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Taking Notes in Meetings - Tips?
birwin | May 8 2008
I’ve got one of our every other month meetings coming up in a couple of weeks, and I thought I’d seek out some tips for taking notes. My preferred note taking tool is OmniOutliner, and I’ll sometimes use MindManager for brainstorming during meetings. My OO notes are pretty much “stream of consciousness”, just capturing what’s said as it’s said. I go back after the meeting and review the notes for action items. MM and OO have worked pretty well for me, but I’d like to hear how other people take notes in meetings. Thanks! |
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PAPER!
Why sit in front of a computer? That takes you out of the conversation and lessens the value of the meeting.
I take all my meeting notes on paper, then I put the pages into my physical inbox to process them later. Often that processing includes transcribing the notes digitally, and re-writing everything forces me to think more about what I wrote to see what it really means. In addition, I can scribble whatever I want all over the page during the meeting since I’m not worried about format until afterward.
Also, the processing step of course includes putting any relevant projects or actions into my system… which is an electronic/paper blend that deals mostly in printed-out index cards apart from my daily and weekly review sessions.
I AGREE, PAPER!
Our computers rock. But sometimes, clicking away during a meeting is very rude. NOT that you’re that kind of person. However, I feel you can write your notes and make them very effective by putting them into Next Action lists after your meeting. People will appreciate the eye contact and true interaction you offer them that way.
Happy GTD!
Matthew Fauris
Thanks for the tips. I’ve
Thanks for the tips. I’ve tried paper but it just doesn’t work for me for a number of reasons:
I can type a lot faster than I can write. Someone noted that if I wrote by hand, I’d be more involved in the meeting. My experience has been just the opposite. I’m much more involved if I’m on a computer, as I take less time taking notes. I have better eye contact with all participants if I’m on a computer, because I don’t have to look at the computer as much when I’m typing. I have to look at the paper the whole time I’m writing by hand in order to stay in the lines. :) Furthermore, everyone at our meetings has a laptop open, so I’m not the only one.
My hand gets crampy after writing for a while, even after trying every ergonomic pen and writing technique out there. (This problem is probably due to my very limited range of wrist flexion, an anatomical quirk I was born with.)
Since I got a laptop, I’ve made a goal of going as paperless as possible. If my notes are going digital eventually, why not just take them digitally? Transcribing them after the fact was, for me, a waste of time.
OK, then...
If you’re determined to use a computer, I still suggest that you take free-form notes in the meeting and re-state/organize things later. Trying to work within the constraints of some piece of software will only distract you from efficiently Capturing the meeting content. Processing is a separate step and should come later; I’ve found that trying to do two of the GTD workflow steps (capture, process, organize, review, do) at once inevitably leads me to miss something or waste time changing back and forth between modes.
Tablet love
I prefer to write by hand in meetings as well - I am not paper based for anything else, but I don’t deal well with computer based mindmapping tools.
By far my favorite capture tool for that was an old Electrovaya slate style tablet. 8 hours of battery life, lies flat so it isn’t obtrusive during a meeting. I got all the free form benefits of paper with the ability to draw lines at will and go back and margin notes easily. And the added benefits of being able to select and drag chunks of notes around to sort them was great, as was having all my handwritten notes machine searchable. Unfortunately I’ve largely abandoned it because I’ve been needing my Mac laptop and won’t carry both.
For cases where needing to type mattered, I found a portable keyboard for a PDA to be a benefit, since it gets the speed but doesn’t have the barrier effect of a laptop screen.
I am dreaming of a convertible Mac tablet - that would really give me all my favorite features of tools I’ve tried in one item.
Using a Digital Camera for Documents
I was just reading through “I’m very lazy…” about using a digital camera like the Canon Ixus to take photos for going paperless. Has anyone out there had any experience using OCR to to read photographed documents?
NB4L