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In meetings, do you take your own notes or rely on the minutes?

38 replies

UnquietDad · 22/06/2009 17:22

Thought it would be interesting to ask this as it is a side-discussion which has come out of the debate on handwriting in the Crafts thread.

If you work or have worked in an office environment, and you have an appointed admin person to do the minutes - do you sit there and take your own notes as well?

Because it seems some people do, and I have never known this.

I don't mean the odd jotting about an action point or meeting time particular to me which can go in my diary. I mean notes of what other people have said, for your own records.

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PandaG · 22/06/2009 17:26

just make my own notes re dates etc., as minutes do not always get circulated for a few days. Don't ever keep detailed notes.

(maybe I would if there was an issue I felt strongly about and was unhappy about the accuracy of minute taking - but this situation has never arisen!)

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UnquietDad · 22/06/2009 17:27

Yup, that's what I've always done, Panda.

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PavlovtheForgetfulCat · 22/06/2009 17:31

I always take my own minutes. As minutes can easily be 'edited' to incorrectly summarise something, or place emphasis on something, or missed, or not get typed up at all. But I am also paranoid

If it is a basic team meeting full of hot air and bluster ideas that are just being trashed about I don't, but if it a formal meeting to do with for example, supervision, or about a risk issue, or about something that I will want to refer back to correctly (ie if it is not recorded properly it can be a problem) then I record my own minutes.

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DeborahBorr · 22/06/2009 17:34

God, no, I'm not awake for long enough for any notes to be coherent. We have meetings about meetings. I rely on the minutes and quickly scan them to check whether or not my name is against an Action Point.

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theDreadPirateRoberts · 22/06/2009 18:26

Yep, for two reasons - 1. Sometimes it's the only way I can stay awake, and 2. Huge differences can be achieved in what was said and what is understood by careless (or careful) slanting of phrases. For this reason, I often used to offer to scribe unasked

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choufleur · 22/06/2009 18:29

depends what the meeting is about and whether I am likely to have to do things as a result of the meeting

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fridayschild · 22/06/2009 18:33

I take notes of my action points and to stay awake.

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UnquietDad · 22/06/2009 23:58

All very interesting. Thanks.

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gigglewitch · 23/06/2009 00:02

UD, I always take my own ... sometimes I do wonder if the "official" minutes produced by a certain manager at our place are about the same meeting as the one I have attended!!

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Tortington · 23/06/2009 00:03

i take notes on what pertains to me

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nooka · 23/06/2009 07:08

God no. I do re-write other people's minutes on a fairly frequent basis though, as it's not a skill that people are necessarily very good at (sadly I've organised a fair few committees in my career). Short notes about key points are generally sufficient for that.

If the meeting is one I am not central too, then I usually doodle quite a bit though

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traceybath · 23/06/2009 07:13

I would take notes so i could ask for official minutes to be amended if necessary.

Also to prompt me on my actions because the minutes may not be distributed that promptly.

However to be honest as a project manager it was normally me taking all the notes anyway.

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LoveBeingAMummy · 23/06/2009 09:06

I used to through notes re anything I needed to action stuff that was coming etc. Used to be a girl who would take notes of everything including everyone elses actions, even informal discussions that were not minuted. I thought very strange

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slug · 23/06/2009 09:20

I've taken up recording them. But then I'm working on a podcasting project at the moment so it pays to practise what I preach.

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AMumInScotland · 23/06/2009 09:29

Just my own action points, date of next meeting, deadlines etc. Plus other thoughts that have been triggered by something at the meeting, but aren't actually being discussed and minuted. eg thoughts of "Oops I'd better check that's actually working" which I'd prefer not to mention out loud...

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3littlefrogs · 23/06/2009 09:30

Always take notes IMO.

One committee I am on has a "minute taker" who always gets it spectacularly wrong. And circulates the minutes before they have been approved/agreed. It drives me mad, so now I take my own.

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snickersnack · 23/06/2009 10:47

I always take my own notes. Meetings I'm in generally aren't formally minuted - someone may be put in charge of capturing what needs to be done and sending it around - so I'm used to writing things down. I find it quite a helpful way of cementing what's being said in my mind.

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tinierclanger · 23/06/2009 10:48

Always take my own notes. Our minutes are circulated for approval and nearly always something gets missed!

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UnquietDad · 23/06/2009 11:06

With so many of you taking your own notes it rather begs the question of what minutes are FOR. I've never been in a meeting where I have been bothered enough to do this. And I've been a project manager!

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BonsoirAnna · 23/06/2009 11:08

Minutes are a consensual output of the meeting.

Your own notes are a record of the individual POVs.

IMO.

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UnquietDad · 23/06/2009 11:11

Is that everywhere or just in Paris and Milan ?

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Sunshinemummy · 23/06/2009 11:16

I take my own notes but not verbatim minutes, rather I log actions, decisions and any risks, assumptions, issues or dependencies that arise.

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Swedes · 23/06/2009 11:20

Minutes = arse covering for all
your own minutes = covering your own arse

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Swedes · 23/06/2009 11:22

btw I loathe the way the word action is used in a business context, it really makes me want to vom.

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traceybath · 23/06/2009 11:31

I guess i've never worked anywhere either where we had an admin type person just to take minutes - it was more my responsibility generally as PM to do a status report as a result of the meeting.

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