How to attend a meeting


Please read the following...it is somewhat lengthy but it may help shed 
help explain some things...
     
There are two major kinds of work in modern organizations:
1. Taking phone messages for people who are in meetings, and, 2. Going 
to meetings.
     
Your ultimate career strategy will be to get a job involving primarily 
No. 2, going to meetings, as soon as possible, because that's where the 
real prestige is.  It is all very well and good to be able to take phone
messages, but you are never going to get a position of power, a position
where you can cost thousands of people their jobs with a single 
bonehead decision, unless you learn how to attend meetings.
     
The first meeting ever was held back in the Mezzanine Era.  In those 
days, Man's job was to slay his prey and bring it home for Woman, who 
had to figure out how to cook it.  The problem was, Man was slow and 
basically naked, whereas the prey had warm fur and could run like an 
antelope.  (In fact it was an antelope, only nobody knew this).
     
At last someone said, "Maybe if we just sat down and did some 
brainstorming, we could come up with a better way to hunt our prey!" It 
went extremely well, plus it was much warmer sitting in a circle, so 
they agreed to meet again the next day, and the next.
     
But the women pointed out that, prey-wise, the men had not produced 
anything, and the human race was pretty much starving.  The men
agreed that was serious and said they would put it right near the top of
their "agenda".  At this point, the women, who were primitive but not 
stupid, started eating plants, and thus modern agriculture was born.  It
never would have happened without meetings.
     
The modern business meeting, however, might better be compared with 
a funeral, in the sense that you have a gathering of people who are 
wearing uncomfortable clothing and would rather be somewhere else. 
The major difference is that most funerals have a definite purpose. 
Also, nothing is really ever buried in a meeting.  An idea may look dead, 
but it will always reappear at another meeting later on.  If you have ever 
seen the movie, "Night of the Living Dead," you have a rough idea of how 
modern meetings operate, with projects and proposals that everyone 
thought were killed rising up constantly from their graves to stagger 
back into meetings and eat the brains of the living.
     
There are three major kinds of meetings:
     
1.  Meetings that are held for basically the same reason that Arbor Day
    is observed - namely, tradition.  For example, a lot of managerial 
    people like to meet on Monday, because it's Monday.  You'll get used
     
    to it.  You'd better, because this kind account for 83% of all 
    meetings (based on a study in which I wrote down numbers until one
    of them looked about right).  This type of meeting operates the way
    "Show and Tell" does in nursery school, with everyone getting to say
     
    something, the difference being that in nursery school, the kids 
    actually have something to say.
     
    When it's your turn, you should say that you're still working on 
    whatever it is you're supposed to be working on.  This may seem 
    pretty dumb, since obviously you'd be working on whatever you're 
    supposed to be working on, and even if you weren't, you'd claim you 
    were, but that's the traditional thing for everyone to say.  It
    would be a lot faster if the person running the meeting would just say,
    "Everyone who is still working on what he or she is supposed to be 
    working on, raise your hand."  You'd be out of there in five minutes,
    even allowing for jokes.
     
    But this is not how we do it in America.  My guess is, it's how they
     
    do it in Japan.
     
2.  Meetings where there is some alleged purpose. These are trickier,
    because what you do depends on what the purpose is.  Sometimes
    the  purpose is harmless, like someone wants to show slides of pie 
    charts and give everyone a big, fat report.  All you have to do in 
    this kind of meeting is sit there and have elaborate fantasies, then 
    take the report back to your office and throw it away, unless, of 
    course, you're a vice president, in which case you write the name of
    a subordinate in the upper right hand corner, followed by a question 
    mark, like this: "Norm?" Then you send it to Norm and forget all
    about it (although it will plague Norm for the rest of his career).
     
3.  But sometimes you go to meetings where the purpose is to get your
    "input" on something.   This is very serious because what it means 
    is, they want to make sure that in case whatever it is turns out to 
    be stupid or fatal, you'll get some of the blame, so you have to 
    escape from the meeting before they get around to asking you 
    anything. One way is to set fire to your tie.
     
    Another is to have an accomplice interrupt the meeting and announce 
    that you have a phone call from someone very important, such as the 
    president of the company or the Pope.  It should be one or the other.
    It would sound fishy if the accomplice said, "You have a call from 
    the president of the company, or the Pope."
     
    You should know how to take notes at a meeting.  Use a yellow legal 
    pad.  At the top, write the date and underline it twice.  Now wait 
    until an important person, such as your boss, starts talking; when he
    does, look at him with an expression of enraptured interest, as though
    he is revealing the secrets of life itself.  Then write interlocking
    rectangles like this:  (picture of doodled rectangles).
     
    If it is an especially lengthy meeting, you can try something like 
    this (Picture of more elaborate doodles and a caricature of the boss).

    If somebody falls asleep in a meeting, have everyone else leave the
    room. Then collect a group of total strangers, right off the street, 
    and have them sit around the sleeping person until he wakes up.
    Then have one  of them say to him, "Bob, your plan is very, very risky. 
    However, you've given us no choice but to try it.  I only hope, for your
    sake, that you know what you're getting yourself into."  Then they 
    should file quietly out of the room.
     


Back Home
Nothing but Jokes by Nauman Faridi
Hosted by www.Geocities.ws

1