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What are meeting minutes?Minutes provide a summary of what was discussed at a meeting, what actions were agreed, who will action any issues and by when. They also contain a list of those present at the meeting and apologies for absence.Why do you need meeting minutes?Minutes act as an aid memoir for those who attended the meeting and are also a useful for summary for anyone who was unable to attend. Everyone attending should ‘sign off on’ the minutes to confirm what is recorded is reliable, and this prevents any later arguments regarding what actions were agreed.For regular meetings e.g. project meetings for an ongoing project, it is good practice to check through the previous minutes at the beginning of a meeting and note whether the actions mentioned have been taken. This is often the first thing on the agenda.What does the minute taker do?The person taking minutes will make notes of what transpires in the meeting, write them up (sometimes in a specific format agreed in advance), distribute them to all who attended for sign off, then distribute a final copy to all who attended and anyone who sent apologies. This person will probably also be responsible for keeping copies of minutes on a file for future reference.Sometimes a full recording of who said what is required. On other occasions minutes may consist only of a brief note of what was discussed and what actions were agreed.Importantly minutes should be issued as soon after the meeting takes place as possible, although for detailed minutes the writing up might take as long as the meeting, or longer. (This won’t be the case if the minutes are discussion and action points only.)Who should the minute taker be?The person taking minutes will ideally have some knowledge of the subject of the meeting but should not be the chair of the meeting. It is just not possible to satisfactorily chair a meeting and take minutes.Ideally the minute taker will not be a participant in the meeting at all; their role will be simply to take minutes.Advantages of an outsourced minute takerAn outsourced minute taker could be a virtual assistant or a secretarial service. While a virtual assistant may work closely with a company s/he will not be a part of it but an entirely separate entity. A secretarial service is similar but is unlikely to have even a close relationship with the company. This can be an advantage if the content of the meeting is likely to be contentious or if the chair is concerned about bias.In a small company an outsourced minute taker also allows all the meeting attendees to concentrate on participating in the meeting, discussing and putting forward suggestions. If a team member is taking minutes they will be fully occupied with this task and unable to give their full input.Using an outsourced minute taker
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Anne Hickley has many years experience in a wide variety of administrative posts. Roles have included provision of secretarial services, PA work, project management and administration, academic and business report writing and editing, and recruitment. She has worked for a range of companies and institutions from SMEs to multinational businesses. Anne has a degree and a doctorate, and also holds the Diploma in Recruitment Practice, the membership qualification for the Recruitment and Employment Confederation. She runs her own small business, Penguin Office Services (www.penguinofficeservices.co.uk) and has a website specifically dedicated to transcription at www.penguin-transcription.co.uk These provide a wide variety of administrative services to clients around the world, from corporates to individuals.
This article is copyright, Anne Hickley, 2007.
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