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There's Usually One at Every Meeting

Posted By Administration, Wednesday, September 26, 2018
Updated: Thursday, September 27, 2018

So, I'm spending my Sunday taking a few on-line courses that are available to my firm's employees 24/7 (I love that option; I can grow my knowledge and skills whenever I want—in my jammies or with beverage in hand, pausing if I need a break—you get the picture).

So anyway, one of the courses I finished today was talking about the sins of meetings (did you know there are seven of them, and that they are deadly?).

The webinar guy (from LeadershipIQ) talked about people who show up late for meetings. That's just downright annoying, if you ask me. If I'm the leader of the meeting, I must confess I still don't have a set way of addressing the tardy person, if that person should even be addressed/acknowledged when they walk in late to the meeting.

I remember attending an educational session in which the speaker said she wouldn't acknowledge the tardy person; wouldn't allow them to break into (upset the rhythm of) her presentation.

I recall being at another session and someone walked in late. The speaker backtracked to bring the tardy person up to speed on what they missed.

Today's webinar guy talked about how meetings cost your company money (he had an example formula, something like: 8 people x $50/hour x a 3-hour meeting = $1,200). And he said that tardy attendees should not be allowed to continue to be tardy. And he gave some examples of what some firms (or meeting leaders) do to try to curb the tardiness, such as: If there are 8 people in the meeting, buy only 7 doughnuts or coffees. Or, the person late to the meeting buys dinner for everyone.

Those tactics might work, but do you think the person who is habitually tardy gives a hoot if they never get a doughnut? I think not.

The webinar guy offered this solution: When that annoying person shows up late, tell him/her (something like) this, "Your being late is a waste of my time and a waste of everyone's time in this room. You just cost this organization [insert dollar figure here] because of your tardiness. Your tardiness is not going to be allowed to continue."

And then don't invite that person to future meetings.

The webinar guy suggested you bluntly, calmly, and rationally tell the tardy person the results of his/her tardiness.

I kind of like that tactic. It's bold, and sometimes you should be bold. Right?

What I'm not sure of right now is whether I'd say that in front of everyone (right when the tardy person walked in), or whether I'd wait to speak to the tardy person privately. I do know that if I did it privately, I'd be sure to let the other meeting attendees know the reason why the tardy person is no longer invited to our meetings.

How do you handle tardy meeting attendees (or what ways have you seen others handle that situation)? Share your ideas in the comment box below.

 

 

 

Judy A Beebe, CDFA, is the Principal Technical Associate - Office Administration

for WSP-USA in Seattle, WA

Tags:  Late to Meeting  SDA  Society for Design Administration  Tardy 

Permalink | Comments (4)
 

Comments on this post...

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Sarah Wallace, FSDA, LEED Green Associate says...
Posted Thursday, September 27, 2018
Great blog - i like addressing it directly with the person and when it happens (not later) if it is habitual and a volunteer organziation (like SDA). However, this is reliant on the context. If I think of clients/consultants coming to our office, they often have issues with traffic and just finding our suite in a large complex. obviously, the direct approach or saying they won't be invited to future meetings wouldn't be apopriate. But if you are constantly waiting for a tardy board member and it impacts the other officers from handling the agenda in a respectful and timely manner, then that indicates the need for a different conversation about accountability, dedication, or logistical changes that would help. Great ideas to appy to different scenarios....
Permalink to this Comment }

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Gloria Boden, CDFA says...
Posted Thursday, September 27, 2018
Can I be honest here? Humiliating someone in front of their co-workers or in private is never the way to go. Showing up with a donut short is just childish. People show up late for all kinds of reasons. I feel you should just continue with the meeting. After the meeting if you want to ask the person if everything is okay, fine.
Permalink to this Comment }

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Gloria Boden, CDFA says...
Posted Thursday, September 27, 2018
Can I be honest here? Humiliating someone in front of their co-workers or in private is never the way to go. Showing up with a donut short is just childish. People show up late for all kinds of reasons. I feel you should just continue with the meeting. After the meeting if you want to ask the person if everything is okay, fine. Let me add, I personally start my meetings on time in order to set a precedence. That is that natural consequence of being late.
Permalink to this Comment }

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Betsy Nickless, FSDA says...
Posted Monday, October 1, 2018
I'm with Gloria on this one. Yes, if it's an employee and it's costing the company money, chronic tardiness should be addressed privately, not in front of the group. Although some acknowledgment of the tardiness is in order so that other know it's not acceptable. As for volunteer organizations, we've all been caught at the door by the boss, on the phone by the client, or in the middle of a Canstruction crisis;)
Permalink to this Comment }

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