The Math You're Ignoring
Your meetings are costing you a fortune. And you probably don't even realize it.
Let's do the math for a typical tech company:
- 10-person engineering team
- Average salary: €80,000/year (€40/hour)
- 10 hours of meetings per week per person
Weekly meeting cost: 10 people × 10 hours × €40/hour = €4,000/week
Annual meeting cost: €4,000 × 52 weeks = €208,000/year
That's €208K spent on meetings for a single 10-person team.
Now ask yourself:
- How many of those meetings are productive?
- How many could be an email or a Slack message?
- How many have unclear agendas, rambling discussions, and no decisions?
If even 30% of your meetings are wasteful, you're burning €62,400 per year per team.
For a 100-person company, that's €624,000 annually lost to bad meetings.
Why Tech Companies Are Especially Meeting-Heavy
Tech companies love meetings. You have:
- Daily standups (15 min × 5 days = 1h 15min/week)
- Sprint planning (2-4 hours every 2 weeks)
- Sprint retros (1-2 hours every 2 weeks)
- Backlog grooming (1-2 hours/week)
- 1:1s with manager (30 min/week)
- Team all-hands (1 hour/week)
- Cross-functional syncs (30 min to 1 hour, multiple per week)
- Product reviews (1-2 hours/week)
- Architecture discussions (ad-hoc, 1-3 hours)
Add it up: 10-15 hours of meetings per week is normal for engineers in tech companies.
For managers and product people, it's worse: 20-30 hours per week.
The problem isn't that meetings exist. It's that most meetings are poorly run.
The Meeting Maximizer Framework
The Meeting Maximizer framework from strategic coaching gives you six principles to transform wasteful meetings into productive ones.
Principle #1: Every Meeting Needs a Decision Owner
Who's responsible for this meeting? Who has the authority to make decisions if there's a tie?
When everyone owns the meeting, no one owns it. Discussions meander. Decisions get postponed. Follow-ups don't happen.
The fix: Assign a single decision owner for every meeting. This person:
- Sets the agenda
- Facilitates the discussion
- Makes the final call if consensus isn't reached
- Owns follow-up actions
Example: In a product roadmap meeting, the Product Manager is the decision owner. They listen to input from engineering, design, sales, and support—but they make the final call on priorities.
Principle #2: Send Agenda + Expected Outcome 24 Hours Before
How many meetings have you joined without knowing what you're supposed to discuss or decide?
Meetings without agendas waste 30-50% more time because:
- People show up unprepared
- The first 10-15 minutes are spent figuring out what to discuss
- Important topics get missed
- Decisions get deferred because people "need to think about it"
The fix: The decision owner sends an agenda 24 hours before the meeting with:
- Topics to cover (bullet points)
- Expected outcome (decision? alignment? brainstorm?)
- Pre-reads (if any)
- Who needs to speak (so they can prepare)
Example agenda for a feature prioritization meeting:
Meeting: Q2 Feature Prioritization Owner: Sarah (PM) Expected outcome: Decide top 3 features for Q2
Agenda (60 min):
- Review Q1 results (10 min) — Sarah
- Discuss candidate features (30 min):
- AI search (10 min) — Alex
- Mobile app redesign (10 min) — Jordan
- Enterprise SSO (10 min) — Taylor
- Vote and decide top 3 (20 min) — All
Pre-read: Q1 OKR results (link)
Notice: Everyone knows what to expect. They can prepare. The meeting will start on time and stay on track.
Principle #3: Use the 25/50 Minute Rule (Not 30/60)
Here's a productivity secret: Meetings expand to fill the time available.
If you schedule 60 minutes, the discussion will take 60 minutes—even if the decision could be made in 40.
The fix: Schedule meetings for 25 or 50 minutes instead of 30 or 60.
Why?
- Forces focus. People get to the point faster when time is tight.
- Gives buffer time. Attendees get 5-10 minutes between meetings to process, take notes, or grab coffee.
- Reduces meeting fatigue. Back-to-back 60-minute meetings are exhausting. 50-minute meetings with 10-minute breaks are sustainable.
Pro tip: In Google Calendar, enable "Speedy meetings" in settings. It automatically shortens meetings by 5-10 minutes.
