Note that these are (1) really long and (2) incomplete - I'm working on these, particularly making them shorter. This is just a first braindump because Marco asked how I ran meetings... if people are interested / can think of a good place to post them outside a textfile on my hard drive, I'll gladly move my work to there.<br>
<br>-Mel<br><br><div class="gmail_quote">On Tue, Nov 11, 2008 at 11:37 AM, Marco Pesenti Gritti <span dir="ltr"><<a href="mailto:mpgritti@gmail.com">mpgritti@gmail.com</a>></span> wrote:<br><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="border-left: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204); margin: 0pt 0pt 0pt 0.8ex; padding-left: 1ex;">
Since each team is running meetings now, I thought I'd forward these<br>
notes from Mel. I think they contain a bunch of concrete advises on<br>
how make them better!<br>
<br>
<br>
---------- Forwarded message ----------<br>
From: Mel Chua <<a href="mailto:mel@melchua.com">mel@melchua.com</a>><br>
Date: Fri, Nov 7, 2008 at 6:42 AM<br>
Subject: Running good meetings<br>
To: Marco Pesenti Gritti <<a href="mailto:mpgritti@gmail.com">mpgritti@gmail.com</a>><br>
<br>
<br>
(Note that I don't always do all of these because I forget stuff<br>
sometimes, but as I think through my "if I was actually<br>
super-disciplined about running meetings correctly, here's what I'd<br>
do" list, here's what I came up with.)<br>
<br>
These are notes specifically applicable to running IRC meetings with<br>
meetbot using using Mediawiki (with Semantic Mediawiki) as a<br>
note-taking system, but the general principles apply to running any<br>
sort of meeting.<br>
<br>
Before the meeting:<br>
<br>
0. Make it really easy to take/manage meeting notes. See<br>
<a href="http://wiki.laptop.org/go/Community_testing_meetings" target="_blank">http://wiki.laptop.org/go/Community_testing_meetings</a> for an example -<br>
Skierpage was awesome and made the "How to add a meeting" button +<br>
semantic mediawiki stuff, which pulls from this template:<br>
<a href="http://wiki.laptop.org/go/Template:New_community_testing_meeting" target="_blank">http://wiki.laptop.org/go/Template:New_community_testing_meeting</a> (But<br>
for the really cool stuff, check out the source on for<br>
<a href="http://wiki.laptop.org/go/Community_testing_meetings#Meeting_minutes" target="_blank">http://wiki.laptop.org/go/Community_testing_meetings#Meeting_minutes</a><br>
for SMW-fu).<br>
<br>
Basically, I asked Skierpage to help me make a system that I would<br>
*not* be too lazy to use. ;) See<br>
<a href="http://lists.laptop.org/pipermail/wiki-gang/2008-October/000059.html" target="_blank">http://lists.laptop.org/pipermail/wiki-gang/2008-October/000059.html</a><br>
for this discussion.<br>
<br>
1. Have a draft agenda on a wiki page, using the system from #0.<br>
Pre-filling the page with a template stub (the "How to add a meeting"<br>
button + <a href="http://wiki.laptop.org/go/Template:New_community_testing_meeting" target="_blank">http://wiki.laptop.org/go/Template:New_community_testing_meeting</a><br>
template) helps a lot to decrease gruntwork.<br>
<a href="http://wiki.laptop.org/index.php?title=Community_testing_meetings/2008-11-06&oldid=178820" target="_blank">http://wiki.laptop.org/index.php?title=Community_testing_meetings/2008-11-06&oldid=178820</a><br>
is an example of pre-meeting notes - note that there's one section per<br>
agenda item, with short notes arrayed below.<br>
<br>
When there's a lot of background information, or when somebody wants<br>
to voice their opinion before the meeting, or can't make the meeting<br>
and wants to put their thoughts forth for consideration, link to it.<br>
For example: <a href="http://wiki.laptop.org/go/Community_testing_meetings/2008-11-06/Prioritizing_activities_to_test" target="_blank">http://wiki.laptop.org/go/Community_testing_meetings/2008-11-06/Prioritizing_activities_to_test</a><br>
<br>
2. Send out reminder emails about the meeting - mention it (with a<br>
link to the draft agenda) when you send out the minutes from the<br>
previous meeting, and send a reminder the day before or the day of the<br>
