Stop Having Meetings About Meetings: How Facilitation Actually Gets Things Done
The Hidden Cost of Bad Meetings
It’s Also About Innovation
Steps for Effective Meetings
Step 1: Design for Outcomes, Not Topics
Most meetings fail before they even start because they’re organized around topics instead of outcomes.
Instead of: “Let’s discuss our marketing strategy.” Try: “By the end of this session, we’ll have agreed on our top three marketing priorities for Q4 and assigned ownership for each one.”
Step 2: Separate Divergent and Convergent Thinking
Here’s where most strategic sessions go wrong: they try to generate ideas and make decisions at the same time. Your brain can’t do both effectively.
Divergent thinking is about exploring possibilities, brainstorming options, and considering different perspectives. Convergent thinking is about evaluating, prioritizing, and deciding.
When I facilitate innovation sessions, I structure them in distinct phases:
Phase 1: Expand (divergent)
- Generate as many ideas as possible
- Build on each other’s suggestions
- Suspend judgment completely
- Ask “What if?” and “How might we?”
Phase 2: Evaluate (convergent)
- Apply criteria for feasibility, impact, and alignment
- Combine similar ideas
- Eliminate options that don’t fit
- Make decisions about next steps
Step 3: Manage the Room Dynamics
Every meeting has personalities that can either help or hurt the conversation. The job of a facilitator is to leverage everyone’s strengths while managing their potential downsides. In many cases, having a neutral third-party facilitator can be a value-add. They allow all parties to contribute to the conversation, which can also increase the feeling of the whole team coming together. They can also manage participants without having to deal with internal relationship dynamics and can manage participants in ways that maybe internal leaders cannot.
Step 4: Build in Decision-Making Protocols
The biggest frustration I often hear is that meetings produce lots of discussion but no actual decisions. This happens when groups don’t have clarity on what decisions need to be made and who can make them.
Before starting any strategic conversation, clarify:
- Who has decision-making authority? Is this group making the final decision, or are we making recommendations to someone else?
- What’s our decision-making process? Consensus? Majority vote? Input from everyone with final decision by the leader?
- What information do we need to decide? This is a big one that often gets overlooked.
- What happens if we can’t reach an agreement today? Do we schedule another session or move forward with the best available option?
Step 5: End with Clear Next Steps
The best-facilitated session in the world is worthless if nobody knows what happens next.
Every facilitated meeting should end with:
What will be done? Who is responsible? When will it be completed? How will we know it’s done?
When to Bring in External Facilitation
Consider external facilitation when:
- The stakes are high, and you need maximum participation
- There are significant disagreements that need neutral mediation
- You want to participate fully in the discussion, not just manage it
- The group has a history of unproductive meetings
- You’re dealing with sensitive topics like organizational restructuring or performance issues.