Five Secrets to All-Hands Meetings that Don’t Waste Time

· 4 min read
Five Secrets to All-Hands Meetings that Don’t Waste Time

All-hands meetings can be a great way to align, update, and engage your entire team — but they can also quickly become giant wastes of time if not run effectively. We’ve all been there: the rambling, unfocused meeting that leaves you frustrated and behind on your work.

Whether you’re looking to start all-hands meetings or improve your current ones, there are a few ways to keep them focused, inclusive, and valuable. You’ll see how minor adjustments can lead to dramatically better meetings that align people rather than annoy them.

The All-Too-Common Frustration

Imagine you’re part of a 10-person startup team. It’s one week until your big launch when your weekly all-hands video call descends into chaos.

Your CEO, Mary, tries presenting important launch updates, but side conversations drown her out. Your lead developer, John, keeps unmuting and muting folks while his barking dog distracts everyone.

Your designer Susan, who just joined last month, sits there silently without a chance to speak. You feel your team’s frustration very well by the call’s end.

Alignment is suffering. Passionate debate has turned to talking over each other. Instead of collaborating, people vent. You have a tight timeline to pull this off successfully, but a lack of harmony and trust threatens progress.

Morale is visibly sinking as your all-hands meetings drive the team further apart. Your launch countdown continues, but these unproductive meetings foster tension instead of progress. You wish your team could rally together, but you don’t know how.

Imagine Productive All-Hands Meetings

Instead of chaos, your all-hands video calls can become enjoyable and organized. Imagine how much better the meetings could be.

Mary clearly explains that today, we’ll align on plans for the upcoming product launch. With that purpose stated, the whole team stays focused.

An agenda was sent out beforehand, so you already have questions and suggestions prepared on each topic. Mary starts with an icebreaker, asking you to share a fun fact about yourselves. John reveals he can juggle, while normally quiet Susan admits she once raced ostriches! Laughter fills the call.

Mary sticks to the agenda, ensuring we cover everything. During project updates, people listen attentively instead of chiming in. When Jill presents the new designs, Susan gets excited, sharing her creative process.

You then end with a Q&A and shout-outs. John congratulates the marketing team on the sales increase they drove. Looking at your teammates, you see smiles and productivity, not frustration.

After the call wraps, you feel energized and aligned, understanding exactly how you can help make the project a success. Your all-hands meetings may not be perfect at that point as there are many facets to it, but they’d improved immensely, helping unite your team when it matters most.

How to Host Productive Meetings Instead

To improve your all-hands, implement an agenda, schedule Q&A, and focus on your goals. Meetings can strengthen your company’s culture and help you recognize team accomplishments. Here are a few tips on how to make your all-hands meetings productive.

Define the Purpose and Outcomes in Advance

All-hands meetings can quickly turn off track without clear goals defined upfront. An unfocused, meandering discussion is frustrating and wastes everyone’s precious time. Defining the intended purpose and outcomes keeps the entire team aligned on what needs improvement. This ensures you strategically optimize the all-hands time to cover key priorities rather than letting conversations drift aimlessly. For example, one company held an all-hands meeting to update employees before a major product launch. However, without stating the purpose as “aligning on launch plans,” conversational drift confused some departments about the next steps.

Set clear agenda with agreed timings

When all-hands meetings have no set agenda, conversations tend to run over time. Certain items get shortchanged or skipped over entirely as you race to fit everything into the allotted time. Creating an agenda with agreed-upon timings for each section lets you strategically plan the meeting. You can ensure proper time is allocated to cover priorities while avoiding meandering, off-topic discussions. I once observed an all-hands meeting derailed because a business update took the whole meeting. With an agenda, they could have designated ~10 minutes for general announcements, ensuring time for the all-important Q&A.

Create a Schedule

Attendance and engagement suffer when all-hands meetings are irregularly scheduled or announced at the last minute. Employees feel out of the loop. A consistent cadence of calendar calls helps people prepare ahead of time. Sending the agenda in advance prepares people to actively participate with questions and thoughts to share.

I saw this in action at one of the companies I worked with years ago as an engineer. New managers tended to send short-notice, context-less invites for “all-hands check-ins.” Attendance was sparse, and our team members felt in the dark about company happenings, new initiatives, and how they could contribute.

Use fun icebreakers

All work and no play during all-hands meetings can cause our minds to wander and engagement to lag. Incorporating quick, interactive elements like icebreakers enhances the atmosphere and brings some fun to the proceedings. Providing time for shout-outs to recognize recent achievements boosts morale and goodwill amongst the team.

For example, a manager at one tech company creatively started each meeting with a “show and tell” time. Employees were sharing about their hobbies, pets, or interests. The room filled with laughter, and teammates connected on a more personal level.

Change the Frequency

Meeting too frequently overloads schedules and burns people out. Not meeting routinely enough causes misalignment. There is a Goldilocks “just right” frequency that provides connection without overwhelm. Monthly or quarterly cadences are often ideal for larger companies to keep communication flowing. One team realized they had tipped too far into overkill when switching from weekly to quarterly all hands. People enjoyed more uninterrupted work time between meetings while still feeling informed on company news through other channels.

All-Hands Can Rally Your Team

All-hands meetings are crucial in aligning teams who work remotely, but without intention and structure, they easily go off the rails. Simple changes can make a world of difference.

With these tips above, You can prevent disjointed, productivity-sucking into valuable face time that energizes your team. Employees will feel heard, connected, and aligned on company priorities.

The key is not to settle for the mindset of “Well, all big meetings are painful and boring.” With strategic planning and facilitation, all hands can fuel collaboration, culture, and results. Your team will look forward to these opportunities to come together.


Originally published on Medium.com