The Monday Morning Meeting
Monica Davidson
I'm all about blending creative practice and business skills in a fun, practical and holistic way.
I first started having the Monday Morning Meeting (MMM) when I was still at university, and discussing the idea of setting up a film business with two friends. Every Monday the three of us would meet in the local café and work out what needed to be done during that week to realise our goals. We would create a prioritised list of duties and activities, and afterwards, I would gleefully dash off and try to complete as many of those tasks as I could, in preparation for the accountability of the following week’s meeting. I have always had that strong School Captain energy.
That fledgling business went nowhere, but I nevertheless set myself up as a solo freelancer after graduation. I spent weeks feeling lost, scared, and unsure of what my next steps would be until the memory of how proactive I felt at the MMM came back to me. I started the process again, this time all on my lonesome, and I loved it. Yes, it’s strange having a meeting with myself, but I’ve now been doing it for over?thirty?years. As Creative Plus Business has grown, we now share the MMM, but the principles remain the same (and I still have my solo meetings as well).
The MMM* gives you a chance to start your week in a ‘business-like’ way, just as you might have a Work-In-Progress meeting or a team get-together when you’re employed by someone else. The MMM creates a regular and focussed time during which you can think strategically about what you need to do for your creative business, what your goals are for this week, and how you’re going to keep yourself on track. Essentially, as it did for me in uni times, the MMM creates accountability in your business like a boss.
How you run your MMM is up to you, but some of the things you can do include:
Once you’ve worked through everything, create a?prioritised list?of activities that need to be completed in this week (on paper or electronically, it doesn’t matter). Each morning, you can then consult the list and see how you’re getting on, and check off items as you go. Make sure, though, that the list only contains those tasks that you can genuinely achieve in the time that you’ve given yourself. A list as long as your arm will never be done and can only serve to make you feel that you’re constantly playing catch up (and that you’re a bit crap).
The next step is to make?dedicated time?in your calendar or diary to complete the tasks you’ve given yourself. I’ve found that if I don’t make the time, things simply don’t happen. I’m extremely intolerant of the word “later”—as far as I’m concerned, there’s no such thing. There’s only “now”, or a fixed time in the future. This obdurate attitude is made worse by the fact that my calendar is not my own—it’s shared with my fabulous team here at C+B who will fill up any of my unassigned time with vital activities, and my family, who always come first. Dedicated, committed time is the only answer—which means my MMM is always at 9am on a Monday, for 90 minutes, followed by 30 minutes of admin and comms time. No excuses, no procrastination, and no mucking around.
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I know this all sounds very un-fun, but when work is over and fun time begins, it can happen in abundance. This is especially true for those who work from home. The MMM creates a clear distinction between leisure and working time, and that can be a great signal not just for yourself, but also for those in your home who need to know that you’re at work, even though you might still be in your PJs. Two clients of mine who are married, in a business partnership,?and?working from home added a wonderful bookend to the MMM by instituting Friday Night Drinks. This rounds off the working week and helps them to relax.
Lastly, an unexpected bonus to the MMM is not just better time management, but it helps you to take yourself and your creative profession more seriously. You will start to treat the tasks and timelines that you set for yourself with the same degree of respect that you treat the deadlines set for you by clients. You’ll begin to be as invested in your own creative business as you are in the work you do for others. Once you take your own business seriously and respect its inner workings, you’ll find that others will follow your lead.
It’s extraordinary how much benefit can come from an hour or two, once a week, talking to yourself! Give it a try—what do you have to lose?
* The MMM does not have to be on a Monday – but it does need to be at the beginning of your working week, whenever that is!
Want to know more about the Monday Morning Meeting? You can watch a very fabulous webinar with loads more details here:?
CREATIVITY ? MANAGEMENT ? SERVICE
1 年Great article Monica. I had mine the wrong way around and was leaving admin/finance to Fridays (and named it FFF - F#@n! Financial Fridays ?? ). To no surprise procrastinated, made excuses, and dreaded the reminder pings coming from my calender. I've now switched it to Money Mondays! It's still an effort but makes greater sense as you've outlined. This leaves Friday to celebrate wins and clock off for the weekend.
Founder and Director @ Supaglu | Solving Studio Staffing
1 年Sian Morris
Growing creative organisations & their impact
1 年Excellent article Monica.
Creative Arts Specialist
1 年Great article Monica- thank you
Psychologist | Founder | Researcher | Guest Speaker
1 年Great list of important items to monitor in business - thank you for sharing!