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Encouraging Open Discussion
If
you're having trouble getting your callers to participate freely
during meetings, try these tips:
Open
up your meeting with a roll call. This gets your participants
talking from the very beginning, and helps them to learn each
other's voices. A good strategy is to ask a question before
you begin calling the roll, & ask each person to respond with
their answer when their name is called. This can be something
relevant to the meeting (such as this week's progress towards a
goal), or something to relax everyone and create a more personable
atmosphere (such as what everyone did over the weekend).
Make
sure all participants are familiar with each other. If
you have invited someone new to a regular meeting, make sure to
introduce them to the group with a brief background and a
description of what they can contribute.
Track
who's talking. Keep a list of all participants in
front of you during the meeting, and make a point to call on
participants who haven't spoken much. Make this practice a
regular part of your meetings, so participants will know that they
are expected to contribute.
When
it's time to open up for discussion, take the lead.
Make the first suggestion, or list a few possible branches for the
discussion to follow. This will "jog" the brains of
your participants, and eliminate the sometimes uncomfortable
position of being "first"!
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