You walk into the room. Someone says "let's get started." There's no agenda. No stated goal. No clear outcome expected.
An hour later, you walk out. What happened? You talked about things. You discussed some stuff. Someone mentioned something about Q3. There was a tangent about vendors. Someone asked a question that didn't get answered.
You have no idea what was decided. You're not even sure anything was.
This meeting has a name in every company: the meeting that could have been an email. Except it wasn't even that useful — at least an email you could search later.
Why Some Meetings Don't Have Agendas
The organizer assumes everyone knows why they're there. "It's the weekly sync." But knowing the meeting exists isn't the same as knowing its job.
Or the agenda was decided in a previous meeting, but no one wrote it down. "We agreed last week to discuss the roadmap." And now everyone's relying on memory that doesn't exist.
Or the meeting was scheduled reactively — "we need to talk about X" — and no one stopped to ask what "talk about X" would produce.
Why Some Meetings Don't Produce Decisions
The goal was never to decide. The goal was to discuss. And discussion without a decision frame just produces more discussion.
Nobody pushed for a conclusion. Nobody said "so what are we deciding here?" Nobody called time and said "we need to decide this now or schedule a follow-up."
The meeting happened. Conversation happened. And then everyone went back to their desks to wait for the next meeting.
What Would Have Made This Meeting Work
One question: "What's the decision we're here to make?"
If that question couldn't be answered, the meeting shouldn't have happened.
If it could be answered, the meeting should have ended with the decision — or a clear next step for when it would be made.
No agenda, no decision. No decision, no point.
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