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Essential Meeting Blueprints for Managers

You're reading from   Essential Meeting Blueprints for Managers Wasted meetings mean wasted time and potential. Ensure your meetings are as productive as possible with strategic planning best practices and more.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2015
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781783000821
Length 252 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Concepts
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Author (1):
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Sharlyn Lauby Sharlyn Lauby
Author Profile Icon Sharlyn Lauby
Sharlyn Lauby
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Table of Contents (12) Chapters Close

1. Meeting Roles, Responsibilities, and Activities 2. Regularly Scheduled Status Updates FREE CHAPTER 3. Brainstorming 4. Networking Meetings 5. Training Meetings 6. Employee Performance Conversations 7. Focus Groups 8. Pitch Meetings 9. Strategic Planning 10. Project Meetings 11. The Work Doesn't End When the Meeting is Over References and Resources

What is a project team?


Project teams are groups that come together to work on a specific, defined initiative. They usually have representation from many different facets of the organization. And once the project is completed, the project team is typically disbanded. An example might be a group of employees responsible for organizing a health and wellness fair.

Sometimes we use the term project team interchangeably with other groups such as task forces, work groups, and committees. While it's not a major faux pas to intermingle these terms, there are some subtle differences:

  • Committees, like project teams, typically have representation from multiple areas in the organization. However, committees are often seen as having an ongoing purpose, charter, or set of governing rules. The safety committee is an example of a common workplace committee.

  • Task forces are like project teams in that they are brought together to accomplish a specific task or initiative. The difference is usually in the initiative...

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