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    3.5 Meeting System: Cadence, Formats, Decision Log

    A meeting is a high-cost manufacturing process. The inputs are expensive engineering hours; the required output is a tangible decision or a synchronized, executable plan. When a meeting occurs without generating a written decision or a specific action item, the process yield for that hour is exactly zero. It is operational waste.

    This chapter defines the required meeting architecture. It distinguishes between the high-frequency, tactical rhythm required of Middle Management and the lower-frequency, strategic cadence required of Executive Leadership.

    Successful meetings are determined before the calendar invite is sent. Regardless of seniority, two fundamental roles must exist for every single session.

    • Responsibility: Design the outcome.
    • Requirement: Formally distribute the agenda 24 hours in advance.
    • The Invitation: Must include an explicit “Goal” (e.g., Goal: Select Vendor A or B based on cost vs. lead time). When the goal is undefined or vague, the meeting is unauthorized.
    • Responsibility: Capture the truth.
    • Requirement: Record corporate decisions and action items in real-time.
    • Constraint: The Chair is forbidden from being the Scribe. Facilitating a vigorous debate while simultaneously typing reduces cognitive control. This role must rotate among attendees to enforce group discipline.

    Middle managers act as the transmission gear, converting high-level strategy into specific execution. The manager’s meeting architecture must focus on alignment, unblocking individuals, and technical velocity.

    • Purpose: Align the immediate functional team (e.g., SMT Engineering, Procurement) on the exact execution plan for the week.
    • Organizer: The Functional Manager.
    • Preparation: The Manager must completely review all WLR-OT notes prior to the meeting.
    • Agenda:
      1. Cascading: Swiftly disseminate critical directives from Executive meetings.
      2. Inter-dependencies: Identify hard cross-functional needs (e.g., “Engineer A needs Part X from Procurement by Thursday”).
      3. Load Balancing: Re-assign tasks from overloaded staff to those with available capacity.
    • Purpose: Solve a specific, isolated problem (e.g., “Root Cause of PCB Warpage on Line 2”).
    • Trigger: A hard blocker exists that cannot be resolved efficiently via asynchronous text.
    • Constraint: Only the necessary subject matter experts must be invited. All others are explicitly excluded.
    • Output: A formal technical decision or an updated process document.
    • Purpose: Systemic process improvement. Focus on “How the work was done,” not just “What was done.”
    • Timing: Immediately after a major Production Batch completion, an NPI milestone, or a sprint close.
    • Format:
      1. Keep: Successful, repeatable behaviors to standardize globally.
      2. Stop: Inefficiencies or obstacles to eliminate.
      3. Start: New tools or operational protocols to pilot.

    Executive leadership operates on longer systemic horizons (Monthly/Quarterly) and focuses on resource allocation, overall financial health, and strategic risk mitigation.

    • Purpose: Synchronize major departments for the next 5-10 operational days.
    • Organizer: COO / Operations Director.
    • Focus: Variance Analysis. Discuss only Red/Yellow failing metrics (e.g., Yield drops, Schedule slips).
    • Output: Finalized Production Schedule for the week; Allocation of shared factory resources.
    • Purpose: Review overarching system health, consolidated financials, and multi-week operational trends.
    • Organizer: CEO.
    • Agenda:
      1. P&L Review: Allocated Budget vs. Hard Actuals.
      2. Quality Trends: Systemic, lingering issues (e.g., Repeated Supplier defect rates).
      3. People: Strategic headcount planning, burn-rate, and cultural health.
    • Output: Officially revised financial forecast; CapEx (Capital Expenditure) approvals.
    • Purpose: Set the strategic direction for the next 90 days.
    • Agenda: Retrospective of previous quarter -> Current Market Context -> Strategy Setting.
    • Output: Finalized, highly quantifiable Objectives and Key Results (OKRs) for all departments.

    Decisions vanish in email threads. A Single Source of Truth (SSOT)—a shared, live document or dashboard—must exist where all official meeting outputs are permanently logged.

    1. The “Action Review” (First 5 Minutes):
      • Open the SSOT on screen.
      • Review all “Open” actions from the previous meeting.
      • Mark them as “Done” or “Escalate.” When an item is stalled, it must be re-assigned or unblocked immediately.
    2. The “Action Commitment” (Last 5 Minutes):
      • The Scribe reads back the newly established Action Items.
      • Chair: “Owner A, the data report is due by Tuesday. Agreed?”
      • Owner A: “Agreed.”
      • Scribe: Logs the binding entry in the SSOT.

    DOR (Decision/Owner/Resolution) Log Template:

    Section titled “DOR (Decision/Owner/Resolution) Log Template:”
    IDThe Item / Formal DecisionThe OwnerThe Due DateThe Status
    01Decision: Enforce IPC-A-610 Class 2 for Client X.QA MgrN/ARatified
    02Action: Order specific SMT stencil for new layout.Eng. LeadOct 15Open

    Recap: Meeting System Cadence, Formats, and Decision Log

    Section titled “Recap: Meeting System Cadence, Formats, and Decision Log”
    Meeting TypeCadenceKey RequirementOutput / DeliverableOwner
    All MeetingsAs ScheduledAgenda with explicit Goal distributed 24h in advance; ChairScribe.Formal decision or specific action item.Chair (Organizer)
    Team SyncWeeklyManager reviews WLR-OT notes prior. Focus: cascade directives, identify interdependencies, load balance.Aligned weekly execution plan.Functional Manager
    Work SessionAd-HocOnly necessary SMEs invited. Trigger: hard blocker requiring synchronous discussion.Formal technical decision or updated process document.Manager/Initiator
    RetrospectivePost-ProjectConducted after major batch/milestone. Format: Keep/Stop/Start analysis.List of process improvements to standardize, eliminate, or pilot.Project/Team Lead
    Weekly Ops Sync (Tier 2)WeeklyDiscuss only Red/Yellow failing metrics (variance analysis).Finalized weekly production schedule; resource allocation.COO/Operations Director
    Monthly Business Review (MBR)MonthlyReview P&L (Budget vs. Actuals), quality trends, strategic headcount.Revised financial forecast; CapEx approvals.CEO
    Quarterly Business Review (QBR)QuarterlyAgenda: Retrospective -> Market Context -> Strategy Setting.Finalized, quantifiable department OKRs for next quarter.Executive Leadership
    Decision TrackingEvery MeetingFirst 5 min: Review & close prior SSOT actions. Last 5 min: Scribe reads new items for verbal commitment.Updated SSOT (DOR Log) with binding Owner, Due Date, Status.Scribe (Rotating)

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