Team meetings can take up a lot of time. Certainly at HighQ, we’re in
and out of meeting rooms for much of the day, catching up on where
we’re at with our global teams or brainstorming ideas for product
updates or marketing strategies.
Usually, team meetings mean everyone traipsing into a meeting room with their own pad of paper and pen, each taking note of what actions they need to take or doodling their way through a particularly dull team meeting. The problem with this is that some people don’t bother to take notes, other people aren’t good at note taking, and the ones who are competent note-takers don’t tend to circulate the information among the team afterwards.
If there’s a document for discussion in the meeting, print-outs need to be made, and sometimes particularly diligent meeting-holders print out copies of their slide deck too read more.
Usually, team meetings mean everyone traipsing into a meeting room with their own pad of paper and pen, each taking note of what actions they need to take or doodling their way through a particularly dull team meeting. The problem with this is that some people don’t bother to take notes, other people aren’t good at note taking, and the ones who are competent note-takers don’t tend to circulate the information among the team afterwards.
If there’s a document for discussion in the meeting, print-outs need to be made, and sometimes particularly diligent meeting-holders print out copies of their slide deck too read more.
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