Why meetings may be ineffective

There are many reasons why meetings are not effective, some of these include:

  • The meeting is unnecessary and revolves around discussion of trivial issues, wasting members’ valuable time
  • The meeting lacks a clarity of purpose, i.e. the aims and objectives are not clearly defined
  • Inappropriate style of leadership, i.e. the chairperson dominates and ignores or disregards other contributions
  • The chairperson exercises little control and allows one or two members to dominate the proceedings
  • The meeting is too large thereby limiting the flow of discussion and preventing all members being able to contribute
  • Decisions emerge that are not truly representative
  • Problems are talked about rather than being talked through
  • Decisions are delayed or not acted upon
  • No clear-cut decisions are made
  • Minutes are inaccurate or seen as being manipulated by the chairperson or secretary for his/her own purposes
  • The wrong people are present, thus preventing the meeting proceeding effectively, e.g. those present must refer to another person and are therefore unable to comment effectively