Image courtesy: MISE

Every time you step into a meeting room, you are burning a lot of your organization’s money. Part of the budget your project or a team receives will be spent on meetings. These spendings are often ignored or not accounted in the overall budget otherwise.

Let’s assume you have a team of 10 senior developers working on a bunch of tasks for 8-hours a day and they are billed at $100/hour. The combined time consumed by 10 developers is 80 hours at the cost of $8,000 for a given day. In theory, that’s a budget well spent if your developers had a productive 8-hours of their day. But then, there are meetings to attend.

If your team of 10 developers is in a meeting for an hour, that translates to:

10 developers x $100 per hour = $1,000 per meeting.

You just had a meeting that took $1,000 off your day’s budget of $8,000. Before I jump into the reality, let’s assume it was a productive meeting and everyone are perfectly aligned to each other’s thought processes. But let’s face it — not all meetings are productive.

What you can do as an organizer of the meeting:

What you can do as a participant:

Having said that, we all need meetings. There is no escape. They are essential to the overall success of a team and the organization. The cost of having no meetings at all could be far more expensive. It is just that we need find a sweet-spot by optimizing the time spent in meetings for efficient communication and enhanced productivity.

HBR has a Meeting Cost Calculator tool that you can use while setting the budget for your upcoming project.

Putting these into practice would save a large amount of money to your organization and help your team get more productive. Be considerate before clicking on the meeting request send button.

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