Effective - Meetings Manitoba Guidebook
Effective - Meetings Manitoba Guidebook
Effective - Meetings Manitoba Guidebook
Meetings
Contents
Planning Your Meeting
Parliamentary Procedure
Agendas
Minutes
Committees
Role of Chairperson
Meeting Personalities
Effective Meetings
is an update of the original resource package produced
through the efforts of Karen Jensen and the
Recreation Resource Development Section
of the Department of Fitness, Recreation and Sport, [1982].
Disclaimer
All information is believed to be accurate and reliable. We will make changes, updates, and deletions as required
and make every effort to ensure the accuracy and quality of the information provided. However, the Province of
Manitoba and Recreation Connections Manitoba assume no responsibility for any errors and are not liable for
damages of any kind resulting from the use of, or reliance on, the information contained herein.
Table of Contents
?
As an executive member or as an individual board member,
you should be able to answer the question:
Poor Leadership
• A meeting often is dominated by a few members and others are excluded. The
chairperson must manage such situations, allowing for input from all.
Lack of Preparation
• A meeting with no specific objectives, no background information on items where
decisions need to be made or a lack of direction frustrates those in attendance,
leaving them without a feeling of accomplishment.
Timing
• Poor timing can result in low attendance, and insufficient information available for
the meeting. Ample time prior to each meeting allows members to plan and
prepare for the meeting.
Uninterested Members
• Members who are unaware of the long-term goals of the association or have not
been oriented often become uninterested. Responsibility within the group helps
to involve these people and gives them a feeling of importance.
Disruptive Members
• People who are not involved in responsibilities of the organization often seek
attention by developing disruptive behaviour. The chairperson should manage
these behaviours and attempt to direct this energy productively.
Environment
• The physical environment has an impact on the productivity of any meeting. Some
seating arrangements and table shapes encourage free and open participation,
while others inhibit it. Find the most suitable environment for your association
through experimentation.
Tradition
• Ritual and tradition keep many meetings as they presently are. Meetings are held
at a customary time and place, whether or not there is a need for a meeting.
This handbook will suggest ways to solve these problems so your meetings will become more
effective.
Checklist
Complete this checklist to determine which areas need work.
Our meetings:
In productive organizations, meetings are of distinctive types. All meetings should have specific
purposes for being held and specific tasks to be performed by the members. However, one
meeting may include several different types within its structure. The different types of
meetings are as follows:
Informational: The purpose here is to share information such as facts, data, decisions, or
policies.
Planning: The purpose of the planning meeting is to discuss a long range plan (one to ten years)
for the organization.
Problem Solving: Similar to a planning meeting but problem solving considers one day to six
months. The focus is on day to day business.
Evaluation: The purpose of this meeting is to assess progress according to the planning and/or
problem solving meetings.
Training: A training meeting is held to educate the members; to expand knowledge, improve
skill, or change attitudes of participants.
Celebrational: This time is spent enjoying being together and having a good time.
Meeting Tempo
Another item worth noting is the tempo of successful meetings
Parliamentary Procedure appears, at first, to be a complex and confusing system to follow. You
will find a few simple procedures will improve the efficiency of your meetings.
3. Agenda
List specific measurable objectives rather than topics
5. Timing
Choose the right time and the right place for participants
Limit the time of the meeting
Start on time – end on time
Background
Information on the causes of a problem or situation which requires a meeting
A flight plan, a road map
An understanding of why there is concern
Target
A constructive purpose all can identify
A clear focus on the subject area
A specific question to pin- point ideas
Participation
An appreciation of the difficulties some have in speaking up at a meeting
A willingness to do pre-planning
Confidence in the leader’s methods
Fairness to both ideas and people
Ground Rules
Thoughtful control for the sake of the individual and the group
A clear statement of the ground rules
Proper techniques to allow people to be heard
Recording
A system of keeping records of the meeting
Evidence that ideas are heard and will be recorded
Summary
A plan for ending the meeting as a complete experience
A realistic summary
Follow Up
What will happen next?
What is expected of members?