meeting itself (also with the draft agenda link).<br>
<br>
3. Invite people personally to the meeting over email, in IRC, when<br>
you see them... anything. Try to bring up specific things that they<br>
might be interested in, or that you would like them to come talk<br>
about. "Hey Mel, we're going to talk about cheese - I remember you<br>
were telling me about this wonderful cheddar that you had last week<br>
and thought you might enjoy coming and speaking about that..."<br>
<br>
4. Remind people to come to the meeting right before it starts. You'll<br>
see me poking my head into offices, walking by people's desks, or at<br>
the very least sitting at mine and suddenly hollering "Hey guys!<br>
Community test meeting in 5 minutes in the #olpc-meeting channel!"<br>
<br>
5. As people file into the meeting room, greet and welcome them and<br>
thank them for coming in a bit early / on time. This is important! It<br>
confirms to them that there's a meeting on, gives you a good sense of<br>
who's present (for a virtual meeting), and makes it clear that being<br>
on time is Awesome.<br>
<br>
6. A minute or so before the meeting starts, look around and say<br>
something like "it's almost time to start, is everybody ready?" to<br>
remind people that the actual get-down-to-business time is coming up.<br>
<br>
During the meeting:<br>
<br>
7. Begin the meeting. (Meetbot command: #startmeeting) This should be<br>
*exactly* on time, if at all humanly possible, and it should be<br>
incredibly obvious to everyone that the meeting has started. Pound a<br>
gavel, wave your arms, say "Time to focus!" or "The meeting has<br>
started!" or... well, I'm sure you can think of wittier things to say.<br>
<br>
8. Thank everyone for coming, again.<br>
<br>
9. If you haven't taken attendance some other way, ask for a roll call<br>
or otherwise figure out who's present, who's lurking, who's doing<br>
something else but can be poked to chime in on something (remember,<br>
when you call on them, that it usually takes them a couple minutes to<br>
realize you're trying to get their attention, so if you can tell them<br>
"your topic is coming up soon" a few minutes in advance, you usually<br>
get better results.)<br>
<br>
Ideally, though, the vast majority of your attendees will be present<br>
and focused on the meeting and only on the meeting. (If this isn't the<br>
case, try to figure out how you can work things out for the next<br>
meeting so that they are. Meetings with everyone half-present tend to<br>
drag on and be painful because nobody's really thinking.)<br>
<br>
10. Post the link to the draft agenda, and then post the abbreviated<br>
version of the agenda - I copy-paste the Table of Contents from the<br>
wiki agenda page. Again, see<br>
<a href="http://wiki.laptop.org/index.php?title=Community_testing_meetings/2008-11-06&oldid=178820" target="_blank">http://wiki.laptop.org/index.php?title=Community_testing_meetings/2008-11-06&oldid=178820</a><br>
as an example.<br>
<br>
Note that last-minute rearranging of the agenda wiki page before<br>
sending this link is totally okay. ;) I mean, it's not ideal. But it's<br>
okay. (Although this could also be my excuse for doing this All The<br>
Time.)<br>
<br>
11. Ask for comments on the agenda or any last-minute decisions. This<br>
is important because once you lock in the agenda, you want to stick to<br>
it.<br>
<br>
12. Phrase your questions with default answers whenever you can - for<br>
instance, instead of "Any additions to the agenda?" say "Any additions<br>
to the agenda? If not, we'll start with the first item, which is: What<br>
Type Of Cheese Should We Get For Tomorrow's Fondue?"<br>
<br>
13. If your questions don't get answered within 20-40 seconds, say<br>
something like "Anybody?" or "I'll take that response as a yes," or<br>
"All right, moving on..." or some other "I am warning you that we are<br>
making a transition to a different topic!" phrase, wait a few more<br>
seconds, and then switch topics. (To your first agenda item. Remember,<br>
you're going through *only* your agenda items. This is absolutely<br>
