A Ten-Step Process for Team Leaders to Reduce Meeting Overload and Take Back Their Time

<p>A few months ago, I started a new job as the leader of a busy team of consultants. Within days of starting, I found myself inundated with meetings, and the expectation seemed to be that I represent our team at board meetings, client meetings, external engagements, you name it.</p> <p>Being eager to please my new boss, it&rsquo;s a role I&rsquo;ve happily played, with little thought to the consequences.</p> <p>But increasingly I&rsquo;ve found myself frustrated, compensating for my busy diary by doing all high value work between 06:00 am and 09:00 am, then staying late to mop up the emails I&rsquo;ve missed during the day &mdash; because I&rsquo;ve been in back-to-back meetings.</p> <p>While it increasingly appears to be the norm that&nbsp;<a href="https://hbswk.hbs.edu/item/you-re-right-you-are-working-longer-and-attending-more-meetings" rel="noopener ugc nofollow" target="_blank">people work longer hours</a>&nbsp;to keep up, it&rsquo;s hard to add any real value or critical thought when I spend my days surfing from meeting to meeting. And interestingly, my team has begun to mention that they would like me to provide more guidance on their work, which obviously I can&rsquo;t do if I&rsquo;m always in meetings.</p> <p><a href="https://medium.com/career-of-you/a-ten-step-process-for-team-leaders-to-reduce-meeting-overload-and-take-back-their-time-407cf1f8f09b"><strong>Read More</strong></a></p>
Tags: Reduce Meeting