In today's workplace, you are highly likely to work with a team across the country (or even across the world). Therefore, a good understanding of making remote meetings work for you and your team is more critical than ever.
There has been a massive uptake in adopting virtual boardrooms to cut down on costly travel for meetings, training sessions, and conferences. With the recent pandemic, an even more significant number of companies have taken the virtual route.
Online meetings have become a regular part of our day's workflow, and they are here to stay. So how do you make them efficient? How do you make up for the lack of a face-to-face interaction? And how do you make sure you cover everything before the meeting ends?
We asked our TAB community to share their tips with you. Here's a look at everything you need to know about running effective remote meetings with teams spread across the planet.
As with any good meeting, you need to set some ground rules for participation and ask everyone to comply. Examples of ground rules include:
Over time, consistent norms help everyone use the time in the meeting more effectively.
If you are hosting a larger meeting, I suggest pairing up another person as a co-host for the meeting. One person can play the technical support role and manage tasks such as, admitting people into the room, assigning people to breakout rooms, recording the meeting, spotlighting key speakers, placing essential information in the chat box to share with the group, and sharing questions addressed in the chat. The other host can focus on presenting and otherwise leading the discussion and engaging the group.
Breakout rooms are great tools for giving people a chance to talk one-on-one or in small teams and dig into details or brainstorm together. The host of the meeting can send messages to the people in breakout rooms and visit each breakout room to ensure everyone is on task. The host can then close the breakout rooms giving the groups a minute or two notice to wrap up and regroup in the main room.
Recording the meeting and making it available to all attendees and perhaps those who couldn't make it gives everyone a chance to keep informed of issues discussed, decisions made, and action items assigned. This allows everyone to stay up to speed on a project even if they missed the meeting.
Electra Govoni, Owner at TAB Boston Northwest
Any meeting, especially virtual, should have an agenda and specifically list the meeting's main point and outcome. The agenda should be distributed to all attendees at least 24 hours before the meeting, and a timekeeper assigned to keep things on track. The meeting should start at the specified time. Too often, virtual meetings take 5-10 minutes to start as the perception can exist that attendees are at home and have more time. This can set a tone that leads to anything but effectiveness or productivity.
Allan Lamar, Owner at TAB Colorado Springs
Virtual meetings lack interpersonal communication. The required structure reduces team collaboration, spontaneity, and psychological safety. Body language makes up 55% of communication, 38% is tone, and both are compromised in a compressed, virtual, 2D format. To make virtual meetings more effective and productive, we need to overcompensate in these two areas. Ways to do this include:
At first, this will not feel natural. But over some time, it will become routine. Be persistent, ask for feedback, and you will find that others start following your lead. This will result in more effective and productive virtual meetings.
Daniel Wong, Owner at TAB Brisbane, Australia
If immediately following your meeting, you see participants gathering in the hallway or parking lot, likely, either something wasn't sufficiently explained or inevitable disagreements weren't voiced during the meeting. Be proactive. Approach the participants later on, to see what was being discussed. Maybe they were discussing their weekend plans. On the other hand, it might be an obstacle to getting everyone on board with a course of action.
John Dini, Owner at TAB San Antonio
Always distribute an agenda to the attendees before the meeting. Never fill the allotted time if the outcome of the meeting has been achieved in less time.
Bob Green, CEO at TAB North Shore
Some of the best ways to make virtual meetings more effective are to:
Act as though you are in a real conference room face to face with people. Pay attention and show the same courtesy and professionalism that you would in a live meeting, and things will go smoothly, and the virtual meeting will be productive.
Jim Morris, Owner at TAB Tennessee Valley Region
Chris Sachse, TAB Member and CEO at Think|Stack
Most people are sitting at their desks for long periods. Therefore, for each 30-minute meeting segment, add a brief period to stand up and move around for all attendees.
Wm. David Levesque, President at TAB Rochester
Be aware of individuals who may be hearing challenged. Some with a hearing disability will read lips, so it is important to look into the camera and speak clearly. Microsoft Teams has a feature that does voice recognition with closed captioning, which can be very helpful even though it is not perfect.
David Zelinski, Owner at TAB Southwest Houston
If you need to deliver information during a meeting, find a way to turn it into a conversation instead of a lecture. Here are a couple of ideas:
If you don't need to cover a lot of information during the meeting, then have a different person from the team run the meeting each time you meet.
Doing any of the above will increase engagement and make your virtual meetings more effective.
Laura Drury, Owner at TAB Focused Directions
Exchange digital documents (like PDF, XLS, DOC, PPT) before the call or even after the virtual meeting. Important documents that contain information important to the topic being discussed can be sent before the meeting with an explanation in the email body. This allows the other party to review the information before the call, saves the time spent in detailed explanations, and minimizes the Q&A session during the meeting. Other documents might become pertinent as the discussion progresses during the virtual meeting. Send these documents after the meeting rather than interrupting the discussion. A good explanation in the email body and some Q&A responses are generally more efficient than the time it takes to explain everything during the virtual meeting.
Joe Palmer, Owner at TAB North Texas
It is harder to see whether people are engaged during a virtual meeting than when face to face. In a face-to-face meeting, we can look at the other participants' body language during the meeting and read into it. A tapping pen, staring off into space, sitting up straight, slouching — all of these can be observed easily. On a Zoom call, it is difficult to tell whether a person is staring at the screen because they are paying attention to the speaker or reading emails, or watching YouTube. To combat this, I announce a "batting order" at the start of each meeting section. My batting order is the order that I will be calling on people for an opportunity to ask questions or give feedback. Even if they don't have anything to add, they know they are called on to speak to ensure they pay more attention. I also change up the batting order over the course of the meeting so the participants don't get too comfortable with the order and allow distractions until it is their turn to talk.
Doug Kerr, Owner at TAB Etobicoke/Mississauga
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