How to write meeting minutes
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Transcript of How to write meeting minutes
HOW TO WRITE MEETING MINUTES
Summarize the main points which are debated and the main views expressed
They should go into sufficient detail to make the substance of the meeting clear, but should not be too detailed, unless there is an important reason for this
Usually the minutes are distributed to members of a committee along with the agenda for the next meeting
The meeting is then asked to confirm their accuracy, or to propose any amendments, before they are signed by the chair as a true record of what took place at the meeting.
Ensure that all the essential elements are noted: Type of meeting Name of the organization Date and time Name of the chair Approval of previous minutes All resolutions
Prepare an outline based on the agenda ahead of time
Leave plenty of white space for notes
By having the topics already written down you can jump right on to a new topic without a pause
Prepare a list of expected attendees and check of the names as people enter the room
Or you can pass around an attendance sheet for everyone to sign as the meeting starts
To be sure about who said what, make a map of the seating arrangement and make sure to ask for introductions of unfamiliar people
Don’t make the mistake of recording every single movement
Concentrate on getting the gist of the discussion and taking enough notes to summarize it later
Think in terms of issues discussed, major points raised and decisions taken
Use whatever recording method is comfortable for you:
Notepad Laptop Tape recorder Steno pad Shorthand
A good idea: to make sound recordings of important meetings as a backup to your notes
If you are an active participant in the meeting study the issues to be discussed and have your questions ready ahead of time
If you concentrate on grasping the issues while you are making your notes, they won’t make any sense to you later
Don’t wait too long to type your minutes, especially while your memory is fresh
Be sure to have the minutes approved by the chair before distributing them to the attendees
Don’t be intimidated by the prospect of taking minutes
Concise and coherent minutes are the mark of a professional
The very process of recording minutes can give you a deeper understanding of the issues faced by your organization along with the ability to focus on what’s important
Name of OrganizationPurpose of MeetingDate/Timechair
topic discussion
action Person responsible
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It has revolutionized business and personal communication
It makes possible to communicate cheaply and almost instantly with people anywhere in the world – provided they have access to a computer
You can send any type of messages from a single word to a book length document complete with pictures and sound files
The recipient can respond at once, or think carefully before replying
Emails inhabit a space somewhere between personal meetings, telephones and letters
They share advantages with each other of these means of communication
They are instant and direct and allow a number of people to participate
They are quick and inexpensive They allow those involved to keep a
permanent record of messages sent and received
Disadvantages: They rely on written language You cannot monitor the recipient’s reaction
to your message When you receive them you may missjudge
the sender’s tone because you only have words on the screen to go by
It is easy to say something that you soon regret
The rules governing them are less well established
Making the Most of E-mail
E-mail is the transmission of files or messages through a computer network
E-mail is a handy medium for sending memos and notices and for forwarding information received electronically from others
Thanks to the “attachment” capabilities of current browsers a writer can develop a lengthy document in Microsoft Word or another word processing programme and send it to others , saving enormously in time and postal charges
E-mail is a form of business correspondence that requires the same attention that memos and letters receive
E-mail has become the dominant method of communication in most companies because it is inexpensive, fast, and easy
Unfortunately the speed and ease have created some problems for business writers and their companies:
First, employees sometimes send and often receive time-wasting, unnecessary messages
Second, many e-mails are sloppily written: people simply write down what’s on their mind and press the send button without reflection on content and composition
Third, emotional and ill-considered messages are sometimes send before the writer has had time to calm down
Fourth, messages are occasionally misdirected or forwarded to unintended recipients- sometimes with negative consequences
Fifth, even deleted e-mails can be retrieved for use in disciplinary proceedings or can be subpoenaed for use in legal disputes
The e-mail subject line should be the lure that gets your reader interested and signals the contents
For this reason, your subject should meet at least one of the following goals: Contain your key message: “sales meeting
rescheduled to 2 PM on Friday” Include the desired action or response: “Your
comments urgently needed by 4 PM today” Be specific but not too long: “How about
lunch tomorrow?” Allow your reader to file and retrieve your
message easily: “John’s report”
In contrast, a weak subject line gives little or no information or too much to be read on one line
If the subject line is too general, vague, or left blank, the reader may skip or delete the message altogether
Remember: busy people receive fifty to one hundred e-mail messages per day. To ensure that yours is opened and read, it must stand out
Treat each e-mail as a coherent information packet – to ask a question, communicate your opinion, report news, and so forth
You will achieve coherence if each e-mail contains only one message
If you have more than one message for a recipient, create a separate e-mail for each, and give each a strong, appropriate subject line
The one-message e-mail has two major advantages:
1. the recipient can digest and respond to a single message more easily
2. if a recipient forwards your e-mail to a third party, other messages – which can be highly inappropriate – won’t be dragged along
Structure
Short emails are usually relaxed, informal and unstructured
Long ones, as with letters, the structure consists of three main parts:
1. introduction - you explain briefly what the message is about
2. body – the main part of the message 3. conclusion – rounds the message off and,
if you want some kind of action to result from the message, you spell out what it is
Hi Jason, Thanks for your contribution to the meeting yesterday. I
thought it was very valuable for all of us.
I’ve been thinking about what you said about new ideas for marketing GKH products in the EU. I spoke to Kate, our Overseas Sales Director, and she’s very interested in the idea. We wonder if you would have a moment to explain your ideas to her – nothing elaborate, just a series of bullet points would do. Then she can evaluate it and, if she decides to proceed, she’ll work up a full scale proposal in collaboration with you.
Perhaps you could let me know if you’d like to do this – and when.
Regards, Sandra
Response
Keep your message as short as feasible
Structure it so that it is easy to read and understand
When you have finished the message, read it through for sense and message