Quick, Daily Status… It Does Work
Our previous set of status meetings failed to be productive. They lasted at least an hour every day, often more than that. They were unfocused, and often crossed so many topics that no one really remembered what happened after they left the room. Eventually, they just kind of petered out… no one really wanted to attend them anymore, as they were obviously unproductive. The period that followed was almost as bad–no daily status, but at least people had more time to do actual work. Tasks were slipping through the cracks and overall communication declined.
So I was happy to step in with an alternative solution: a Scrum-like daily status meeting. I don’t make people stand-up, and we’re time-boxed to 30 minutes instead of 15, but otherwise the principles are the same. At each meeting the attendees are required to come prepared to answer the usual triumvirate of questions:
- What did you accomplish yesterday?
- What are your goals for today?
- What issues are affecting your ability to meet those goals?
I’m pleased to say that even after only one week, the system has proven effective. People don’t mind attending since it’s short and focused. We stick to the agenda above; we’re not quite used to the format yet, so some side discussions occur in the middle of the meeting, but we’re getting better. Now everyone knows what everyone else is doing, and communication is improving. We’re catching issues much faster since the team is aware of what is going on before it happens.
I won’t claim daily status is a panacea, but it’s working for us with remarkable results.