The Virtual Meeting Coach

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April 23 rd

The Language and Culture of Virtual Meetings – The Madhatters Tea Party Launch

Opening day of the Madhatters Tea Party 6-Week Virtual Meeting Camp went just about as I’d imagined it would. Wild. Crazy. Full of surprises. And a little on the chaotic side for the first 15-20 minutes.

How else would you expect things to go with a gang of mostly inexperienced virtual meeters, coming from a dozen different frames of reference, with wide-ranging computer literacy, using both PC and Macintosh computers, and connecting through a free teleconferencing line and a full-featured multi-media virtual meeting room at the same time? And did I say most of them were middle-aged women?

As the Madhatter of Madhatters, I was utterly delighted by the whole event! It was the quintessential Virtual Madhatters Tea Party!

When it was over, participants’ feedback reflected various levels of cognitive overload … and excitement …and curiosity …and a desire for more!

I had a debriefing conversation about the first Madhatters Tea Party today with my colleague, friend, and former client, Tom Carroll, founder of EvolutionaryLearning.com.

Tom’s lifetime of research mapping human excellence and designing strategies to rapidly transfer that excellence from one human to another (and another and another…) has inspired me since we met a decade ago in Austin, Texas. When I first met Tom, he was a Senior Performance Consultant at International SEMATECH where he and his colleague, Mike Bown, helped semiconductor engineering and wafer fabrication teams make the most of their full human capacities in a high pressure, multi-company, multi-cultural consortium whose mission was to ensure that the US get ahead – and stay ahead – of the rest of the world in the development of semiconductor technologies.

These days, Tom has moved into his own consulting practice where he continues to research and test ways to help human beings perform better, faster, and cheaper in a variety of industries where the competition is tough and stakes are high.

At my request, Tom was a participant/observer during the first Madhatters Tea Party and I’ve asked him to continue observing. I’ll be publishing a series of our “behind the scenes” debriefing conversations here on the blog to help the Madhatters and the Virtual Tea Partiers – and anyone else who’s interested – get some background context for the experience-based-learning they’re doing.

I hope you find  something useful for yourself in this dialogue and, as always, I’m interested in your thoughts and feelings. Please feel free to comment below.

This first conversation is focused on Tom’s perceptions about the Virtual Tea Party and explores some of my assumptions about the language and culture of virtual meetings. Out of my training in educational psychology and anthropology, my personal experience teaching ESL and cross-cultural communication, and my research and testing of hundreds of virtual meeting technologies over the last three years, I have come to believe that immersing people in a learning experience that is both safe and serious is the only sound way to help human beings quickly build the literacy and fluency each of us needs in order to make the most of new, online meeting tools.

In this economy, the stakes couldn’t be higher – particularly for independent business people with high-value services to sell.

I’m completely convinced that once we understand how to use them, virtual meetings can allow teachers, trainers, coaches and consultants to lower costs while providing more and better service.

Give a listen. And by all means, feel free to share what you think…

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  • nikaquirk

    Meri – really enjoyed the discernment between “making a presentation” and “working with content in a virtual meeting”. I think you are right on and you know, some people don't get that difference in f2f meetings either!

  • http://www.virtualmeetingcoach.com The Virtual Meeting Coach

    Nika, I'm so happy to hear you hearing me!! It seems to be harder than I realize for people to make this distinction. The old paradigm of the teacher standing up at the front of the room, “owning” the blackboard and/or the textbook and pouring content into minds presumed to be “empty” before they receive the “presentation” (i.e., a dump of content) is dying hard. I must have been one of the luckiest girls on the planet. I really didn't have too many experiences like this compared to what others have described to me… So I guess I just take it for granted that when we “meet” over “content” that we're going to have a dialogic interaction… and lots of people still don't. The thing is, young people already HAVE direct access to all the content they ever want now. More than they can process alone…and they're already “talking amongst themselves” to make sense of all the access they have, using their phones and social media. It's mostly folks over 45 who are still trying to put new wine into old wineskins, I think. Poco a poco… minds they are a'changin'….

    It's so delightful being in this ongoing learning conversation with you, Nika, because you get all this, too… already. Always looking forward to learning with and from you…


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