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Adventures in Meeting Minutes

Taking meeting minutes is one of the smaller tasks I handle, but it can provide an important record of business dealings within an organization or between one organization and another. However, it’s not always as easy as I like to think. Today I’ll discuss some of the challenges that can arise.

Is This Job Really Necessary?

I’ve worked in departments where the tech writers found keeping meeting minutes a demeaning task, more suited for less-skilled “clerical” staff rather than more experienced professionals. I don’t work there anymore so I can operate as I see fit, and that means I do the minutes because a) I take notes at meetings anyhow and b) I can use the billable hours.

Why do managers want meeting minutes?

Given the sometimes-contentious nature of some meetings, it’s usually important that the note taker:

Challenges

Technical meetings are challenging if you’re new to the department, organization, or content. You spend a lot of time learning acronyms or unfamiliar terminology. Most of the time it’s easier to ask about those after the meeting to verify their spelling or meaning. However, if you’re expected to record an exact agreement or set of wording in a document, you will have a little more leeway to ask people to slow down and explain what they’re saying.

It’s still easier taking notes in person. This has been a rare thing in the COVID-19 world. Phones and computer speakers sometimes miss things, especially if more than one person is speaking. Body language and expressions also can help convey meaning, even in an engineering setting. Reading lips can help if you’re listening to a speaker with a foreign accent of some sort. And sometimes people just talk so quickly that you miss things because you’re trying to process and write down the previous sentence.

Resolutions

Here are some of the methods I suggest to address the challenges I’ve faced when taking the minutes:

Meanwhile, think of recording meeting minutes as a way to learning a lot in a very short time. My techie buddies call it “drinking from the fire hose.”

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