Don’t Hide Behind Email
April 28th, 2015 by Clint Padgett
A survey of 32,000 employees revealed that people who met with their managers up to six hours a week were more inspired, engaged and innovative at work. That confirms PSI’s preference for in-person, biweekly team status meetings to shift the Worry Curve.
We know it’s difficult to make time, coordinate schedules, and reserve the room. However, consider the pitfalls of relying solely on electronic status reports – for project managers and teams:
- It encourages procrastination: Emailed status reports and updates sit in an inbox with other email – easy to overlook or put off. It doesn’t command the attention a meeting would.
- It discourages group problem solving: Electronic reporting deprives the project of the collective insight and support of the entire team when problems arise.
- It hinders accountability: The biggest problem electronic reporting creates is enabling team members to avoid public accountability for their tasks by hiding behind email.
In-person meetings create team commitment to the project, to each other and to their own roles in the project, while project managers find it easier to monitor progress, see deviations from the plan and tap the insights of the whole group to find solutions. Being in a room together drives accountability, results, and a sense of community.
It’s a lot better than hiding behind an email.
Tags: challenge, deadlines, decisions, focus, management, Project Management, Project Success, Project Success Method, Shifting the Worry Curve, teamwork
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