You know the feeling. You walk out of another meeting, glance at the clock, and realize you're never getting that hour back.
No clear direction. No accountability. No numbers were even discussed. Just a room full of people who filled up a calendar slot and called it collaboration.
It happens in almost every company. And most owners have no idea how much it's actually costing them.
Let's Do the Math
Take a moment to calculate the real cost of your meetings. Add up the hourly value of everyone in the room, including yourself. Multiply that by the length of the meeting. Now multiply that by how often it happens every month.
For a lot of businesses, that number is staggering. Thousands of dollars a month spent on meetings that produce no decisions, no accountability, and no forward progress.
That's not a scheduling issue. That's a leak in your profitability.
Meetings Aren't the Problem. Bad Meetings Are.
It's easy to blame meetings themselves. Cancel them all and just communicate over Slack, right?
Not quite. The right meetings, run the right way, are one of the most powerful tools you have for driving alignment, accountability, and growth. The problem isn't that you're meeting. It's that most meetings aren't built with a purpose.
A good meeting has a clear agenda. Reviews specific numbers. Assigns clear action items with owners and deadlines. And ends with everyone knowing exactly what happens next. A bad meeting has none of that. It's just people talking.
What a High Value Meeting Actually Looks Like
Here's a simple framework to turn your meetings from time fillers into growth drivers.
- Start with the numbers. Every meeting should open by reviewing the specific metrics relevant to that team or department. This keeps the conversation grounded in reality, not opinions.
- Review action items from last time. What was committed to last meeting? Was it completed? If not, why? This is where accountability either gets built or quietly erodes.
- Solve, don't just discuss. If a problem comes up, the goal of the meeting is to leave with a decision or a next step, not just a longer conversation about the problem.
- Assign clear owners and deadlines. Every action item leaving the meeting should have exactly one owner and one deadline. No exceptions.
- End on time, every time. A meeting that consistently runs long signals a lack of discipline in how it's being run.
The Meeting Audit Every Owner Should Run
Take an honest look at your recurring meetings this month. For each one, ask three questions.
Does this meeting have a clear purpose? Does it consistently produce decisions and action items? Would the business suffer if we canceled it?
If you can't confidently answer yes to the first two, it's time to redesign or eliminate that meeting entirely.
Building a Meeting Rhythm That Drives Growth
The best run companies aren't in fewer meetings. They're in the right meetings, run with intention, on a consistent cadence.
At ActionCOACH North Kansas City, we help owners build a meeting rhythm that ties directly to their scorecards, their goals, and their accountability structure. So every meeting has a purpose and every hour spent in a room actually moves the business forward.
Ready to Stop Wasting Time in Meetings That Go Nowhere?
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