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Meeting Hero

Plan and Lead Better Meetings

Add Fun to Engage Meeting Participants

boring meetings

There are plenty of people who don’t like meetings. They think they are boring and a waste of time. Your meetings need not be either of these, but for the sake of some focus, this article will only address the boredom problem.

If boredom is bad, what’s the definition of good? Let’s go for interesting or better yet, engaging.

To make the meeting more engaging for participants, you can start by making sure the meeting has a meaningful goal, one that the people you invited have an interest in achieving.

With the right goal in mind, your next task is to create a plan for achieving the goal. It’s during your planning that you can also think of ways to up the interest level. One question I like to ask myself at this point is, “How can I make the meeting more fun for the participants?”

People understand the meeting is not a party. It’s work. Still, if you can get the job done and have fun doing it, you’ve just achieved meeting hero status. Here are some easy techniques for adding fun to your meeting.

Use Creativity Tools

Although some people will see it as corny; incorporating toys, colors, music, and movement into your meetings can serve as wonderful creativity stimuli.

Create Drama

It doesn’t take much to “stage” the meeting so that it’s more interesting. A big, ticking timer does wonders in helping the team pay attention to time. Splitting into sub-groups for some friendly competition (e.g. seeing which group generates the most ideas) usually notches up the energy. And there’s nothing like role playing specific scenarios and acting out case studies to put people into a creative mindset. WARNING: Be ready for some serious grumbling if you try that last one.

Get Comfortable

Creativity is fun and free-flowing. It’s hard to achieve this in a formal environment. Find a comfortable setting, and encourage the participants to dress and act informally.

Add Fresh Perspectives

Invite people to the session who have no formal “expertise” in the topic. Rules and assumptions do not limit these folks. Their questions, ideas, and challenges will help uncover dangerous assumptions and push the group to explore uncharted territory.

Of course implementing these ideas will take some effort on your part. While many of us would like to think that fun should emerge spontaneously, I have found that it usually requires some planning. Is the time and energy worth it? Try it and discover the answer for yourself.

Tom LaForce is the resident Meeting Hero of LaForce Teamwork Services, a Minneapolis-based consulting company. He's on a mission to create better results through teamwork. He is the author of Meeting Hero: Plan and Lead Engaging, Productive Meetings.

Meeting Hero is provided by LaForce Teamwork Services, a consulting and training company that offers workshops, meeting leadership, and advisory services.

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