Most meetings don’t fail because of time. They fail because nothing actually gets decided.
Executives are spending nearly 23 hours a week in meetings - and yet 70% say those meetings are ineffective. That’s not a scheduling problem. It’s a decision-making problem.
Too many meetings have:
- Too many voices
- Not enough ownership
- More discussion, but fewer decisions
And over time, that doesn’t just waste time. It also shapes your culture. It tells your team that being busy matters more than being effective.
In our latest episode of The Intentional Workplace Podcast, we break down how to keep the “meat of the meeting” - the conversations that actually matter - without over-processing decisions or burning people out.
Good meetings don’t try to include everything. They protect space for what actually requires human judgment.
A few practical ways to fix it:
- Start with the decision, not the agenda. If nothing will change after the meeting, don’t have it.
- Send context in advance. Meetings are for thinking, not reading slides out loud.
- Limit the room. Smaller groups = clearer accountability.
- End with ownership. If no one owns it, nothing moves.
- Audit recurring meetings. If it’s not adding value anymore, it shouldn’t exist.
🎙 In this episode, Jacob Stone and Maria Williams dive into the topic of meetings and how this can impact culture. If your calendar is full but progress feels slow…this one’s worth a listen!
Fifteen minutes. Two experts. Intentional work.
To learn more about People Operations, Scaling Teams, or Auditing your Human Resource Processes please connect with us!
Jacob Stone:
[email protected]
www.worqtap.com
Maria Williams:
[email protected]
www.scalesmarthr.com