VP Meeting Operating Guide
Put your VPs in a room with no windows.
Not literally (I mean... unless they deserve it). But structurally. Design a space where no one is worried about optics or busy rehearsing the message they're "cascading" down.
Because the reality is this: the moment people can see how a conversation will be interpreted outside the room, the conversation changes. It gets safer, more "aligned." More yes's... and a lot less truth.
This is the No Windows Principle. It applies to every executive meeting where real decisions need to happen.
Executive meetings should be environments for disagreement... and long enough for people to get comfortable telling the truth. Most leaders are trained to reduce conflict. They rush to agreement. A quick "disagree and commit." The result? Faster agreement on weaker truth, disguised as decisions.
Most organizations have a truth infrastructure problem. The rooms where senior leaders convene are built for alignment and speed. Honest conversations need something different.
The cost shows up three months later. A strategy no one actually believed in. A hire everyone knew was wrong. A reorganization that solved the wrong problem. By then, nobody connects it back to that Thursday morning meeting where everyone nodded instead of naming what they saw.
Senior leaders and Heads of HR who want to turn leadership gatherings into productive meetings.
Four design choices the person running the room makes before anyone walks in.
No live notes outside the room. No cascade drafting in real time. When leaders feel watched, they perform.
You need more time than you think. If you schedule 45 minutes, you'll finally get into the groove at minute 30. Block 90.
If people know a decision is being made in the same meeting, they position and they hedge. Surface what's true. Decide separately.
Assign someone to argue the opposite position so disagreement doesn't depend on one brave person.
Four norms the room agrees to before opening the agenda. Plus the three roles people play once they're in it.
The highest-ranking person speaks after everyone else has weighed in. Senior voices anchor too quickly.
If someone hasn't spoken, they haven't agreed. Verbal confirmation required from every voice.
If you can feel the tension, the room can too. Naming defuses. Ignoring metastasizes.
Last 10 minutes are reserved for one question: "What did we not say?" Don't let it get cut.
Protects the process. Creates the conditions to surface unspoken tension.
Listens and absorbs the full picture. Makes the call after the room has spoken.
Assigned to argue the strongest case against the prevailing direction.
A shortcut to end conversations that haven't actually been had. Real disagree-and-commit requires that the disagreement was fully surfaced, genuinely heard, and acknowledged before the commit happens. If it takes 90 seconds, it wasn't real disagreement.
Live time shouldn't be spent in read-outs. It should be spent in discussion, debate, and disagreement.
Facilitator, Decision Owner, Dissent Lead. Named before the meeting starts.
If the meeting is under an hour, you've designed for the polished version. Give truth time to show up.
Confirm up front. Synthesis and cascade (if needed) happen after, not during.
Frame what you're trying to figure out, not what you've already decided. Recommendations anchor the room before it can think.
"I'm hearing two different reads. Let's stay in the gap before we close it."
Mid-meeting, not an afterthought.
The highest-value moment of the meeting. Don't let it get squeezed by agenda overruns.
The cascade is crafted after the thinking is done.
Acknowledge the tension, the tradeoffs, and what led to the final call.
Ask each leader privately: "Do you believe in this direction, or are you going along with it?"
Is the room getting more honest over time? Are people bringing harder problems?
"The leader's job is not to reduce conflict. It's to increase the amount of disagreement that can safely exist in the room."
wrkhappy builds Leadership & Performance Infrastructure for scaling companies. If your exec room is producing alignment without conviction, that's where we start: ash@wrkhappy.co