What is meeting?
A coming together of persons ; an assembly. Particularly, in
law, an assembling of a number of persons for the purpose of discussing and
acting upon some matter or matters in which they have a common interest.
Establishing the purpose of a meeting:
1.
Define
the objective of your meeting to determine whether it is time-sensitive and
really necessary. Examples of meeting objectives include
reporting on project status, brainstorming new ideas and solutions to existing
problems, managing damage control, introducing new policies, making task
assignments and holding administrative hearings related to disciplinary
actions. Create an outline and give each topic a title followed by a short
summary. Example: Going Paperless -- identifying transitional goals, security
concerns and staff training.
2.
Identify by name the individuals who have something of substance
to contribute to your agenda topics so they will understand what is expected of
them. For a project status report, for
instance, you likely need only the project manager as spokesperson and not
every member of her team. If the purpose of the meeting is to brainstorm ideas
for a new policy, your meeting participants would be those who best represent
the interests and sentiments of the specific job classifications or departments
that will be affected.
3.
Determine the amount of time needed to address
each of the topics on your list. Status updates, for example, could require only 10 minutes
for each participant, especially if your meetings occur on a weekly or monthly
basis and everyone is already familiar with the basics of the various projects.
Put your highest priority topics first on the agenda in the event that
discussions run over your allocated time slots and the meeting has to be
continued at a later time or date. Where practical, include an "other
business" slot at the end of your agenda for anything participants would
like to discuss that doesn't fit the existing topic categories.
4.
Decide whether supplemental materials for your
meeting should be distributed and read prior to the meeting or handed out upon
everyone's arrival.
Reference these items in the agenda so participants will understand their
relevance to the topics under discussion.
5.
Set a date, time and location for your meeting,
and place this information prominently at the top of the meeting agenda. Distribute your agenda far enough in advance
that participants have time to prepare but not so far that they will set it
aside and forget about it. If appropriate, send out reminders the day before.
http://smallbusiness.chron.com/establish-meeting-agenda-17356.html
images are taken from Google.


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