Spare the meetings
The answer to everything can’t be “have a meeting.” Zoom fatigue is real, and people need big blocks of time to do deep work. Save meetings for the high-value stuff — collaborating, team-building — and use async tools for the rest.
How Steady makes it happen
See how Steady helps teams eliminate low-value meetings, and maximize productive work time.
The theory
“Meeting hours” are the most precious commodity in a knowledge organization. They carry a high cost but are incredibly valuable when used correctly.
- Meetings are expensive. Companies spend a disproportionate amount of payroll on meetings, to the tune of hundreds of millions of dollars at large companies.
- Meetings are zero-sum. You’re either talking about the work, or doing the work.
- Excess meetings are draining. Too many meetings too much of the time leaves you with little energy for real work.
- Meetings are flexibility killers. Rigid recurring meeting structures erase one of the biggest advantages of remote and hybrid work; flexibility.
- Meetings erode deep-work. Knowledge workers like developers and designers need large, uninterrupted blocks of time to get into flow state do their best work. Nothing of significance is getting done in that 30-minute gap between meetings.
Despite the price, meetings are absolutely vital, especially in remote and hybrid teams. Rich human interaction — collaborating, spit-balling, celebrating, commiserating, etc — is the foundation that great work and strong team culture is built on.
Get rid of low-value meetings — status meetings, high-frequency all-hands, etc. — in favor of async updates and save your meeting budget for high-value collaboration and teamwork.
Reference material
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Laker, B., Pereira, V., Malik, A., Soga, L. (2022, March). Dear Manager, You’re Holding Too Many Meetings. Harvard Business Review.
Research shows that 70% of meetings keep employees from doing productive work. Deliberate and asynchronous approaches can alleiviate the problem.
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Rossi, L. (2023, February 9). How to Reduce Meetings. Refactoring.
Strategies and practical ideas for better async communication, and a detailed case study.
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Graham, P. (2009, July 5). Maker’s Schedule, Manager’s Schedule. PaulGraham.com.
Graham posits that managers’ schedules are typically segmented into one-hour intervals for meetings, while makers (like programmers or writers) prefer long, uninterrupted blocks of time to be productive in their creative or technical work.
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Boyle, M. (2022 September 26). Useless Meetings Waste Time and $100 Million a Year for Big Companies. Bloomberg.
Employees say they don’t need to be in nearly one-third of the meetings they attend, a survey shows.
Ready to go Steady?
See for yourself how Steady helps teams work better, together.