Transforming Meetings and Management with Mamie Stewart: Practical Insights for Modern Leaders
Andy Storch recently welcomed Mamie Kanfer Stewart, executive coach, founder of Meteor and The Modern Manager, and author of "Momentum: Creating Effective, Engaging, and Enjoyable Meetings," to the Talent Development Hot Seat podcast. Mamie is a renowned expert in leadership and meeting effectiveness. In their conversation, Andy and Mamie explored how organizations can run better meetings, empower modern managers, and develop leaders more effectively through practical, human-centered strategies. Here are actionable steps and insights you can use to create a thriving culture of leadership and team effectiveness in your own organization.
Start with Purpose-Driven Meetings
Mamie believes the biggest difference between energizing, productive meetings and frustrating time-wasters is clarity of purpose. Always define a clear, shared desired outcome for each meeting not just a verb like “discuss” or “review,” but a tangible noun: a decision, a completed plan, or a list of open questions. Take a moment to state, “At the end of this meeting, we will have what?” This simple shift sets the stage for focus, alignment, and meaningful progress across teams.
Be Thoughtful About Who Attends
Re-examine the default habit of inviting everyone to every meeting. Instead, Mamie suggests classifying participants by their role in the meeting process: Who needs to be engaged before, during, or after? Only invite those who truly need to contribute in real time, while using recaps or recordings to keep others informed. Occasionally, consider inviting employees for exposure or learning, but always be transparent about why they’re included so the opportunity is meaningful not simply a passive time sink.
Support the Transition to Modern Management
Today’s managers face more complexity than ever remote work, AI, cross-cultural teams, and generational diversity. Mamie emphasizes that success hinges less on hierarchy and more on empowerment and adaptability. To flourish, managers must view themselves as lifelong learners, supporting each team member as an individual rather than defaulting to their own preferences or styles.
Develop Core Managerial Skills
Mamie identifies conflict management and feedback as foundational skills for 21st-century managers. It’s natural for new leaders to want to avoid discomfort, but organizations should create structured support mentorship, resources, or programs to help managers gain confidence, self-awareness, and clear processes for healthy conflict and constructive feedback. Collaboration, coaching, and tailoring their leadership approach to each individual’s needs are equally crucial for high-performing teams.
Make Leadership Development Bite-Sized and Ongoing
Traditional workshops cram too much information into one session, leaving participants overwhelmed and often forgetful. Mamie responded by pioneering “micro-workshops”: 30-45 minute, highly focused, interactive sessions delivered over time and across locations. Each session tackles one specific skill, such as drafting clear meeting goals or identifying the right people to invite. By building skills gradually with real-time practice and recording sessions for ongoing reference or onboarding, you create lasting, systematic change.
Leverage Technology for Engagement
Virtual learning isn’t just about moving workshops to Zoom. Mamie shared her experience with tools like Inside the Show, which overlays chat, interactive polls, and dynamic video arrangements to elevate virtual workshops beyond anything possible in-person. Use technology not only for convenience but to give every participant a voice and foster an inclusive learning environment, regardless of physical location.
Embed Coaching into Management Development
Half of Mamie’s work is executive coaching, and she passionately advocates democratizing coaching for every manager not just senior leaders. A coach provides a vital sounding board for managers who may feel too vulnerable to confide in their boss or peers. With today’s AI-powered tools, even resource-constrained organizations can offer on-demand, confidential, and personalized growth support to all their leaders.
Encourage Managers to Experiment with AI
While few managers have fully embraced AI, the potential is huge for organizing feedback, developing team members, and enhancing conversations. Train managers to use AI as an extension of their brain: documenting observations, identifying growth themes, and shaping how they appreciate or coach team members. Model safe and ethical AI adoption to accelerate innovation and set a strong example for employees.
Create a Culture Where Delegation Drives Growth
Many managers struggle to delegate, which can trap both them and their teams in stagnant roles. Teach leaders to see delegation not as losing control but as their most powerful tool for empowering, growing, and developing talent. Help them realize that effective delegation paired with tailored support propels both productivity and personal development.
Focus on the Human Element
Above all, Mamie reminds us that every management and learning challenge comes back to human connection. Get to know each team member as an individual how they like to work, communicate, and grow. The best managers are those who adapt their approach to match the needs of each person on their team.
Reinventing leadership and meetings doesn’t require flashy budgets or massive teams; it takes intentionality, empathy, and the willingness to experiment and adapt. By following Mamie Kanfer Stewart’s practical steps, talent development professionals can create more purposeful meetings, empower modern managers, and unlock genuine growth at every level.
Be sure to listen to the full episode on the Talent Development Hot Seat podcast!
