Exercise 3 Flashcards
1
Q
Motivation Meetings
A
- Often, meetings do not reach the desired outcome
- People get bored if the meeting is taking too long
- They also forget to discuss important points
- Decisions are forgotten because no-one wrote them down
- Shy participants might not be able to share their opinion while others talk too much
2
Q
1) Purpose of the Meeting
A
- Meeting Management is a procedure to plan and ensure productive meetings
- It allows meetings with a constant level of quality and a structured process
- It provides templates, roles and guidelines
3
Q
2) Desired Outcome
A
- As a manager you need to know how to apply meeting management
- You need the ability to illustrate the benefits of the meeting procedures to achieve efficient meetings
- Review systematically the agendas and minutes in the first weeks of a project
- Suggest time-saving improvements to the facilitators and the minute takers
- Get familiar with key phrases for standard situations, e.g.
- “Let me play the role of secondary facilitator” stands for The scope of the current discussion is outside the agenda. Let us get back on track.
- “Can we pop up a level?” stands for The discussion has delved into a level of detail that is unnecessary for this audience. Actually, most of us are already lost.
4
Q
General Meeting Guidelines
A
- Active listening
- Active participation
- Punctual attendance
- No one-on-one or side meetings
- Respect the agenda
- Keep time
- Willingness to reach consensus
- Freedom to check process and ground rules
- Share responsibility for team’s progress
5
Q
Meeting Management in General
A
- A team should meet at least once a week
- Scrum Teams meet daily
- Use a structured agenda
- Team members share important information and make it accessible to all
- participants (meeting minutes)
- Every participant is aware of his/her role in the meeting
6
Q
Roles
A
A role defines a set of responsibilities which consist of specific tasks.
Typical meeting roles: facilitator, minute taker, time keeper
7
Q
Primary Facilitator
A
Tasks and responsibilities:
- Organizes the meeting
- Creates the agenda at least one day before the meeting
- Makes sure the agenda is filled out at least 1h before the meeting starts
- Guides the meeting as moderator
- Makes sure the participants follow the structure of the agenda but be flexible for changes
8
Q
Minute Taker
A
Tasks and responsibilities:
- Creates meeting minutes during the meeting
- Writes down all important information and decisions
- Distributes the minutes to all participants latest one day after the meeting
9
Q
Time Keeper
A
Tasks and responsibilities:
- Keeps track of the time
- There are time limits for each section in the agenda. It’s your job to make sure they are met.
- Don’t be afraid to interrupt a person
- Time Keeper
- If he/she is talking too long (even the moderator)
- If you say that the time is up, the rest of the team has to listen to you!
10
Q
Roles should?
A
Meeting roles rotates on a regular basis so that all participants have the opportunity to fill every role
11
Q
Confluence
A
Confluence Features:
- Organize and share information
- Build a team knowledge base
- Create the meeting agenda
- Maintain a team calendar
- Link JIRA issues
- Add comments to pages
12
Q
A