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THE DON IN LTC Supporting an Endangered Species

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Title: THE DON IN LTC Supporting an Endangered Species


1
THE DON IN LTC Supporting an Endangered Species
  • Janet Dykstra, MS, RN, CDONA-LTC
  • Edie Cassel Walters, MBA, RN, NHA

2
  • IV.
  • DEATH BY MEETING PREVENTION STRATEGIES

3
  • Been to any
  • really great
  • meetings lately?

4
  • Been to any
  • deadly meetings lately?

5
How often do you hear
  • I have to go to a meeting

Sorry, shes in a meeting, may I take a message
I cant get anything done for all of the
meetings
6
DEATH BY MEETING
  • Patrick Lencioni Death by Meeting
  • Meetings work because a group can develop
    solutions collectively better than individually.
    A problem that requires the knowledge and
    experience of several people, and implementation
    by several people, can best be addressed in a
    meeting.

7
Why do we have meetings?
  • Solve a problem
  • Make a decision
  • Make a plan
  • Report and present
  • React and evaluate

8
Some Not-so-Good Reasons for Meetings
  • We cant make a decision, so well have a meeting
  • Its mandated (meeting should also be useful)
  • Meeting is better than working
  • Inclusion in meetings make staff feel important
  • Meeting out of habit rather than necessity

9
What Makes a Good Meeting?
  • Productivity (competency)
  • Creativity (skill)
  • Efficiency (ability)
  • Participation (cooperation/team)
  • Commitment (responsibility)

10
  • Organizations in general spend between 7 and 15
    of their personnel budgets on meetings
  • (Health care is probably much higher!)

11
What Makes a Bad Meeting?
  • The format isnt appropriate to the content
  • People are not prepared
  • Doesnt start or end on time
  • No agenda when appropriate, or agenda not
    followed
  • Highest priority items left for last no time
  • Outcomes not clear
  • Roles and responsibilities not clear

12
Diagnosing Meetings Call the Doctor if
  • People doodle, doze, blackberry
  • Too many people talk at once
  • Meeting is dominated by one or several
  • Meeting is dominated by the leader
  • There are personal attacks
  • Nothing gets accomplished
  • Same topics are discussed over and over without
    resolution
  • Meetings start late, end late

13
Diagnosing Meetings Call the Doctor if
(continued)
  • Absence is a problem
  • There is no passion, no real debate
  • There is no agreed-upon outcome
  • Wrong number of attendees, wrong attendees

14
Six Meeting Killers(Bounds Woods)
  • Hogging too much talking by one person
  • Bogging staying on one topic too long
  • Fogging avoiding a topic or being vague or
    defensive
  • Frogging jumping from topic to topic without
    closure
  • Flogging attacking a person
  • Clogging slowing down the group by failing to
    accomplish action items

15
What Makes a Good Meeting?
  • Common focus on content
  • Common focus on process
  • Open and balanced conversational flow
  • Individuals protected from attack
  • Roles and responsibilities clearly defined and
    agreed upon
  • Goals are accomplished

16
Lencionis Model
  • Meetings should be interactive
  • Meetings should be relevant
  • Conflict (an anxious situation needing
    resolution) is necessary

17
Lencionis Model (continued)
  • Basic rules
  • A meeting needs a hook in the first 10
    minutes
  • It is often necessary to mine for conflict
  • If there is no decision possible, the leader
    decides
  • Everyone supports decisions
  • Different meetings for different purposes!

18
Lencionis Model (continued)
  • MEETING TYPES
  • Think about what you see on TV
  • THE DAILY CHECK IN OR HEADLINE NEWS
  • 5 MINUTES DAILY
  • Share daily schedules, immediate issues

19
Lencionis Model (continued)
  • MEETING TYPES
  • The Weekly Tactical or DOCUDRAMA or SITCOM
  • 1 hour weekly
  • Tactical
  • Lightning round
  • Review key metrics
  • Has agenda
  • Items must have immediate impact on tactical
    issues and goals

20
Lencionis Model (continued)
  • MEETING TYPES
  • The Monthly Strategic or MOVIE
  • 2 hours monthly or ad hoc
  • Strategic
  • Discuss, analyze, brainstorm, decide on critical
    issues affecting long term success
  • Limit to one or two topics
  • Do research and prepare

21
Lencionis Model (continued)
  • MEETING TYPES
  • The Quarterly Off-Site Review or MINI-SERIES
  • 6 hours quarterly
  • 30,000 foot view
  • Strategic
  • Long term impact

22
Lencionis Model (continued)
  • MEETING TYPES
  • The Quarterly Off-Site Review or MINI-SERIES
    (continued)
  • Comprehensive Strategy Review
  • Team Review
  • Personnel Review
  • Competitive and Industry Review

23
One Providers Experience
24
One Providers Experience
25
One Providers Experience
  • Overall ratings 31.4 to 45.6 higher.
  • Tasks Accomplished Issues Resolved Not
    Repeated
  • Initial ranking (8/8)
  • Parking Lot meeting (1/8)
  • Everyone Participates
  • Ranked 2/8 and 3/8 vs. initial 6/8
  • (After redesign of Stand-up and Weekly Tactical
  • And Team building retreat)

26
One Providers Experience
  • Team/Leadership challenges continue
  • Staying on task
  • Clear Action Plan
  • Stand-up Meeting keep it short
  • Team accountability to stay on track
  • Next evaluation at end of 3 Months

27
Tips for Improving Meetings
  • Traditional
  • Leader directs, controls
  • Leaders authority and responsibility
    acknowledged by members
  • Improved
  • Members OWN the meeting
  • All have responsibility, all contribute

28
Tips for Improving Meetings (continued)
  • Traditional
  • The leader focuses on the task, keeps the group
    focused, assures outcome
  • The leaders sets limits and uses rules of order.
  • Improved
  • The group stays focused with occasional help from
    the leader.
  • All take responsibility for outcomes, methods,
    assignments and use of time

29
Tips for Improving Meetings (continued)
  • Traditional
  • The leader discourages expression of feelings or
    emotions believing they are disruptive to
    objective, logical thinking
  • Improved
  • Feelings, emotions and conflict are considered
    legitimate factors in the discussion process

30
Tips for Improving Meetings (continued)
  • Traditional
  • The leader suppresses a disruptive member by
    taking the offender away from the group
  • Improved
  • Any problem is faced and solved within the group
    and by the group

31
Tips for Avoiding GROUPTHINK
  • Encourage members to raise objections and
    concerns
  • Assign a member to play the role of critical
    evaluation or devils advocate
  • Promote an environment open to questions and
    alternative ideas
  • Divide the group into smaller groups, compare
    results

32
Tips for Avoiding GROUPTHINK (continued)
  • Get input from outside the group
  • Require a minimum number of options before
    decision
  • Develop criteria for evaluating options

33
The meeting is only as good as the team and . .
.
34
The team is only as good as the weakest link
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