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October 25, 2007

11 Tips for Starting (and Finishing) Meetings on Time

Your meetings often start late and run over time, but it doesn't have to be this way. It's time to take your meetings more seriously! Whether you're the meeting organizer or the attendee, commit to starting and finishing your meetings on time. Expect attendees to be punctual and the meeting to finish on schedule. Intolerance for tardiness will set a behavioral standard for the group, and participants will likely conform if expectations are well-defined and consistently enforced. Listed below are some tips to help you and your group stay on time.


If You're the Meeting Organizer:
1. state that the meeting will begin promptly at the scheduled time and that all participants should be on time
2. send a reminder e-mail thirty minutes before the meeting begins and encourage meeting participants to arrive on time
3. ensure that you begin the meeting at the scheduled time. If you've encouraged others to be prompt, don't embarrass yourself by showing up late.
4. close the meeting room doors at the scheduled time. There's nothing like late attendees to disrupt the flow of a meeting! Consider posting a note outside the door stating the meeting's time. This may seem harsh, but it clearly communicates how serious you are about keeping your meetings on time. If the tardy participants don't consider your meeting important enough to arrive on time, perhaps they shouldn't have committed to attend at all.
5. if your meeting starts a little late, you should still finish the meeting at the scheduled time. It's inconsiderate to assume the participants' schedules revolve around your meeting, so wrap up the meeting when you promised.
6. consider creating a "latecomer jar" to which meeting participants must contribute one dollar for each minute they arrive late to meetings. At the end of the week, you can buy muffins or donuts for everyone who attended the meeting… courtesy of the latecomers!

If You're the Attendee:
7. quickly review the agenda before heading to the meeting. It's a good idea to remind yourself why you're attending the meeting. Reviewing the agenda helps attendees be better prepared for the meeting and, in turn, will help focus the meeting, enable all of the agenda items to be covered and allow the meeting to finish on time!
8. make your way to the meeting ten minutes before it actually begins. This will give you enough time to visit the washroom, pour a cup of coffee or deal with any issues that may come up along the way. Plus, you'll get the best seat for the meeting!
9. consider speaking up if the meeting organizer shows up late. There are several ways to do this tactfully without insulting anyone. For example, if the organizer consistently arrives ten minutes late to your weekly meetings, ask him if it would be more convenient to start 15 minutes later next week.
10. try to ask only relevant questions during the meeting. If your comment isn't directly related to the topic at hand, don't mention it. Getting off track is one of the main reasons that meetings go over time. If your group can avoid getting off track, you'll all spend less time in meetings.
11. leave the meeting when it was scheduled to end. When the organizer extended the invitation to meet, he stated when the meeting would finish. It was on this condition that you accepted the meeting and committed your time. If you have work to which you must attend, politely tell the organizer that you have to leave and excuse yourself from the meeting.


By acting on these ideas, you can indicate how important punctual meetings are. You may even influence others whose meetings frequently run over time.

October 05, 2007

Girl's Day Away is Done!

Golf Outing

The Girl's Day Away golf outing was a success! 144 women showed up to golf that day, and everyone had a wonderful time. If you are interested in seeing a slide show of pictures we took during the day, visit our website. Special thanks to Visit Charlotte for hosting this event, and we know that Girls on the Run benefitted greatly from the fundraiser.

Bed & Bike Inn

Just relax!

Episode XI Studios recently completed a video project for the Bed & Bike Inn in Gold Hill, North Carolina. We learned that there was yet another place in North Carolina that we had overlooked, and it is now our mission to educate Charlotteans about what is right here in our own backyards. If you have been looking for a weekend getaway that's not really far away, this is a perfect spot.

Only an hour from Charlotte, the Bed & Bike Inn is close to more entertainment options than we ever knew about. We highly recommend visiting Historic Gold Hill and enjoying a meal at Miss Ruby’s Restaurant (yummm). For more information about the Inn, click here to see the video.


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