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Running a Productive Standup Meeting

Easy 19 items · 15 min
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testuser Published 1 month ago

This checklist helps teams run focused, efficient daily standups in 15 minutes or less. It’s for Scrum teams, remote or co-located groups, and anyone who wants consistent short syncs that surface blockers and create clear next steps.

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  1. Set a strict 15-minute time-box — Announce the timer at the start and stop discussion when time is up.
  2. Confirm facilitator for today's standup — Rotate facilitator regularly or use a volunteer to keep variety.
  3. Start the meeting on time — Begin with the timer even if some members are late to reinforce punctuality.
  4. State the meeting goal and quick agenda — One-sentence goal: sync, surface blockers, and assign actions.
  5. Run the three-question round — Use a consistent order to keep the meeting predictable.
  6. Ask: What did you do yesterday? — Keep updates brief and relevant to current sprint goals.
  7. Ask: What will you do today? — Focus on commitments and next steps, not long plans.
  8. Ask: What blockers or impediments do you have? — Encourage people to name blockers clearly so they can be addressed.
  9. Call out blockers explicitly for follow-up — Highlight who will unblock and required support.
  10. Park off-topic discussions in the parking lot — Note items for a later deep dive; do not derail the standup.
  11. Capture action items with owners and due dates — Record owner, task, and deadline immediately during the meeting.
  12. Use a visible timer or shared clock — Display remaining time so everyone can self-manage conciseness.
  13. Ask participants to mute when not speaking and use video when possible — Reduce background noise; video helps engagement for remote teams.
  14. Use a consistent meeting link and perform a quick tech check — Verify audio/video and screen-share before the timer starts.
  15. Limit status updates to 60 seconds per person — Coach concise answers and redirect long items to the parking lot.
  16. Record decisions and update the shared tracker immediately — Log changes in tickets, board, or notes to keep records current.
  17. End with a quick recap and next steps — Restate owners, due dates, and any scheduled follow-ups.
  18. Schedule follow-up deeper dives as needed — If a topic needs >5 minutes, book a separate meeting or async thread.
  19. Review meeting effectiveness weekly — Spend 5 minutes weekly to adjust format, timing, or roles.
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