firm. Ideally you'll go through them in order, though this is not so<br>
firm.)<br>
<br>
14. Discuss the agenda item at hand, and only the agenda item at hand.<br>
If people drift off topic, but what they say is close enough that it<br>
can be re-steered into the conversation, say something like "That's a<br>
great point, how can we apply it to Thursday's fondue cheese selection<br>
(or whatever the topic is)?" Find some way to gently re-fold it into<br>
the conversation topic.<br>
<br>
If the point they bring up can be folded into a later agenda item,<br>
tell them to bring it up when that agenda item comes up. "We're going<br>
to talk about chocolate in a few minutes, would you mind bringing this<br>
up again then?"<br>
<br>
If their point can't be folded into any agenda item but is on-topic<br>
for that kind of meeting, ask if they would like to lead a discussion<br>
on that during the next meeting, and then tell them to put it as an<br>
agenda item, led by them, on the next meeting's draft agenda.<br>
"Actually, that would be a great thing to talk about at our next<br>
meeting. Do you think you could lead a discussion on that next week?<br>
You can? Thanks! Can you put it on next week's meeting agenda<br>
wikipage, and put your name there so I remember that you'll be leading<br>
that discussion? The link is..."<br>
<br>
If their point is totally off topic for the meeting or the group, tell<br>
them so; if you can, point them towards the proper venue for it.<br>
"Actually, salad selection is outside the domain of the fondue group,<br>
but the Appetizers Committee is meeting on Friday, and Marco runs that<br>
meeting; you should ask him if you can talk about it then."<br>
<br>
15. #14 relies mainly on one thing - that at any given time, it should<br>
be clear what the agenda item/topic is. Give reminders occasionally if<br>
needed. Reference back to the notes on the draft wiki page. That's why<br>
you put them there beforehand - in addition to being useful<br>
pre-reading, they also give you things to use to steer the<br>
conversation back on topic. "Actually, let's look at what Marco said<br>
earlier about Muenster cheese - if you read this email that he wrote,<br>
you'll see that..."<br>
<br>
16. Oh, yes. If new people come in, welcome them, thank them for<br>
coming, send them the agenda, and tell them what agenda item you're<br>
discussing. "Hi, Mel! Glad you could make it. The agenda is at... and<br>
we're talking about item 5, 'should we have bread or crackers?' right<br>
now."<br>
<br>
17. It helps to have commonly-accessed URLs (where you can get a<br>
meeting transcript, the draft agenda, the previous meeting's minutes,<br>
next week's meeting agenda...) in a text document or somewhere else<br>
you can rapidly copy-paste them from.<br>
<br>
(Ideally, something like meetbot would store those URLs beforehand and<br>
then you could call them out as needed, but that feature isn't there<br>
yet. Something like "Hi, Mel! Glad you could make it. Here are the<br>
logs so far - meetbot: #logs" and then meetbot would spit out the<br>
appropriate URL, which you told it beforehand.)<br>
<br>
18. If things are too quiet, call on people individually for thoughts<br>
and comments. "Greg, do you know if we have any vegans coming to the<br>
party who can't eat cheese? Chris, do you know if the bread we're<br>
planning on using is vegetarian? Brian, you used to cook for somebody<br>
with food allergies - what should we avoid?"<br>
<br>
19. If things are too noisy, step back and rephrase them as topics in<br>
a linear order, and then go through that order. "Okay, I think we have<br>
several conversations going on here - Kim, why don't you talk about<br>
why we should use French bread first, and then Frances can make her<br>
case for crackers, and then I want to make sure we hear Joe's<br>
suggestions on how to slice the vegetables for dipping."<br>
<br>
...wow, this is longer than I thought it would be. More to come later.<br>
_______________________________________________<br>
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</blockquote></div><br>