be heard and to provide safety and opportunity for other team members to be heard are action opportunities for your team. And stay tuned, as it matters where you sit in your meetings.
Meeting Communication Strategies for Equitable Participation
Use strategies like these shared here to allow for equity of voice when feedback is needed and decisions are to be processed as a team. Committing to practice strategies such as these helps protect against some team members becoming disengaged because of not easily entering the conversation. This may occur because others often talk too frequently or interrupt more than we realize.
1. Practice Different Roles in a Team Meeting
Assigning team members different roles will keep the meeting focused and within agreed-upon guidelines. Switch roles across other meetings. The assignments increase engagement, and help model what behavior is beneficial in meetings. Consider appointing a leader, facilitator, timekeeper, notetaker, tech host, or chat moderator (if online), a vibes watcher, a decision-maker, a promise tracker, a voice of the customer, and an enforcer. (See further descriptions in articles on meeting roles at the end of the blog.)
2. Use a Deck of Cards to Help Pace Verbal Participation
I love this strategy! Maybe because our family is card sharks. Pull a
3. Discern Agreement Quickly with Green, Yellow, and Red Feedback Squares
Another way we frustrate each other in meetings is when we revisit what we already agree on. Sometimes a leader senses what we all feel good about, and sometimes a leader may miss the cues. Simple squares of green, yellow, and red paper squares or pieces of cloth can provide simple nonverbal cues of agreement, a need for more information or cautiousness of that idea, or red indicating someone truly thinks that proposal is a no-go. By testing the feel of the room without words, time can be saved, and sentiment can be assessed to know which topics or ideas should be picked up and pursued further for understanding.
4. Use a Shared Google Doc or Other Online Document
Have members record feedback on the assigned question or item for discussion on a shared online document. This is especially helpful when people are tired or after a period of too much conversation or verbal work. It's an excellent remedy when a recent discussion was not equitable, and in hindsight, you realize a member or two dominated the landscape.
The pause in conversation will have elicited a spirit of calm and given the brain a chance to renew before further discernment is needed in conversation. You may be tempted to assign this asynchronously. Still, there is energy and urgency when we gather even virtually, if necessary, and simultaneously work on the same problem.
I use another 10+ strategies for building equitable voice opportunities in meetings that I'd happily share with you. Email me, and the document full of meeting mindfulness ideas is yours!
Physical Proximity in Meetings
In addition to how we organize opportunities for our teams to creatively problem-solve, hear each other, work towards decisions, deal
Be mindful of the purpose of your meeting, its length, who is invited/expected, and the various roles played in the meeting. Paying attention to where people sit and taking responsibility to change those positions and experiment with participation rates is worth the effort. Mix it up and try some of the structures shared here for fun, variety, and, most importantly, building more equity of voice in the room. Contact me, and I'll happily send you more pages of meeting mindfulness resource ideas.
Transforming influence alongside you,