What’s your meeting room buffer?

Meetings over run sometimes, they often do at our place sometimes by a lot. If the meeting room is busy you use another room or wherever you can.
 
Meetings over run sometimes, they often do at our place sometimes by a lot. If the meeting room is busy you use another room or wherever you can.
Yeah see that’s the thing at our place too. The fact he appeared at 4pm then disappeared must have subconsciously given me the idea he’d gone to find another room. People do that quite often especially if you’re on your own as the one coming in. To reappear 2mins later and bust in.. yeah not cool.

yes, i thought it was pretty damn rude, of you.
So you’ve never had a meeting overrun by a few minutes as people try to wrap up? We can’t all be robots like you :)

I’m gonna book all my meeting rooms with a 10min buffer and thus make them useless for the next half hour slot. That’ll learn ‘em… ;)
 
Going to have to side with the view that if the other guy had the meeting room booked for 4pm, you should have been out of the room by then. If he knocked on the door at 4pm he had probably already been waiting outside for you. A lot of people expect meetings to start on time and even if you finished your meeting bang on 4pm, by the time he has got into the room and connected he will already be running late.

Possibly the funniest scenario I encountered was back in the pre Covid days when I had booked a large meeting room for a face to face meeting of about a dozen people. I had actually booked the room starting 15 minutes early to ensure that it was vacant. I arrived to find two guys in it, both stood up, looking angry and having what appears to be a full blown argument. I point out that I have the room booked and one of them snaps a terse reply at me that they will be out in a minute, strides over and slams the door. The people for my meeting arrive and we gather in the corridor, listening to the raised voices coming from the room. The minutes tick away and it goes past the start time of our meeting with no sign of the guys coming out. My group are getting impatient so I tell everyone we are going to walk into the room and sit down around the conference table. I open the door and walk in, the two men are still stood there in full flow and seem absolutely outraged that I have dared to enter. Finally they realise that they need to leave and storm out with decidedly bad grace. I never found out who they were or even exactly what they were arguing about and why they needed to do it in a conference room.
 
So you’ve never had a meeting overrun by a few minutes as people try to wrap up? We can’t all be robots like you :)

I’m gonna book all my meeting rooms with a 10min buffer and thus make them useless for the next half hour slot. That’ll learn ‘em… ;)
I’m lucky in that I don’t need to book a room but if I did I would book it well in excess of the actual call duration so I would have ample time to comfortably wrap up any over runs.
 
Have to agree, if a room is booked for a time I expect it to be available at the time. A couple of minutes late is generally OK but I know plenty who can't stand it.
 
I’m sure I’m not the only one that works in a relatively large office with not enough meeting rooms.

I jumped into a meeting room today at 3.30pm and saw it was booked for 4pm. No worries, my Zoom call was only booked for 30mins.

Fast forward to 4pm on the dot as I’m trying to wrap up (a company was demo’ing to me, so kinda tricky) and there’s a sharp rap on the glass door. I wave saying “yep wrapping up”.

2mins later the guy busts open the door whilst I’m mid sentence and says something along the lines of “I have a meeting” and a small argument ensues. I don’t know who he is, he doesn’t know me. Rude, no?

I’d never be offended if someone was 2-3mins late to a virtual meeting, or even an IRL meeting. It’s life, previous meetings overrun, other people’s watches are different. But to bust in on someone’s meeting and turf them out?

Cue, stand and bang comments :p


On the contrary, i have hard cut off times and expect people to be punctual. Meetings should be time boxed and time checks given so the meeting can conclude on time.
When tou have back to back meetings through several hours the day you cannot have meetings over run a few minutes.

It is a huge loss in efficiency for many people to be waiting for for stragglers.

If you are blocking other people's meeting then it is especially problematic . They probably have an agenda and timing will already be tight. It might only feel like a few minutes to you but that might be 1 topic of conversation that there won't be time for in the next meeting .

There is also a practical side effect of being strict in meeting times in that it forces you to focus on the most important items, concise replies, etc.


Lastly, what if the other person had a call with a customer or someone very senior. Ot would not look good to be late.
 
Meetings over run sometimes, they often do at our place sometimes by a lot. If the meeting room is busy you use another room or wherever you can.
The OP has set out the scenario that meeting space is limited so, no, they can’t just meet somewhere else.
 
You must create great working relationships :D

I said externals, usually companies that want to sell their wares, that I may be interested. It's not hard to say to someone "we've got until 2pm for this demo/meeting" if you actually follow through
 
Ideally there should be a gap between bookings to allow for changeover etc.. let people get in ahead of their slot etc..

If he's booked a room for 4pm then "bursting in" or rather entering the room he literally booked after 4pm is perfectly fine, especially if you hadn't booked it yourself, if you're going to jump into a meeting room at the last minute and you already *know* it's been booked in 30 minutes time then you should let the person you're going to have the meeting with know that you have less than 30 minutes *and* it's on you to be proactive and start wrapping up *before* 4pm.

Starting to wrap up the meeting only after 4pm, when you know someone else has the room booked is really bad form and if anything the meeting being interrupted ought to prompt a quicker wrapping up - like literally pick up your laptop and start walking outside to wrap it up IMO as it's you who has overrun.
 
I’m lucky in that I don’t need to book a room but if I did I would book it well in excess of the actual call duration so I would have ample time to comfortably wrap up any over runs.
It’s hard enough to get a room with a “straight” 30mins/1hr slot. If you start looking at weird times like 3.20pm or ending at 10 past, it’s very unlikely you’ll find anything.
Have to agree, if a room is booked for a time I expect it to be available at the time. A couple of minutes late is generally OK but I know plenty who can't stand it.
Well that’s a contradiction because it was only 2mins. And again, we all seem to agree it was annoying my meeting overran but I’m interested to know if everyone else thought what he did was out of order.
On the contrary, i have hard cut off times and expect people to be punctual.
It’s clearly a different industry/office culture. What if you’re back to back and it takes 5mins for you to walk from one meeting room to another? Do you demand to leave your first meeting 6mins before the end even if it’s not yours? Everyone’s busy, life is busy, people stop you in the corridor, you need to pee, grab some water etc. Heck if it’s a Teams/Zoom/whatever and you have computer/.tech issues that can easily waste 2-3mins. Or your watch is slow :p Like I said, we’re not all robots.
Starting to wrap up the meeting only after 4pm, when you know someone else has the room booked is really bad form
As above I already started wrapping it up before. The one thing I’ve learnt here is that if you’re waiting for a room don’t disappear from view otherwise they may think you’ve gone to a different one.

But hey, I can see that I work in a very different office environment to a lot of folks here. So I’m sure this thread will go round and round in circles. Funnily enough my other half works in a very more corporate environment, when I told her she pretty much agreed he was incredibly rude. And she’s obsessed with being on time for stuff too.
 
It'll go round in circles until you get validation for thinking someone reacted unreasonably to your poor time management, yes.

Their reaction isn't important, you can only control your own actions.
 
More if anyone else thought it was pretty damn rude, as I did.
I don't think it's particularly rude to enter a meeting room you have booked when someone else is overrunning their booking by several minutes - it's certainly more rude to continue to occupy a room that others have booked for several minutes after it should have been available to them.
 
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