
Lead Engaging Meetings

Thank you for reading this book. Be sure to get your free tools, bonus chapter, and resources at www.LeadEngagingMeetings.com. And should you ever want to connect, feel free to email me at Jeff@LeadEngagingMee
Jeff Shannon • Lead Engaging Meetings
My rule is to try something new in every meeting I lead.
Jeff Shannon • Lead Engaging Meetings
This may sound like woo-woo, touchy-feely stuff, but the truth is you will never reach mastery without using all five of your senses.
Jeff Shannon • Lead Engaging Meetings
Here is my final and probably most valuable advice for your journey to lead engaging and productive meetings: improvise
Jeff Shannon • Lead Engaging Meetings
Remember the big idea of this book: you must engage people if you want engagement.
Jeff Shannon • Lead Engaging Meetings
Conclusion
Jeff Shannon • Lead Engaging Meetings
The end of the meeting, including the affirming actions, locks in the value for the participants and the organization. This is where the execution of the plan or implementation of the learning begins.
Jeff Shannon • Lead Engaging Meetings
Simplify all the language to capture the spirit in as few words as possible. Add context to anything essential that your meeting notes may not have captured. Run the document through an AI grammar and spellchecker. Make the document visually appealing with proper spacing, titles, and subtitles. Send this second-draft document to the group for revie
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Capture all the words you jotted down on a flip chart (or other tool) during the meeting into a document. As a reminder, the notes captured during the meeting represent the first draft. After the meeting, organize the information based on the subjects into a one- to three-page document. This is the second draft.