2d • 2 days ago
Here’s how leaders master the room in minutes:
I’ve watched 1,000+ executive meetings.
These are the 15 micro-habits leaders do to make their meetings more effective:
1/. Arrive 5 minutes early and scan the room first ↳ Never rush in last minute
2/. Keep devices face-down ↳ Show others their time matters
3/. Take physical notes ↳ The old-school way commands attention
4/. Sit up straight, lean slightly forward ↳ Body language speaks before you do
5/. Reference others’ earlier points by name ↳ “Building on Sarah’s insight…”
6/. Ask questions before making statements ↳ Lead with curiosity, not authority
7/. Pause 3 seconds before responding ↳ Thoughtfulness beats quick reactions
8/. Use “What if…” instead of “But…” ↳ Open possibilities rather than shut them down
9/. Acknowledge opposing views first ↳ “I see your perspective, and…”
10/. Keep comments under 60 seconds ↳ Brevity signals confidence
11/. Make eye contact with everyone ↳ Not just the highest-ranking person
12/. Summarise others’ points accurately ↳ Show you truly listen
13/. End contributions with clear next steps ↳ “So I’ll have that analysis by Friday”
14/. Thank people for specific insights ↳ Not just generic “good meeting”
15/. Send follow-up notes within 2 hours ↳ While everything’s fresh
The best part?
→ None of these require special talent or authority. → Just intentional practice.
Which one will you try in your next meeting?
Leave a comment 👇
—- Repost if this resonates & follow ⚡️Harvey Lee ⚡️ for more.
Click here to add your own text
Here’s how leaders master the room in minutes:
I’ve watched 1,000+ executive meetings.
These are the 15 micro-habits leaders do to make their meetings more effective:
1/. Arrive 5 minutes early and scan the room first
↳ Never rush in last minute
2/. Keep devices face-down
↳ Show others their time matters
3/. Take physical notes
↳ The old-school way commands attention
4/. Sit up straight, lean slightly forward
↳ Body language speaks before you do
5/. Reference others’ earlier points by name
↳ “Building on Sarah’s insight…”
6/. Ask questions before making statements
↳ Lead with curiosity, not authority
7/. Pause 3 seconds before responding
↳ Thoughtfulness beats quick reactions
8/. Use “What if…” instead of “But…”
↳ Open possibilities rather than shut them down
9/. Acknowledge opposing views first
↳ “I see your perspective, and…”
10/. Keep comments under 60 seconds
↳ Brevity signals confidence
11/. Make eye contact with everyone
↳ Not just the highest-ranking person
12/. Summarise others’ points accurately
↳ Show you truly listen
13/. End contributions with clear next steps
↳ “So I’ll have that analysis by Friday”
14/. Thank people for specific insights
↳ Not just generic “good meeting”
15/. Send follow-up notes within 2 hours
↳ While everything’s fresh
The best part?
→ None of these require special talent or authority.
→ Just intentional practice.
Which one will you try in your next meeting?
Leave a comment 👇
—-
Repost if this resonates & follow ⚡️Harvey Lee ⚡️ for more.