Garry Mansell recently wrote an interesting post on how to understand how a scaling business is really run that had some really good insight on how you build for success versus how you pretend to.
According to Garry — the diary tells you whether the business is scaling, or not. A business that is truly scaling has:
- a diary that is light — it’s not filled with back-to-back-to-back meetings … it has time for people to work (and think) and allows people to make the day-to-day decisions necessary to function
- a diary that doesn’t have repeating meetings that just discuss the same thing in an infinity loop that continually eats up revenue
- a diary that sees the CEO focused external is focused on building and scaling
And for the most part, he’s right. Except, as both an IT and a Procurement professional, I can tell you it’s critical:
- to have regular stand-up/check-in meetings in Dev, especially if you’re using an Agile framework — but these all-team recurring meetings are scheduled to be as short as necessary, and they don’t waste time on detailed status reports, but where things are, who’s waiting on what, what issues have arisen, and who can deal with them … and as soon as all issues are discussed, you get back to work
- in Procurement, you need the same series of meetings for every strategic sourcing event, you need regular check in with Risk Management to track ongoing risks, and you need regular team check-ins to ensure all projects are progressing and resources are allocated properly … but in the first case, they are predefined by the process, only include the necessary reps from each stakeholder group, and held when needed — not weekly meetings; in the second, only issues that have arised or change status are discussed; and in the third, when the situation is understood, the meeting is ended, cut short as much as possible
In other words, there are a number of meetings you can’t get rid of, but you can minimize them and adopt practices to minimize their length, schedule them short, and end them when the necessary information has been exchanged and/or decisions reached. So it’s both the diary … and the details!
