We’ve all been in the meeting that just won’t end.
By the time the meeting wraps up, you’re drained and thinking, “That could’ve been an email.”
The problem isn’t the meeting itself—it’s the lack of time management.
You’ve probably heard of time-boxing—a simple way to manage time by setting limits on tasks or discussions. But here’s the twist: what if you applied it to meeting planning in 10-minute chunks?
Most people think about time-boxing in broad strokes—30 minutes here, an hour there—but smaller increments can transform your meetings. Ten minutes is short enough to:
When you plan your meetings in 10-minute increments, you’re designing for momentum and clarity. It’s like pacing a great lesson or workshop: every block serves a purpose, and no time gets wasted.
The magic of the 10-minute rule lies in its balance:
Most importantly, it changes the way you approach meeting planning. Instead of estimating vaguely (“let’s spend about 20 minutes on X”), you break the agenda into crisp, focused segments.
Here’s how to make the 10-minute rule work for your next meeting:
Define exactly what you’re trying to achieve:
Knowing the outcome helps you prioritize where the time goes.
Here’s an example for a 40-minute decision-making meeting:
Time | Focus |
---|---|
0-10 min | Set the stage: What’s the goal, and why does it matter? |
10-20 min | Explore options: Capture ideas in a shared workspace. |
20-30 min | Narrow down: Discuss and refine the most promising options. |
30-40 min | Decide and assign: Finalize the decision and next steps. |
The 10-minute blocks ensure every section has a clear purpose, and you’re not letting discussions meander.
At the start of each block, say something like:
The limit adds a sense of urgency. When people know there’s only 10 minutes, they focus on what matters instead of filling time with tangents.
If you need more time for a particular discussion, stack two or three 10-minute blocks together. The difference? It’s intentional. Instead of letting conversations overrun, you’re choosing to allocate extra time.
This flexibility means you can adapt without losing control of the agenda.
Here’s the bottom line: when you plan meetings in 10-minute chunks, you create rhythm, focus, and intentionality. You’re not just time-boxing—you’re designing the flow of the meeting to keep momentum high.
Why it works:
Imagine you’re leading a 30-minute brainstorming meeting to identify customer pain points:
0-10 min: Set the stage
10-20 min: Silent brainstorming
20-30 min: Narrow the list and decide
Time-boxing in 10-minute increments transforms meetings from vague and meandering to focused and intentional. It’s not about rigid control—it’s about giving every part of the meeting a clear purpose.
In Part 5, we’ll tackle ownership and accountability—because even the best-run meetings fall apart if no one knows who’s doing what next.
Because meetings that matter respect your time—and everyone else’s.
Want to design meetings that get results? Let’s work together to make it happen.