
Your weekly meeting isn’t broken. It’s just useless. Here’s how to fix it
Let’s be blunt: most MSP leadership meetings are a colossal waste of time.
They’re scheduled with good intentions, alignment, accountability, momentum, but quickly devolve into status updates, random tangents, and a slow death by metrics. Everyone leaves feeling like they “did the right thing” but with no real change in direction, energy, or results.
So what’s going wrong?
1. You’re mistaking motion for progress.
A well-run meeting can create a false sense of productivity. You covered a lot. Everyone spoke. You updated your scorecard. But did you solve anything meaningful? Did you leave with fewer problems than you came in with?
Activity isn’t impact.
2. You’re stuck in the weeds.
Leadership meetings should focus on the business, not in it. That means strategic issues, not ticket trends or which engineer is behind on documentation. If your agenda is indistinguishable from your daily huddle, something’s broken.
3. You’re not getting uncomfortable.
Great leadership meetings have tension. Conflict. Debate. If everyone agrees too easily, you’re probably just circling safe topics. The real issues, the ones holding back growth, live in discomfort. You have to surface them, name them, and solve them.
4. You’re not making decisions.
Discussion is easy. Decisions are hard. If your meetings end with a lot of talk but no concrete actions, you’re stuck in limbo. Every week you’re having the same conversations because no one is accountable for moving anything forward.
5. You don’t actually need a meeting.
Sometimes the bravest thing a leadership team can do is cancel the meeting. If there’s nothing strategic to align on, no decisions to make, and no issues to solve, don’t meet. Go do the work.
How to Fix It
A great leadership meeting should be energising, uncomfortable, and productive.
If your team is nodding through another safe, slow-motion meeting, it’s time to shake things up.
Adelvium helps MSPs run meetings that actually move the business forward. Let’s talk.