Two techniques proved effective in curing cases of chronic
tardiness are:
1.) To ignore latecomers
2.) To make no attempt to
bring late-comers up to date.
Getting off the subject is the most commonly reported meeting problem in business meetings. It usually exists when a meeting lacks structure, when there is extensive topic jumping or group members prematurely jump to a solution, and when irrelevant discussion occurs by following the suggested key steps taken by the chairperson of the meeting this problem can be alleviated.
Meetings which do not progress from point to point in an organized way are difficult to keep on track because there is no common plan or perception as to what should be covered. This can be lessened by having discipline in tracking the discussion, summarizing after each point, and emphasizing upon crystal clear structure and progression throughout the entire discussion.
The average group shifts topics every 1.5 minutes. Changing topics is natural but needs to be monitored by all group members in order to avoid being excessive. Everyone must strive to keep the number of topic shifts within reasonable limits. Solution jumping occurs when the group tires to solve a problem before adequate definition or analysis of the problem has been made. Solution jumping, like topic jumping, requires immediate intervention and correction by the chairperson or other group members by reverting back to the agenda item.
A well-planned chairperson's orientation will avert a significant amount of
irrelevant comment. All group members need to relate their comments to the
discussion and ask for clarification when another person's comments seem
to be unrelated to the discussion.
(Mosuick, et. al., 1987)