Summarize Decisions - Do you know how to loop someone in at the end of a meeting?
Last updated by Brady Stroud [SSW] about 2 months ago.See historyAs businesses become larger and more complex, it's harder for the decision makers to keep up to date with every product change or be in every meeting. Responsibilities for decision making cannot be delegated but gathering the information to make an informed decision can.
One common tactic is to have a delegate attend the meeting on their behalf and then loop them in at the end, bringing them up to date with an executive summary.
Here are some tips to doing this effectively:
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Ensure the meeting has an agenda
- It should list the delegate (who is receiving the information)
- The last 5 minutes of the meeting will be used to loop in someone else
- Take notes during the meeting
- Summarize the info/action items with the other people on the call
- Call up the person you want to loop in
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Loop them in (done by the delegate)
- Lead with the main message and action items. For example, "We need to adjust X in product Y" or "We should look into using X on the next project"
- Include a recommendation where possible
- Group information around the most important themes
- Consider it an executive summary - if you have to recite the meeting, then it isn't a summary. If everything is important, then nothing is important.
- If the delegate says something incorrect the other attendees of the meeting have a chance to correct them
With this strategy, the decision maker can get to the important points quickly. They can be told:
- What's important - Why should they care?
- What action needs to be taken
- What are the choices - don't leave out the recommendation
- What decisions have to be made and when
Tip: If you can't add them to the summary, record a summary and send them a link to watch when they have time.
They know that there is a lot more detail behind what appears to be a one-line summary. If they want more detail, they can drill down or ask for more information.