Most meetings fail not in the room, but around it. They collapse because there’s no clear agenda beforehand and no follow-up afterwards.
The result is wasted time, actions forgotten, and teams left wondering what the point was.
It’s not meetings themselves that people dread, but their potential for wasted time and effort.
This wasted time happens when leaders treat meetings as isolated events, rather than part of a wider communication cycle.
We’ll look at the habits that set meetings up for success before they start, and how to follow through afterwards so discussions translate into action.
Harvard Business Review found that managers spend up to 23 hours a week in meetings, and the majority believe they’re unproductive.
The real issue isn’t just the time spent in the room, but the lack of structure around it. Some common issues include:
When these bookends are missing, even the best-intentioned meetings become forgettable.
The value of a meeting is determined before it starts and after it ends, not just during the time block itself.
The difference between a sharp, energising meeting and a meandering one is almost always preparation.
Good pre-communication means people arrive ready to contribute, not just listen.
Best practices for before the meeting:
According to Doodle’s “State of Meetings” report, unproductive meetings cost businesses $399 billion annually in the US due to lost productivity.
That cost is preventable when preparation is treated as seriously as the meeting itself.
Even a well-run meeting can unravel if nothing happens afterwards. Post-meeting communication is where decisions gain traction.
Best practices for after the meeting:
Without this discipline, meetings become talking shops with lots of words and little follow-through. With a little effort, meetings can drive results and get things moving.
What happens after the meeting determines whether it was a conversation or a turning point.
Strong meeting habits aren’t just about isolated improvements; they should become part of the culture.
Teams that consistently prepare and follow up create a rhythm of respect and accountability.
Shopify famously cut 10,000 recurring meetings in 2023, asking teams to re-justify every slot. The goal wasn’t fewer meetings, but more intentional ones.
“Meetings are a bug, not a feature of work. They take up time, cause delays, and impact productivity. Most importantly, no one joined your company to sit in meetings.” - Kaz Nejatian, Chief Operating Officer at Shopify
If your team dreads meetings, the problem may not be the meetings themselves but the lack of structure before and after them.
By treating meetings as part of a communication cycle, not an isolated event, you’ll cut wasted time and increase impact.
Book a call to find out how Vestd helps teams build ownership and alignment.