Publicity
Notices to members including date, time, location, purpose
Location
Size of room Ventilation
Electrical outlets Parking
Acoustics Traffic Directions
Temperature Lighting
Washrooms Telephone access
Stairs/elevators Wall Space for Flipcharts
Equipment
Tables (numbers, size, shape) Extension cords
Chairs (numbers, comfort) Flip chart/extra paper
Screen Coffee, tea, water or other refreshments
White board/markers LCD projector
Laptop
Materials
Name tags Masking tape
Felt markers Pens
Paper
lack sufficient information and need to be referred The position of the chairperson
to a committee or the executive indicates the role that he/she
intends to play. Sitting at the
may be poorly-timed or those that you do not wish end of a long, narrow table
to take immediate action on
reveals power and complete
control, whereas a chair who
Items for Decision and Action
require action of an immediate and visible nature
sits among the members becomes
by board members more of a facilitator. It is more
difficult to manage discussion
result in specific recommendations from this last position.
Agenda
Call to order
Make introductions if necessary (5 minutes)
Examples:
To set date, time, location for our next tournament
To discuss method and develop critical path to increase participation levels by 10%
To identify evaluation methods for officials in our area
Objectives stated in the terms of used above may require further refinements during the
meeting. They will help when deciding who should attend, as well as allow participants to
prepare for the meeting. With a well-prepared agenda, composed of objectives, (not topics),
your meeting will be simplified and shorter.
b) New items
Heading
Date
Time
Location
Name of chair
Names of members present
Names of members absent
Starting time
Adoption of minutes from last meeting
Summary of ideas and topics discussed
Suggestions proposed, action by whom, by when
All motions made
Name of members who made motions
Name of members who seconded motions
Outcome of motions (carried or defeated)
Time of adjournment
Date, time, location of next meeting
Page 12 Effective Meetings
Committees
A committee is two or more persons who have been chosen by the organization to carry out a
specific task.
Benefits:
Saves time and prevents boredom at meetings. The committee can work out the
project details and report back at the next meeting.
People can choose the committee that their abilities/interests suit best.
Involves everyone; thus one person is not loaded with all of the responsibilities
A committee may do any particular job the organization wishes. The size of the committee
depends on the size of the project. It should include both new and experienced members.
1. Election by members
2. Volunteers
3. According to a resolution
Types of Committees
Standing Committees are those which are active throughout the year.
Special Committees are those which are appointed to serve a single event or purpose.
These are also called Ad Hoc Committees and are often dissolved at the conclusion of
the event or project.
Organization
A committee is organized similar to the larger board. The chairperson calls the committee
together and presides at the meetings It is important definite duty assignments are made
within the committee. Since committee are appointed as representatives of a whole
organization, reports must be made by the chairperson to the board members at meetings.
4. Procedure
What has been done
Information that has been gathered
Proposed action plan
Names of those assigned to carry out specific tasks
5. Recommendations
Should be made at the larger committee or board meeting in the
form of motions and acted upon
1. The Chairperson must be fully informed on each item and thus be able to determine
what the objective is. In order for the chairperson to be effective he/she:
Should set aside the time to review each agenda item with the person
responsible for bringing it forward
Must know why the board is dealing with an item and what action is required
Must be generally aware of all the alternatives
Must be able to guide his fellow members towards their objective
2. The Chairperson must be able to encourage the involvement of each board member
in discussions to ensure that all relevant points are heard.
The Chairperson should not be the main spokesperson on the agenda items.
His/her role should be to elicit comments from colleagues and if possible arrive
on a generally agreed upon course of action.
Encouraging discussion also entails a fairly high degree of management by the
chairperson. Individuals should not be allowed to dominate the discussion. The
Chairperson should not allow the discussion to drift.
4. The Chairperson must be capable of summarizing the main points and bringing the
item to a decision.
The chairperson should be serving in a directing capacity – to draw out the main
points, summarize then and have a motion made on the item.
2. Focus on the behaviour and avoid labelling the person. Classifying the person only
increases his/her defensiveness.
3. Point out the effects this behaviour has on the group. Often, the disruptive individual is
unaware of the negative impact of his/her behaviour.
4. Suggest alternative behaviours that will be more productive, satisfying participation for
the disruption member.
● ● ●
The Province of Manitoba has staff available
to assist organizations with
Consultation
Meeting Management
Strategic Planning
•
The Encourager • Shows approval (smiles, nods head) and verablly gives approval
•
The Recorder • Keeps written records of decisions and actions of the group
•
• Gives ground or admits that there are two sides to the question in
The Compromiser • order that progress be made
• The know-it-all
The Recognition Seeker • Draws attention to his/her self
•
• Does not talk
Mr./Mrs. Zipper
Remember to:
Have a purpose for a meeting
Pre-Plan each meeting
Inform all members
Keep accurate records