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Summary

Most teams don’t need more meetings—they need better ones.  Meetings that lack structure, clarity, and respect for focus time drain energy and hurt engagement. Protect time, define purpose, and run meetings that move work forward instead of slowing it down.

 


 

Chances are, if you’ve been in the workforce longer than five minutes, you’ve heard someone complain about meetings.  

Today’s reality is that work increasingly tilts toward chat, email, and meetings, while time for real, focused work continues to shrink. From Microsoft’s 2024 Work Trend Index 

  • People spend 60% of their time communicating and 40% creating, with meetings and after-hours work stuck at post-pandemic highs. 
  • 68% say the pace and volume of work is hard to keep up with. 
  • 46% report burnout. 

That should shape how you run meetings and how you protect focus time around them. 

“Meeting hangovers” and employee engagement 

There’s also a cost we rarely name: meeting hangovers. HBR reports that over one quarter of meetings leave lingering negative effects—lower energy, focus, and motivation—for hours after the meeting ends. If your team leaves a meeting drained, the next two hours of “work time” won’t deliver much work.  

Engagement tells the same story. Gallup shows global engagement fell to 21% in 2024, with manager engagement dropping fastest. What this means is that people have less headspace and less patience for sloppy meetings. If you run meetings, you’re either helping or hurting engagement.  

How to make meetings work for you and your team  

Start with the non-negotiable: Protect uninterrupted time. If your calendar makes focus impossible, no meeting format will save you. 

  • Block focus hours at the same time each week; treat these hours like client time. HBR recommends explicit norms for when not to meet, including scheduled focus hours and meeting-free days.  
  • Shrink the communication load by relying on written communication for updates, and reserve live time for making decisions and solving problems 
  • Track impact consistently by taking a quick pulse after meetings—“Was this worth it? Did we move work forward?”—and trimming or redesigning anything that doesn’t pass. Good calendar hygiene is a managerial skill. 

Diagnose the real problem by role (and fix it with structure) 

Let’s break down some common problem scenarios and how to address them. 

Visionaries

They can derail the best-laid meeting agenda. Of course, it’s critically important to have innovators and visionaries, but allowing them to constantly derail meetings can undermine productivity. These visionaries are often part of the leadership team, which can make it difficult to check their impulses.  

How to problem-solve: 

  • Create an agenda with a verb at the top (decide, prioritize, approve). If there's no action, cancel the meeting. 
  • Park off-agenda items and assign owners. Capture good ideas without derailing the purpose of the meeting. 

When managers “make sure everyone’s aligned”  

Alignment is a process problem. When the first half of the meeting is spent trying to get everyone on the same page, you’re wasting time.   

How to problem-solve: 

  • The meeting title, invite, and agenda carry the facts; the meeting carries the decisions. Make sure everyone has what they need to show up informed and ready to make decisions.  
  • Clarify who owns the final decision prior to the meeting. Decision rights curb circular talk 
  • Limit attendees to contributors and decision-makers; send a recap to everyone else. That protects focus time and reduces after-effects that tank the next two hours of work. 

When loud voices dominate and quiet voices disengage  

Silence doesn’t necessarily mean that everyone agrees. Make sure you’re benefiting from all perspectives by creating an environment where everyone gets a chance to speak. 

How to problem-solve: 

  • Send the agenda early with links and context. Quieter teammates contribute more when they’ve had time to think. 
  • Assign discussion leads by item. People speak with more clarity when they own a segment. 
  • Use a round-robin or “quiet first” protocol. Make airtime equitable on purpose.  


Design the week, then design the meeting 

Your team’s time is your most expensive asset. Protect it.  

Build calendars with focus windows, write agendas that lead to decisions, and run meetings that respect energy. The payoff shows up in output and connection, and how people feel at 4 p.m. and 9 a.m. 

People need one another to feel connected and work through challenges. Just because meetings can be draining doesn’t mean they don’t play an important role in ensuring team members get what they need. Treating them with the value they deserve helps ensure everyone participating feels that value. 


Content published by Q4intelligence

Photo by peopleimages12