Four ways Amazon optimises meetings
Thursday 03 May 2018Amazon’s meetings are run differently, and according to its founder Jeff Bezos, it ensures maximum productivity. Here are Amazon’s rules for brilliant meetings.
1. No PowerPoint
Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos’s 2018 annual letter echoed his long-held dislike of PowerPoint presentations in meetings. Banned at Amazon HQs, employees are instead expected to structure their ideas into a four-to-six-page memo, known internally as a "narrative”, which are distributed at the beginning of the meeting.
Bullet points – a constant presence in bad PowerPoint presentations – are not permitted in any documents. Bullet points can encourage audience members to write down points as quickly as possible, without really taking in the message. Reading text on the screen, listening to the speaker, making notes and trying to understand all of the information is difficult to sustain simultaneously.
In an email sent to his senior team in 2004, Bezos explained narrative memos are a superior alternative because they “force better thought and better understanding of what's more important than what, and how things are related.”
2. Start with silence
Instead of forcing everyone in the meeting to stare up at PowerPoint slides for 45 minutes, Amazon bosses ask employees to sit silently and read the six-page memo “narrative”, while making notes in the margins.
This gives all participants the opportunity to think about the topics and start off on the same page. Employees are often expected to find time to prepare before attending meetings, but time-constraints can make it extremely difficult to fit in. As a result, people go into meetings with different levels of preparation, slowing down the meeting and making it less productive.
3. 'Two Pizza' Teams
Small meetings are essential to Amazon maintaining productivity and purpose, so Amazon executives can only hold meetings where two pizzas are enough to feed everyone present. Unnecessarily large meetings can be difficult to manage and use up a lot of time. Attendees will often leave big meetings feeling less engaged than when they entered. By focusing on smaller teams, managers can ensure greater collaboration and contribution between members, as well as reducing groupthink and social loafing.
4. Focus on storytelling
Storytelling is at the heart of any Amazon meeting. Providing a context and life for a new idea helps the audience understand the presentation’s key messages. Several studies have shown that people retain important information more effectively when it's presented in the form of a story.
Described by Bezos as “so much better than the typical PowerPoint presentation for so many reasons," the method of structuring ideas around an engaging narrative drives the presenters and recipients to carefully consider the topics covered in the meeting. It gets people thinking about how the ideas could improve or work alongside current systems and processes.
Image: Shutterstock
Always think ‘we’ rather than ‘I’, says our Chartered Manager of the Week
How CMI helped Yong Kok Fei CMgr FCMI make the challenging transition to managing a remote team
How I created a leadership development programme based on CMI principles
How Simon Takel CMgr FCMI created a leadership development programme that is having a big impact at Exeter College
Helping L&D teams connect the dots as strategic business partners
Helen Marshall shares why the learning never stops, even for chief learning officers
How NHS manager Sarah boosted her confidence with a CMDA
“I always had a bit of imposter syndrome,” says Sarah, who is cancer performance manager at Bolton NHS Foundation Trust
Case Study
We’re really proud of all of the managers, employers and training providers who choose to work with CMI, so here we’ve arranged a selection of their success stories.
Members See More
CMI Members have access to thousands of online learning and CPD resources. Learn more about our membership benefits
Join The Community
CMI offers a variety of flexible membership solutions, tailored to your needs. Find out more and get involved in the CMI community today.