📉⏱️ Meeting Debt: The Hidden Interest We Pay When Work Lacks Clarity
Most teams do not have a meeting problem, we have a clarity problem that produces meetings. Meetings are often the interest payment on decisions we did not structure, documents we did not write, and expectations we did not make visible early. When clarity is missing, we compensate by gathering people in real time to sort it out. AI can help us reduce meeting hours, but not by “summarizing meetings better.” The bigger time win is preventing unnecessary meetings in the first place by making work clearer before we sync. When we do that, we shrink time-to-decision, reduce follow-up loops, and protect deep work. ------------- How Meeting Debt Builds ------------- Meeting debt is like technical debt. We take a shortcut today, “Let’s just talk it through,” and we pay for it later with compounding costs. Each meeting spawns another: a pre-meeting to align, the meeting itself, and a follow-up to clarify what we decided. Add in context switching and the time it takes to regain focus, and the true cost is much larger than the calendar block. We often schedule meetings because we are trying to resolve ambiguity live. The agenda is vague, the goal is unclear, and the decision criteria are not defined. People show up with different assumptions and different levels of context. Then we spend half the meeting getting everyone to the same starting line. Here is the common micro-scenario. A stakeholder asks, “Where are we on this?” The team has progress, but it is scattered across Slack, email, and someone’s head. Instead of writing a crisp update, we schedule a meeting. The meeting produces more discussion than clarity, and now we need another meeting to finalize a decision. The work did not move forward, it just moved around. AI does not remove the need for human conversation. It reduces the time we spend using conversation to compensate for missing artifacts. When we bring clarity into the work earlier, meetings become shorter, fewer, and more decisive. ------------- Insight 1: Meetings Expand to Fill Uncertainty -------------