I have facilitated thousands of meetings and have poured personal time and passion into improving my meeting facilitation skills. I have adopted practices from my mentors and I have developed practices of my own. It is my opinion that the most successful agendas include certain meeting specifications as well as agenda items, times and responsibilities to help guide the meeting.
While managing a project in 2004, I discovered OneNote. I saw opportunity to model some personal best practices and began to tweak tags, the agenda, etc. as I learned new tricks for gaining productivity and improving communication.
In Figure 1, below, I have shared my current personal best practice agenda layout. This agenda layout is proven to be effective for nearly any kind of working meeting. I have validated these practices through thousands of meetings, including meetings within my own company, meetings for my employer, and customer project meetings on consulting engagements.
Within the Agenda Item column however, I recommend only changing the "<Key Topic #1>" item by replacing it with the actual key topic of your first key topic. Then, insert rows for any additional key topics you need for a successful meeting. As a best practice, however, I'd try to limit the number of <Key Topics> to no more than five (5).
You may have noticed that, in the content of the Attendee block, I listed participants and added the "Participant" tag. In my last post, I explained how to customize your tags which include creation of the "Participant" tag.
In future posts, I'll share some great tips and tricks to help you create this effective agenda so fast that you'll think twice before ever having another working meeting without one.
In some cases a completely different agenda style may be more successful. For example, in a meeting where you are pitching a proposal to a prospective customer, you may want an agenda that is integrated into a presentation, or printed as part of a formatted proposal document. That situation typically often calls for an agenda that is printed or integrated into a presentation slide deck, both of which are outside the scope of this post. Still, this post can be used as guidance for building the agenda.
Stick with me, and I'll keep sharing, in an orderly process, tips and tricks that have taken me years to learn and assemble.
Stick with me, and I'll keep sharing, in an orderly process, tips and tricks that have taken me years to learn and assemble.