I found this article about Marrisa Mayers at the following link article
These tips should help anyone with there meeting skills
1. Set a firm agenda.
Mayer
requests a meeting agenda ahead of time that outlines what the
participants want to discuss and the best way of using the allotted
time. Agendas need to have flexibility, of course, but Mayer finds that
agendas act as tools that force individuals to think about what they
want to accomplish in meetings. It helps all those involved to focus on
what they are really trying to achieve and how best to reach that goal.
2. Assign a note-taker.
A
Google meeting features a lot of displays. On one wall, a projector
displays the presentation, while right next to it, another projector
shows the transcription of the meeting. (Yet another displays a 4-foot
image of a ticking stopwatch.) Google executives are big believers in
capturing an official set of notes, so inaccuracies and inconsistencies
can be caught immediately.
Those who missed the meetings receive
a copy of the notes. When people are trying to remember what decisions
were made, in what direction the team is going, and what actions need
to be taken, they can simply review the notes.
3. Carve out micro-meetings.
Mayer
sets aside large blocks of time that she slices into smaller,
self-contained gatherings on a particular subject or project. For
example, during her weekly two-hour confab with the co-founders and CEO
Eric Schmidt, she sets aside five- to 10-minute segments—or longer,
depending on the subject—devoted to such specific areas as weekly
reports on how the site is performing, new product launches, etc.
This
method offers enough flexibility to modify the agenda just before the
meeting, should anything pressing occur. It also instills discipline
that keeps the meeting tightly focused. Mayer does the same with
members of her teams who might need only five or 10 minutes of her time
instead of 30 minutes—the shortest block of time her calendar permits.
By setting aside micro-meetings within a larger block of time, she
accomplishes more.
Mayer, who has a background in engineering
and computer science, jokingly refers to micro-meetings as "reducing
latency in the pipeline." That means if she has an employee with an
issue that comes up Tuesday, he or she can schedule a 10-minute
micro-meeting during Mayer's large time block, instead of waiting for
her next 30-minute opening, which might not be available for two weeks.
4. Hold office hours.
Mayer
brought this idea from her experience teaching computer science at
Stanford, where she first met the two guys who would go on to
revolutionize how the world gets its information. Beginning at 4 p.m.,
for 90 minutes a day, Mayer holds office hours.
Employees add
their name to a board outside her office, and she sees them on a
first-come, first-serve basis. Sometimes project managers need approval
on a marketing campaign; sometimes staffers want a few minutes to pitch
a design (see BusinessWeek.com, 6/30/06, "Inside Google's New-Product Process").
Says
Mayer: "Many of our most technologically interesting products have
shown up during office hours. Google News, Orkut [Google's social
networking site], Google Reviews, and Google Desktop all showed up
first in office hours." During office hours, Mayer can get through up
to 15 meetings, averaging seven minutes per person.
5. Discourage politics, use data.
One of Mayer's "Nine Notions of Innovation" is "Don't politic, use data" (see BusinessWeek.com, 6/19/06, "9 Notions of Innovation").
This
idea can and should apply to meetings in organizations in which people
feel as though the boss will give the green light to a design created
by the person he or she likes the best, showing favoritism for the
individual instead of the idea.
Mayer believes this mindset can
demoralize employees, so she goes out of her way to make the approval
process a science. Google chooses designs on a clearly defined set of
metrics and how well they perform against those metrics. Designs are
chosen based on merit and evidence, not personal relationships.
Mayer
discourages using the phrase "I like" in design meetings, such as "I
like the way the screen looks." Instead, she encourages such comments
as "The experimentation on the site shows that his design performed 10%
better." This works for Google, because it builds a culture driven by
customer feedback data, not the internal politics that pervade so many
of today's corporations.
6. Stick to the clock.
To
add a little pressure to keep meetings focused, Google gatherings often
feature a giant timer on the wall, counting down the minutes left for a
particular meeting or topic. It's literally a downloadable timer that
runs off a computer and is projected 4 feet tall.
Imagine how
chaotic it must look to outsiders when the wall shows several displays
at once—the presentation, transcription, and a mega-timer! And yet, at
Google, it makes sense, imposing structure amidst creative chaos. The
timer exerts a subtle pressure to keep meetings running on schedule.
Mayer
does have one caveat when it comes to the timer—maintain a healthy
sense of humor about it. (The timer was counting down to the end of my
interview with Mayer—but she turned it into a fun and friendly reminder
instead of an abrupt end to our discussion.)
Please keep in mind
that these meeting techniques work well for Google. They may or may not
be appropriate for your place of business. But these six keys should
give you some new ideas about how to transform your meetings from a
waste of time to time well spent.
well done, brother
Posted by: Marcusnp | March 24, 2008 at 04:21 AM