Wednesday, December 10, 2025
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Meet for a Reason (C-Suite TV)

You can see it in any social media feed: People hate meetings.  And you can’t really blame them. So many meetings are boring, useless, or purely for show, it’s no surprise that at work, they’re the thing we love to hate. The thing is, to do work in groups requires discussion, and that means meetings.  But maybe we don’t hate all meetings, just bad ones.  Here’s One Small Step to keep your meeting from being one of the bad ones.

Like this and want more? Watch more of “One Small Step” on C-Suite Network TV. And, Visit the Group Harmonics Industry Intelligence Archive for ideas, whitepapers, and case studies about changing culture and how small practical actions can create large systemic results.

Ed Muzio
Ed Muziohttps://www.iteratenow.com
Ed Muzio is one of a few management consultants in the world who does systems-level coaching with a CEO or SVP and his/her staff simultaneously, helping executive teams make a cultural shift so significant that it propagates downward into how the organization runs. His work has been hailed for producing substantial results even in the most challenging circumstances, and Ed has been called “one of the planet’s clearest thinkers on management practice" by the editor of an international business magazine. His mantra is "higher output, lower stress, sustainable growth” – a promise central to his company’s mission of creating culture changers – and his books have won Awards of Excellence in the performance improvement field. Originally trained as an engineer, Ed has started organizations large and small, led global initiatives in technology development and employee recruitment, and published articles and papers on a variety of business topics. Prior to founding Group Harmonics in 2004, Ed was President and Executive Director of a human services organization, and a leader, mentor, and technologist within Intel Corporation and the Sematech consortium. A Cornell University graduate, Ed's accomplishments include the creation and stewardship of a worldwide manufacturing infrastructure program, a nationally-recognized engineering development organization, and a non-profit residential program for at-risk youth.
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