Meetings called/attended by US business people in the course of their duties are examined in the light of: time spent, productiveness or otherwise, theoretical and actual productiveness, functional group differences, comparison of male and female attitudes, comparative weakness of finance groups in achieving productive meetings, the need for training to inculcate meeting skills, the cost in wasted money of ineffective meetings, the correlation between managing meetings and personal advancement/self‐perception, the need for subordinates, not just managers, to learn meeting skills. The implications of these factors are seen to be that meetings are important to any organisation;managed effectively, they increase productivity and, managed poorly,they cost American business a fortune.
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1 January 1991
Research Article|
January 01 1991
Are Today′s Executives Meeting with Success?
Walter A. Green;
Walter A. Green
R.C. Auletta and Company, Inc., USA
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Harold Lazarus
Harold Lazarus
Hofstra University, USA
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-7492
Print ISSN: 0262-1711
© MCB UP Limited
1991
Journal of Management Development (1991) 10 (1): 14–25.
Citation
Green WA, Lazarus H (1991), "Are Today′s Executives Meeting with Success?". Journal of Management Development, Vol. 10 No. 1 pp. 14–25, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/02621719110139034
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