The YourSpace Project

a class blog for Indiana Wesleyan University students

Archive for September 4th, 2008

Make Meetings Better

Posted by Russ Ray on September 4, 2008

This not only applies to the workplace, but also your project teams. My wife’s project team had the worst problem with meeting on Saturday mornings to get work done, but instead spent the time gossiping and talking instead of working. She would leave the meetings feeling like her time away from her family was wasted and nothing got done.

So here they are in two parts: The three rules of meeting etiquette and the five rules of engagement for effective meetings.

Three rules of meeting etiquette

  • Every meeting has a start time and an end time. That means it starts on time and ends on time. If someone is chronically late to meetings, the others must bring peer pressure to bear on that individual. If most of a company’s executives exhibit this trait, then find another company. It’s a sign of immaturity and disrespect for others.
  • Every meeting is run by someone who is responsible for every aspect of the meeting including agenda, attendance, punctuality, and documentation. That person keeps everyone on topic and moves the meeting along using the methods described below.
  • Key decisions that are reached during the meeting regarding strategies, plans or objectives should be published by whoever ran the meeting within one day. That also goes for follow-up or action required and an owner for each item.

Five rules of engagement for effective meetings

  • Listening is good. Gratuitous speech is bad. Silence means consent. Don’t chime in just to hear your own voice.
  • Presenting new ideas or brainstorming is good. Knocking down another’s idea is bad. There’s a time for reaching consensus.
  • Attack the problem or issue, not the person you disagree with. “I don’t agree with you” is okay, but “I think you’re an idiot” isn’t.
  • Stay on topic, but don’t beat a dead horse. Save other subjects for other meetings. Use a “parking lot” for important issues that may need to be revisited at a later date.
  • Be open, honest, and forthcoming. Don’t hold back, bullshit, or sugar-coat issues. This is especially critical in meetings where key decisions are based on the information presented.

Don’t just follow these rules yourself; teach them to others. Present them at meetings you conduct. Make work life easier and less frustrating for all your fellow employees and help to make your company more successful. It’ll pay off big-time in the long run.

Posted in Business, Conflict, Team Dynamics | Leave a Comment »

Think Faster and Better on Your Feet

Posted by Russ Ray on September 4, 2008

The Bible also has something to say about being “nothing without somebody else”: “Two are better than one because they have a good return for their labor. For if either of them falls, the one will lift up his companion. But woe to the one who falls when there is not another to lift him up. Furthermore, if two lie down together they keep warm, but how can one be warm alone? And if one can overpower him who is alone, two can resist him. A cord of three strands is not quickly torn apart.” (Eccl. 4:9 – 12)

CNN Living and Real Simple suggest stealing a few tricks from improv actors to help you think better and faster on your feet—and look better in real world situations.

Make everyone else in your group look good. How it works: Here’s what you learn in improv: You’re nothing without somebody else. There’s nothing to improvise without someone to improvise with. The more you trust others to be your props, the more you invite them to shine, the stronger you get.

Despite some heavy-handed improv 101 lessons (if you ever heard anyone “yes… and” like that, you’d think they were insane), the ideas are still useful. If you regularly apply any of these improv ideas to the real world, let’s hear about it in the comments.

Posted in Communication, Team Dynamics | Leave a Comment »

Print Is Dead

Posted by Russ Ray on September 4, 2008

Considering that most people get their news now from cable networks and web sites, the daily newspaper is struggling to remain financially viable. Consider these facts:

Gannett, which owns many large newspapers including the Indianapolis Star and USA Today, recently announced that they were cutting 1,000 jobs because of a decline in revenue. This loss of revenue comes from classified ads and other advertising, blamed on Craigslist and other online advertising.

An online paper covering news in a fictitious world populated by penguins has become more widely read than New York’s Daily News, the Chicago Tribune, or the Dallas Morning News. This particular web site is owned by Disney.

Posted in Communication, Internet, Mass Media | Leave a Comment »