38. Why Meeting Prep Is the First Sign of Accountability
I used to think meeting prep was just the responsible thing to do before a meeting. Read the dashboard. Check the agenda. Know your numbers. Show up ready.
Useful, but not exactly profound.
Then Damien Burn said something years ago that I have repeated more times than I can count:
“I didn’t have time to prepare for a short meeting, so we are going to have a long one.”
That line stuck with me because it names something every CEO has felt. You walk into a meeting expecting a decision, and instead, you spend half the time getting everyone caught up. The simple thing becomes complicated. The short meeting becomes a long one. And usually, it is not because the issue was unclear.
It is because someone did not prepare.
That is why this card is Meeting Prep.
Meeting prep is not really about meetings. It is about accountability.
Damien Burn joins us for this episode, and that feels especially fitting. He was my coach during a pivotal season when I was still a CEO, and his influence helped shape my own path into coaching. He brings a direct, practical lens to accountability, meeting rhythm, metric ownership, and the habits that turn strong individuals into a real leadership team.
Because when someone shows up late, unprepared, or sees their numbers for the first time in the meeting, they are telling you something. They may not mean to, but they are saying, “I did not treat this as important enough before I walked in.”
A prepared team can make decisions. An unprepared team creates more meetings. A prepared leader can own the number, name the issue, and ask for help early. An unprepared leader waits until someone notices, then offers an excuse.
Meeting prep opens the door to the bigger conversation: peer accountability, metric ownership, first-team thinking, and culture. If you own a metric, you should know the number. If you sit on the leadership team, that is your first team. And if you are the CEO, culture is not something you delegate and hope for the best.
Key-Card points:
* Meeting prep is a signal of respect
* Unprepared meetings create more meetings
* A players prepare differently
* Peer accountability matters
* Culture is the CEO’s accountability
Links & Resources
* Meeting Prep [https://veverka.ca/meeting-prep]
* Veverka.ca [http://veverka.ca]
Connect with Milan
* Veverka.ca [http://veverka.ca]
* LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/milanveverka/]
Connect with Ged
* Crystalyzer.com [https://www.crystalyzer.com/]
* LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/gedroberts/]
CardCast is produced by Lovemore Media.