status meeting

add fun to meeting room

add fun to the meeting room

This post was originally posted in Go Ahead, Manage.


Regular status meetings are boring: everyone goes around the table and rehashes what they did in the last week or month. No one really cares. If the project dates are slipping, the team wants the meeting to be over with so they can get back to doing something useful.

But status meetings can be fun!

Yes, I know, it’s a strange concept. But I’ve seen it happen. I was doing documentation on a software development team. The team was implementing agile development practices, and they were planning to do a release every month. This meant a big meeting with marketing, sales, the whole development team.

It was important for the project lead to include the whole company in that project. She felt that it would bring the two worlds of development and marketing/sales together, that it would help people understand the other side.

Since everyone had things to do in the project, I suggested that we make something visual, like a board, to monitor out progress. The rest of the team thought I was crazy, they humored me. So I built this huge board and pasted a giant photograph on it. It was about the size of 6 letter-sized pages. Then I cut out squares of colorful cardboard and pinned them over the picture, so I was the only one who knew what was behind the cardboard.

Each one of those pieces of cardboard corresponded to a task in the project. It could be a feature, or finishing documentation, and even the first sale was there. So developers, marketers and sales reps all had at least a square or two to “unpin” from the board. The first month, when we did the first “unpinning,” people thought it was really lame and corny.

But something happened.

People kept their pieces of cardboard and pinned them on the walls of their cubicles. Those pieces of yellow and purple cardboard became trophies.

On the second monthly meeting, people were clapping those who got to “unpin” and there was a feeling of pride in the room. The board was displayed at the entrance of the R&D department. It gave a very visual impression of how far along the project was.

And so people came to like those status meetings.

Making status meetings fun means changing how it’s done

Status meetings should not be just about reporting what happened. They should be about accomplishment. They should be there to reward the people who did good, and motivate those who are having difficulties.

If no one wants to go to the meeting, what’s the point of having the meeting?

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Made To Stick

Made To Stick

It delights me every time I discover a way that the world of knowledge available to human kind is applicable across disciplines.

Granted, the book Made to Stick which I am reading right now is intended to apply as a guideline without any particular discipline in mind, only communication and retention of ideas in general.

While driving to work one day, I realized how the ideas can and should apply to project status meetings. There are usually specific points that you want to highlight with those in the room, be they the sponsor, project team, customer, etc. You may want different ideas to stick with different groups of people, too. This book is all about how to craft and present ideas to make them stick.

Let’s say you have a particular risk on your project that is looking like it may be a big issue, and you are asking for your sponsor’s help in mitigating or preparing for it. If that is the biggest issue for your sponsor to help with, you want the risk and what they can do to help to stick with them, and make it a dominant thought when they leave the meeting. Whenever they think of your project, they should associate it with that risk they need to help with.

OK, so now you are holding a status meeting with your team. You want to review progress over the last period, talk about what is happening now and coming up, and make sure everyone is away of risks that could impact their work. This is an opportunity to recognize people for their accomplishments, and it would be very helpful if the idea that “this project manager appreciates our effort, and recognizes us for it” sticks with them. You also may want to pick out a few key milestones that everyone is working towards, and major risks they should look out for so you can be notified as early as possible if something comes up.

With every example you care to come up with, it is important how you craft and present the message. There are many techniques described in the book, relating to the content of the message itself, associations, and many other helpful principles.

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