The daily standup was invented to solve a problem: managers needed visibility into what their team was doing. But visibility doesn't require a daily meeting. It requires a good information system.
The status update meeting is a relic. Here's why, and what to replace it with.
The Problem with Daily Standups
Daily standups assume that a manager needs to know, every day, what every team member is working on. This was true when work was opaque and communication was slow. It's less true now.
The cost of daily standups:
- 30 minutes per person per day
- 2.5 hours per week per person in a 5-person team
- Context-switching cost: most people need 15-30 minutes to refocus after a meeting
For a 5-person team, that's 3+ hours of productivity lost every week. In a year, that's a month of work.
What Weekly Reports Look Like
Instead of daily standups, have people write a weekly update. One paragraph, every Friday:
- What you accomplished this week
- What you're working on next week
- Any blockers or risks
Total time: 10 minutes per person, per week. No meeting required.
Why Weekly Reports Win
Asynchronous by default
People can read updates on their own schedule. No one needs to be in the same room at the same time. This is especially valuable for remote and distributed teams.
Better documentation
Written updates are searchable. You can look back and see what someone was working on three months ago. Verbal standups disappear the moment they end.
Scales better
A team of 5 can do a round-robin standup in 15 minutes. A team of 50 cannot. Written updates work at any scale.
Respects deep work
Developers, writers, and other knowledge workers need long stretches of uninterrupted time. Daily standups fragment that time. Weekly reports don't.
When to Keep the Standup
For some teams, especially early-stage startups with high coordination needs, daily standups still make sense. If your team is:
- Working on highly interdependent tasks
- Rapidly changing priorities
- Still establishing norms and trust
Then keep the standup. But for teams doing mostly independent work with clear priorities, weekly reports are more efficient.
The Transition
Try it for one month: replace daily standups with weekly written updates. Keep the daily for teams that need the rhythm. Most will find they don't miss what they thought they needed.
Visibility is important. Meetings aren't the only way to get it.
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