Most Meetings Fail Before They Start
The meeting invite says 'Discuss Q3 strategy.' Six people show up. Two didn't prepare because they didn't know they needed to. One thought this was a brainstorm. Another thought it was a decision-making meeting. The facilitator opens with 'so, where should we start?' and forty-five minutes later, nothing has been decided.
This isn't a meeting problem. It's a pre-meeting communication problem. The meeting failed the moment the invite was sent without context, expected preparation, or a clear outcome. By the time people are in the room, the damage is done.
A single well-crafted pre-meeting email can cut meeting time in half and double the output. Here's how.
The 'Decision Meeting' Pre-Email
Subject: [Meeting name] — prep needed by [date]
Hi team, We're meeting on [date] to make a decision on [specific topic]. CONTEXT: [2-3 sentences of background]. THE DECISION: [Specific question we need to answer]. OPTIONS ON THE TABLE: Option A: [description + trade-offs] Option B: [description + trade-offs] Option C: [description + trade-offs] PREP NEEDED: Please come ready with your recommendation and reasoning. If you have data or examples that support your position, bring them. EXPECTED OUTCOME: We leave with a decision and next steps assigned. [Your name]
This email eliminates the three biggest meeting killers: unclear purpose (everyone knows it's a decision meeting), insufficient preparation (options are pre-loaded), and ambiguous outcomes (the expected output is stated). People can't show up and wing it.
The 'Status Update' Pre-Email
Subject: [Meeting name] — please update your section by [date]
Hi team, For our [meeting name] on [date], please update your section in [shared doc link] by [deadline — 24h before meeting]. Format: Current status (1 sentence), Blockers (if any), Help needed (if any). If your section has no blockers and no help needed, you can skip the meeting and I'll send you notes. We'll focus meeting time on items that need group discussion or decisions. [Your name]
The radical move here: making attendance optional for people with no blockers. This signals that you value people's time more than ritual attendance. It also means the people who DO attend have real issues to discuss, making the meeting dramatically more productive.
The Post-Meeting Summary Email
Subject: [Meeting name] — decisions + action items
Send within 2 hours of the meeting ending:
Hi team, Here's what came out of today's meeting: DECISIONS MADE: [Bullet list of decisions with brief rationale] ACTION ITEMS: [Person] — [Task] — [Deadline] [Person] — [Task] — [Deadline] OPEN ITEMS (for next meeting): [Topics deferred] Next meeting: [Date] with focus on [specific topic]. Let me know if I captured anything incorrectly. [Your name]
This email is the difference between a meeting that matters and a meeting that evaporates. Without a written summary, decisions get reinterpreted, action items get forgotten, and the next meeting starts with 'wait, what did we decide last time?'
Top comments (0)