JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon says if you check your email in meetings, he'll tell you to close it: 'it's disrespectful' | Fortune
Briefly

JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon says if you check your email in meetings, he'll tell you to close it: 'it's disrespectful' | Fortune
""When I go to a meeting, I've done the pre-reads, and you get 100% of my attention,""
""None of this nodding off, none of this reading my mail," Dimon added to Fortune's Alyson Shontell. "If you have an iPad in front of me and it looks like you're reading your email or getting notifications, I tell you to close the damn thing. It's disrespectful.""
""Here's another example of what slows us down: meetings. Kill meetings," he wrote. "But when they do happen, they have to start on time and end on time - and someone's got to lead them.""
Meeting participants must complete pre-reads and provide undivided attention; multitasking and checking notifications are disrespectful. Meetings without clear purpose should be eliminated. When meetings occur, they must start and end on time, have a designated leader, a clear goal, defined outcomes, and an action list. Only essential attendees should be present. For new products or services, drafting a mock press release can clarify objectives. A leader who cannot give full attention to the role should recognize it is time to step down.
Read at Fortune
Unable to calculate read time
[
|
]