That Went Fine, Didn’t It? Make Your Next Meeting Your Best Meeting Yet

  • 29 Oct 2019
  • 6:00 PM - 8:00 PM
  • Points.com 111 Richmond St. W., 6th Floor Toronto

Registration

  • Paid admission for non-members who wish to attend an event. This payment may be used towards a membership application if used within 25 days after the event.
  • TPMA Annual Members, Corporate Annual Members, Sponsors who have memberships, and Student Members

All of our events include a light meal, networking time, opportunities for introductions or announcements from the audience, as well as Q&A time.
Registration is closed

Come prepared to practice! In this interactive session, you’ll learn:

  • The Five Conflict Resolution Types, and How to Change Your Meeting to Get The Results You Need, No Matter Who’s in the Room
  • How to Treat Your Colleagues Like Customers So You Can Make Them Want to Give You what You Want
  • The Pre- and Post-Meeting Checklists You Need to Short Circuit the Endless, Pointless Meetings No One Ever Loves

Gone are the days when all it took to make a great meeting were some pizza, a few beverages, and a handful of sticky notes. Even when you’re working with a team of trusted colleagues, today’s pressure-packed, time-limited business environment can turn the simplest meeting into a pressure cooker. Product managers spend a lot of time learning how to listen to the voice of the customer, use empathy as a superpower, and entice, beg, or cajole their colleagues to get back on the roadmap. But the flood of pressure for everyone to be listening to customers, has meant that each participant also feels responsible if something goes wrong with the outcome. 

Excellent meeting management is not only about getting all the ideas out and pushing people to a direction they can agree on. It’s about building relationships and commitments to the collaborative effort that will support the decisions all the way through the process. Timing is critical, as is who’s in the room, and how the interaction is structured.

Megann Willson is a Researcher, a Marketing Consultant and Strategist. She was a UX expert before that had a name, a trained Innovation Games™ Facilitator, and is a former instructor of Integrated Marketing Communications at Queen’s University’s Smith School of Business. As a marketer in the B2B, Industrial and Tech spaces, her claim to fame is that she has never had to sell soup, soap, or shampoo.

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