Principle #4: Invite Only People Who Add Value (Not "Just in Case")
How many meetings have you attended where you contributed nothing and learned nothing?
The "just in case" invite is the silent killer of productivity.
"Let's invite Sarah just in case we need input on the API design."
But Sarah sits through 45 minutes of discussion on topics she doesn't care about, contributes 2 minutes of input, and then goes back to work frustrated.
The fix: Invite only people who:
- Make decisions in the meeting
- Provide critical input on the topic
- Execute follow-up actions from the meeting
If someone is "just FYI," don't invite them. Send them the notes instead.
Example: A sprint planning meeting for the backend team doesn't need the entire design team. Invite the designer working on that feature, not all 8 designers.
The math: If you cut one unnecessary person from a 1-hour meeting, you save €40-€100 (depending on their salary). Do this across 10 meetings per week, and you save €20,000-€50,000 per year for that one person.
Principle #5: End with WHO Does WHAT by WHEN
How many meetings end with "great discussion!" but no clarity on next steps?
You leave the meeting feeling productive. Then three weeks later, you realize nothing happened.
The fix: Every meeting ends with a summary of WHO does WHAT by WHEN.
Example:
- Alex: Prototype AI search feature → Demo by Feb 24
- Jordan: Update mobile app mockups based on feedback → Share in Slack by Feb 21
- Taylor: Research enterprise SSO providers → Report back in next meeting (Feb 28)
Write this down in the meeting notes. Share it with all attendees within 24 hours.
Pro tip: Use a shared doc (Google Doc, Notion, etc.) for live note-taking during the meeting. Everyone sees the action items as they're captured. No confusion.
Principle #6: Block No-Meeting Deep Work Days
Cal Newport's research shows that deep work—focused, uninterrupted work on cognitively demanding tasks—is where most value is created.
But deep work is impossible when your calendar looks like Swiss cheese: a meeting at 10am, another at 11:30am, another at 2pm, another at 4pm.
You never get more than 90 minutes of uninterrupted time. So you never enter deep work mode. Your output suffers.
The fix: Block one or two full days per week as no-meeting days.
- Engineers use these days for deep coding, architecture design, and complex debugging.
- Product managers use these days for writing specs, analyzing data, and strategic thinking.
- Designers use these days for detailed design work and prototyping.
How to implement this:
- Pick a day (e.g., Tuesdays and Thursdays are "No-Meeting Days")
- Announce it to the team
- Block it on your calendar as "Deep Work" (mark as busy)
- Decline meeting invites on those days (with rare exceptions for true emergencies)
The impact: Engineers report 30-50% higher productivity on no-meeting days. Complex problems that would take a week of fragmented time get solved in a single deep work day.
The Meeting ROI Calculator
Still not convinced bad meetings are costing you?
Use this simple formula to calculate the cost of any meeting:
Meeting Cost = Number of Attendees × Average Hourly Rate × Meeting Duration (hours)
Example:
- 8 attendees
- Average rate: €50/hour (blended average of junior + senior engineers)
- Meeting duration: 1.5 hours
Cost = 8 × €50 × 1.5 = €600
Now ask: Did this meeting generate €600 of value?
If the answer is "no" or "I don't know," the meeting shouldn't happen—or it should be redesigned.
Pro tip: Track meeting costs for one month. You'll be shocked. Then use the Meeting Maximizer principles to cut 30-50% of that cost.
How Hyperion Consulting Helps Optimize Team Operations
At Hyperion Consulting, we help tech companies optimize their operations—including meetings.
Our Team Efficiency Audit includes:
- Meeting audit: We analyze your team's calendar for one month and identify wasteful meetings
- Meeting Maximizer workshop: We train your team on the six principles
- Operating rhythm design: We help you design a sustainable cadence of standups, reviews, planning sessions, and deep work time
- Accountability systems: We implement WHO-WHAT-WHEN tracking for follow-ups
We've helped companies cut meeting time by 30-40% while improving decision velocity and team morale.
Ready to stop wasting €200K+ per year on bad meetings? Book a free consultation to discuss your team operations.
Or explore our Strategic Planning services to learn more about operating rhythm design.
