So many meetings, so little done. How one CEO is reclaiming his time.
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Jessica Guynn, USA TODAYDecember 30, 2025 at 11:39 PM
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Meetings took over Bob Jordanās calendar. Now the Southwest Airlines CEO is doing something about it.
He blocks his calendar three afternoons a week to escape the back-to-back meetings that keep him from all-important tasks that only the CEO can handle.
āI think when you first start, itās easy to confuse busyness and going to meetings with leadership,ā Jordan said in a roundtable discussion at The New York Timesā DealBook Summit earlier this month. āIām trying to in 2026, yāall are going to think Iām crazy, ... to hold the afternoons of Wednesday to Friday completely open.ā
āWhat's it for? Itās so that you can work on things you need to work on, you can think about whatās important right now, you can call people you need to talk to,ā Jordan said. "Because what we all find I'm sure is that there is no time for 'work' and you confuse going to meetings with the work."
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An empty conference room is seen as the first phase of FMC Corporation employees return to work in the office in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S., June 14, 2021.How meetings took over your calendar
Meeting bloat ā one-on-ones, all-hands meetings, Zoom and Teams meetings ā continues to clog calendars. Unnecessary meetings ā those with too many people and no clear objective or that drone on too long, wander off topic or devolve into gripe sessions ā exhaust already over-scheduled workers, sap productivity and top office pet peeves. Workers are most annoyed by meetings that could have been emails or messages, according to SurveyMonkey research.
Managers have tried for years to get control of the runaway meeting train by tightening agendas and shortening sessions. Theyāve held standing meetings and walk and talks. Theyāve even encouraged people to drink a glass of water beforehand and let nature take its course. But the frequency of meetings that ticked up during the pandemic continues to increase, workplace observers say.
According to Philip Arkcoll, founder of Worklytics, people multitask in more than half of meeting time and a third of the attendees never speak.
āMeeting hygiene isnāt just a personal productivity preference, itās an organizational design problem,ā Future of Work strategist Stephanie Fraone said in a LinkedIn post. āMeetings are absolutely valuable for alignment, decision-making and human connection. But without intention, structure and standards, they risk crowding out the work theyāre meant to support.ā
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Meetings hijack most productive hours
With hiring freezes and layoffs, many employees are already doing the jobs of multiple people, not to mention fending off the constant pings of messages and other interruptions.
More time spent in meetings leaves even less time for ādeep work,ā the ability to focus without distractions.
Frequently, the most productive hours of the workday are hijacked by someone elseās agenda, according to Microsoft workplace research.
Half of all meetings take place between 9 a.m. and 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. and 3 p.m. when circadian rhythms give many people a natural productivity spike. More than half of all meetings are ad hoc calls without a calendar invite, with 1 in 10 meetings scheduled at the last minute.
Flooded by meeting invites, employees say their days grow longer or bleed into weekends because they have to work early or stay late to make progress on tasks that require a higher level of concentration. According to Microsoft, meetings after 8 p.m. are up 16% year over year.
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"For many, the workday now feels like navigating chaos ā reacting to othersā priorities and losing focus on what matters most," Microsoft's work trend index survey found. "In a time when every hour counts, that drift could quietly drain energy and stall business progress."
4 tips for having great meetings
When Benjamin Laker, a leadership professor at the University of Readingās Henley Business School, and his colleagues studied the effect of meetings on productivity, they found that employees were 71% more productive when meetings were reduced by 40%.
Not all meetings are bad, Laker says. In fact, they can be essential for collaboration and innovation.
āMeetings can be a great way for teams to come together, exchange ideas and work towards common goals,ā Laker told USA TODAY in 2023.
We asked Laker for tips on how to have the right meetings. He said:
Have a purpose for each meeting before scheduling it. Make sure the objectives are clearly defined.
Ask yourself if the information could be communicated in another way such as an email or a Slack or Teams message.
Keep meetings short and focused. Try to schedule meetings for the exact amount of time needed and make sure everyone sticks to the agenda.
Limit the number of people attending a meeting and only include those who need to be there.
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Too many meetings? Try these 4 tips to free up your calendar
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