Most organizations do not have a meeting problem. They have a collaboration problem disguised as meetings.
We gather people, fill calendars, and call it teamwork, but often nothing meaningful is produced. Eight people in a one-hour meeting represent an entire day of collective productivity, and too often the output does not match the investment.
From Conversation to Creation
Real collaboration requires a shift from traditional meetings to structured working sessions.
The simplest way to spot the difference is straightforward: by the end of a working session, something exists that did not exist before. A decision. A draft. A next step.
Without that intent, teams fall into what might be called “social work,” sessions that feel productive in the moment but do not lead to outcomes. The issue is usually not the people in the room. It is that the session was never designed to produce anything specific.
That design work happens before the session. Leaders who approach meetings as facilitators start with a clear goal and a tangible output, then invite only the people needed. Tools like RACI (Responsible, Accountable, Consulted, Informed) can help focus participation so the discussion stays purposeful rather than simply populated.
The End of Update Meetings
Teams can rethink update meetings altogether.
Status updates still matter, but they rarely require synchronous time from the entire team. When updates are shared in writing or handled in one-on-one conversations, it creates space for sessions that focus on actual collaboration: problem-solving, decision-making, and creation.
Designing the Work
Unstructured roundtable discussions are easy to set up, but they often produce uneven results. Structured working sessions take more intention.
In this model, the facilitator is not just guiding conversation. They are shaping how the work gets done. That might mean choosing a simple whiteboarding exercise, breaking the group into smaller working blocks, or time-boxing a discussion to keep it moving.
Making Thinking Visible
A useful habit in working sessions is making the work visible.
When ideas, decisions, and next steps are captured visibly, on a whiteboard, shared document, or virtual canvas, the conversation stays grounded and progress is easier to see.
This practice also creates accountability. At the end of the session, a shared record replaces ambiguity with clarity, reducing the likelihood of “Groundhog Day” meetings where nothing moves forward. Off-topic ideas can be captured in a “parking lot,” signaling they are not dismissed, just out of scope for the moment.
Recreating Collaboration in Remote Work
In distributed teams, the absence of physical proximity can turn meetings into passive experiences. Structured working sessions help counter this by emphasizing shared, visible work.
Screen-sharing raw data, co-editing documents, and solving problems in real time allows participants to contribute actively. Instead of watching a presentation, they become co-creators, replicating the dynamic of working side by side.
A Simple Test
To evaluate your team’s collaboration, ask one question at the end of every session:
“What did we create together?”
If the answer is vague, the session likely needs a clearer design. Organizations do not improve by meeting more; they improve by working better, together.



