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How to Handle the Meeting Culture That Won't Die

|4 min read|
meeting cultureengineering productivitychange managementasyncengineering leadership

You've cut the all-hands. You've replaced status meetings with digests. You've installed a no-meeting day. Six months later, somehow the calendar is full again. Meeting cultures that won't die have specific causes — and changing them requires understanding which cause is at work. Three patterns dominate, and each needs a different fix.

Why meeting culture rebounds

Three causes, often combined:

  • Insecurity about visibility. Managers or engineers worry that without meetings, their work won't be seen.
  • Genuine coordination gaps. The artifacts that should replace meetings don't exist, so meetings re-emerge.
  • Cultural fit. The leadership above engineering still runs meeting-heavy; engineering adapts back to match.

Each requires a different intervention.

Diagnose which cause is dominant

Look at which meetings have re-emerged. Status-shaped meetings → visibility insecurity. Decision-revisiting meetings → missing decision archive. Cross-team "sync" meetings → org-wide meeting culture pulling engineering back. Categorize the re-emergence pattern; that tells you which fix to deploy.

Fix for visibility insecurity: make work visible elsewhere

If meetings exist because work isn't otherwise visible, the answer is to make work visible. Weekly written digests. Public PR streams. Decision logs everyone can read. When engineers and managers can see what's happening without meetings, they stop scheduling meetings to see it.

This takes 4-6 weeks of consistent practice. Visibility through artifacts has to actually be reliable before people will trust it.

Fix for coordination gaps: build the missing artifact

If a meeting keeps re-emerging, it's because the artifact that should replace it doesn't exist or isn't read. Identify the specific gap: is it a missing surface map, a missing decision archive, a missing handoff format? Build it. Reference it in the meeting until people start reading it before the meeting.

Eventually the meeting becomes redundant. Until then, both run in parallel.

Fix for org-wide pull: insulate or escalate

If the rest of the company runs meeting-heavy and engineering is constantly pulled in, two options:

  • Insulate — make engineering attendance optional or rotate a single engineer-rep to each cross-functional meeting, so most engineers stay protected.
  • Escalate — have the CTO or VPE advocate for org-wide meeting reduction. Sometimes the only fix is at the executive level.

Don't argue; instrument

Cultural arguments about meeting load lose. Data wins. Track meeting hours per engineer monthly; track output (deploys, decisions, shipped features); track team satisfaction. The trend lines make the case more persuasively than any debate.

Bring the data to leadership quarterly. The trend will either justify continued reduction or reveal the real cost — both are useful.

Meeting Culture, Meet Its Replacement

StandIn replaces status meetings with structured wraps and queryable decisions — so the meetings the team hates can finally end.

See the Workflow →

Reset annually if needed

Every year or so, the calendar accretes meetings nobody questions. Run a fresh meeting audit. Cancel anything whose outcome can't be named in a sentence. Replace with artifacts. This is maintenance, not a one-time project.

Defend deep work as a metric

Track "hours of contiguous focus time available to each engineer per week." Make it a visible team-level metric. When it drops below a threshold, that's the trigger for another meeting cut.

Visible metrics defend deep work better than principles do.

Watch for the symbolic meeting

Some meetings persist because they're symbolic — leadership uses them to signal alignment, engineers attend to signal commitment. These are hardest to cut and least useful. Name them honestly. Sometimes the right move is to make them shorter (15 minutes, monthly) rather than kill them entirely.

Common failure modes

Failure: trying to win the argument in another meeting. The medium is the message. Make the case in writing.

Failure: cutting unilaterally without team buy-in. Meeting cuts that feel imposed produce resentment and revival. Bring engineers into the diagnosis.

Failure: declaring victory too soon. Six weeks of progress, then drift. Maintenance is part of the work.

What to do tomorrow

Map the meetings that have re-emerged since your last cut. Categorize by cause. Pick one cause this quarter and apply the fix. Resist the urge to fight all three simultaneously — focused intervention beats scattered effort.

Frequently asked questions

What if leadership genuinely wants more meetings?

Quantify the cost. Hours per engineer × engineering headcount × engineer fully-loaded cost. Translate it into dollars. Leadership weighs dollars more reliably than vibes.

Can a meeting-heavy culture be fixed by a single EM?

Within their own team, yes. Org-wide, no — that requires CTO or VPE-level commitment. Knowing the limit lets you focus on what you can change.

Is some meeting culture irreducible?

Yes. The remaining 6-8 hours per engineer per week after thorough cuts are usually the meetings that genuinely benefit from synchronous presence. Defend those; don't try to eliminate them.

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