Some Tips for Process-Improvement Meetings
The most common and most egregious mistake that
the various process-improvement team leaders make is not having a meeting
agenda. The agenda must be published before the meeting and distributed to team
members. Team members need to anticipate what to expect in the meeting and what
the intended results are—by this, I mean the deliverables. Minutes of each
meeting must be taken and published before the next meeting. Minutes must be
approved and/or corrected at each subsequent meeting. Always try to have a
facilitator and a person taking minutes.
Maximize the visibility in
the meeting; make sure all process maps are visible to everyone. Insist that
team members get at least introductory training in the methodology. Trying to
train team members on process-improvement tools at the same time that you’re
trying to improve the process is very difficult. If meetings last more than two
hours, the leader is not organized, and the
members won’t be able to function very well.
Always set a goal of finishing at least two
deliverables or milestones for each meeting, and push to have them get completed.
End the meeting with asking the members
what went right and what went wrong.
Contact Dr. Tom = thomasdepaoli@yahoo.com drtombooks.com for newsletter sign up https://drtombooks.com/contact/ My Books link: https://www.amazon.com/Tom-DePaoli/e/B003XSV1IQ
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