Meetings at work: Perceived effectiveness and recommended improvements

This study investigates why a large proportion of meetings continue to be regarded as a poor use of time, despite a substantial body of literature on how to make improvements. Employees from 41 countries provide comments on the effectiveness of their typical meetings and how to improve effectiveness...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of business research 2015-09, Vol.68 (9), p.2015-2026
Hauptverfasser: Geimer, Jennifer L., Leach, Desmond J., DeSimone, Justin A., Rogelberg, Steven G., Warr, Peter B.
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container_end_page 2026
container_issue 9
container_start_page 2015
container_title Journal of business research
container_volume 68
creator Geimer, Jennifer L.
Leach, Desmond J.
DeSimone, Justin A.
Rogelberg, Steven G.
Warr, Peter B.
description This study investigates why a large proportion of meetings continue to be regarded as a poor use of time, despite a substantial body of literature on how to make improvements. Employees from 41 countries provide comments on the effectiveness of their typical meetings and how to improve effectiveness. Less than half the respondents describe meetings as an effective use of time. The results suggest that employees are often invited to meetings of little personal relevance and many meeting organizers fail to apply fundamental meeting design practices. The findings show differences in response patterns for country of origin, job status (part- or full-time), and organizational type, but not for gender, supervisory status, and organizational tenure. The study provides illustrative comments about forms of effectiveness/ineffectiveness and forms of improvement, and discusses the implications with respect to theory development, future research, and practice.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.jbusres.2015.02.015
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subjects Attendee involvement
Development theory
Effectiveness studies
Employees
Manycountries
Meeting effectiveness
Meeting improvement
Meeting recommendations
Meetings
Organization development
Organization theory
Organizational behaviour
Organizational effectiveness
Organizational structure
Practice
title Meetings at work: Perceived effectiveness and recommended improvements
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