Every meeting ends the same way: "Let's circle back on that." And then nobody circles back.
This is the parking lot problem. Good ideas get parked and never retrieved.
The fix is simple: end every meeting with a parking lot, and make it everyone's job to empty it.
What Is a Parking Lot?
A parking lot is a list of topics that came up during a meeting but aren't relevant to the agenda at that moment. They get "parked" for later discussion.
Most teams do this. Almost no teams actually follow up on it.
The Three-Part Ending
Before a meeting ends, the facilitator runs this three-question close:
- What did we decide? (Not discussed — actually decided)
- Who owns it? (Exactly one person per item)
- When is the follow-up? (Specific date, not "sometime")
If you can't answer all three, the meeting isn't over.
The Parking Lot Protocol
When something gets parked, capture it with:
- The topic (one line)
- The owner (one person)
- The deadline (specific date)
Then put it in a shared doc the whole team can see. Review it at the start of every meeting.
Why Parking Lots Die
Most parking lots fail because:
- They go nowhere after the meeting
- No one owns them
- There's no deadline attached
- Nobody remembers to look at them
The protocol fixes all four.
The Real Reason This Matters
When people see their ideas actually get followed up on, they bring more ideas. When ideas get parked and forgotten, they stop bringing them.
The parking lot is a trust-building tool as much as a productivity tool.
Start Today
At your next meeting, try this:
Before ending, say: "Let's do a parking lot check. What did we park, who owns it, and when do we follow up?"
Then actually follow up. That's the only part that matters.
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