How to take truly useful meeting notes

How to take truly useful meeting notes

Well, that meeting could’ve been an email.

You’ve heard something like that before, haven’t you? Meetings often get a bad rap. At their worst, they can feel like calendar-clogging, colossal wastes of time. And even at their best, they can feel like interruptions that rip us away from our focused work.

But here’s the thing: Meetings themselves aren’t inherently bad. In fact, when they’re thoughtfully planned and executed, they provide an unmatched opportunity for connectivity, collaboration, and decision-making. See also: 20 team meeting ideas that will help your team bond in 2023.

Getting there starts with knowing how to take meeting notes.

How to take meeting notes: 3 phases of actionable notes

Your notes are what set you and your team up for success before, during, and even after your sit-down. Here’s how to make the most of them.

1. Before the meeting: Plan your agenda

While meeting notes are typically thought of as the record of what happened during the scheduled conversation, your meeting agenda provides the foundation for taking notes that can help move work forward later.

This document provides structure and direction so that you can keep the discussion focused and ultimately accomplish the meeting’s goal.

Tips for creating your meeting agenda:

Meeting agenda examples and templates

When you’ve laid the groundwork by defining your goal, topics, and speakers, pulling together the agenda is surprisingly easy part. Keep it short and simple.

Here’s an example of what a meeting agenda can look like when you create it on a single Trello card.

You can also customize this Meeting Agenda Trello template to create a Trello board with separate cards for each agenda item. This allows contributors to add attachments or notes to their cards for easy access during the meeting. It also provides a place for meeting attendees to retrieve the information later.

2. During the meeting: Record what’s happening

A lot of magic happens in meetings—they’re where smart questions are asked, ideas are generated, and decisions are made. If you don’t write anything down? All of that wisdom could vanish into thin air as soon as your meeting comes to a close.

Consider your meeting notes your “highlight reel” record of what happened. This log is helpful to return to you as you plan action items (more on that a little later), or even if you need to refer back to a decision or suggestion at a later date.

Tips for writing meeting notes:

Meeting notes example

Exactly where and how you want to record your notes is up to you—whether that’s directly on a Trello card, in a Google Doc, or even by hand in a notebook (which you can type up later). Regardless, here’s a quick look at what your meeting notes might look include:

3. After the meeting: Share your recap

Your meeting is over, but the work is only beginning. You and your team will need to take everything that was discussed and start taking action. To guide everybody in that process, send out a meeting recap that confirms you’re all on the same page.

Tips for recapping your meeting:

Use Trello to host meaningful and productive meetings

Despite the frequent complaints about meetings, we can all agree on this: Meetings themselves aren’t sources of frustration. It’s only when they’re poorly planned and managed that resentment starts to fester.

The good news is that knowing how to take meeting notes—before, during, and after your sit-down—is the key to unlocking conversations that are organized, efficient, and productive.

Want to make note taking even easier? Trello can help. Use the meeting agenda template to keep your topics, parking lot items, and action steps in order, while giving everybody visibility into what’s discussed.

A little bit of planning and you’ll transform people from wishing their meetings were emails to wishing their emails were meetings.

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