Every meeting has norms, whether you have named them or not. There is an unspoken rule about cameras. People have figured out what happens (or does not happen) when someone goes off-topic or is late. The question is whether those norms are helping your group do its best work, and whether everyone in the room actually knows what they are.
Setting norms explicitly gives your team clear rules for how to engage so people can focus on the content and engaging instead of trying to figure out the process.
When to Set Norms
In a group's lifecycle
Not every meeting needs a full norms conversation every time. But there are key moments when it matters most:
- When a group is meeting for the first time. This is the most intuitive moment. A new team, a new project group, a new committee. If people have not worked together before, they do not share assumptions about how to engage. Name the norms early so the group can start strong.
- When a new member joins an existing group. Norms that feel obvious to the team are invisible to someone new. Take a few minutes to walk through how the group works. This is the difference between welcoming someone in and making them figure it out on their own. (Alternatively, make sure to explain key norms to a new person in a one-on-one.)
- At the start of a longer engagement or offsite. Even teams that meet regularly benefit from resetting norms at the beginning of an offsite, retreat, or multi-session working group. The context is different, and different contexts call for different agreements.
- When something is not working. If people are talking over each other, checking out, or showing up unprepared, that is a signal that the group's implicit norms are not serving it. A stop/start/continue conversation (more on this below) can help an existing group recalibrate.
- Periodically, as a check-in. Norms are not permanent. What worked when a team was new may feel unnecessary six months in, or the team may have outgrown agreements that were right at the time. Build in a norms check-in quarterly or at natural inflection points.
Within a meeting
- For a regular meeting with a group that meets often: A quick restate during housekeeping. One to two minutes to remind the group of your agreements, or post them visibly (whiteboard, slide, shared doc) so they stay present throughout. For more on how housekeeping fits into the overall meeting structure, see Meeting Building Blocks Overview.
- For a first-time norms conversation: Dedicate 10 to 20 minutes, depending on group size and approach. This is a content block, not just a housekeeping item.
- For restating established norms with new people in the room: Take a few extra minutes during housekeeping to walk through the norms rather than just referencing them. Name each one and briefly explain why it exists.
- For a norms reset or check-in: 10 to 15 minutes as a dedicated content block, using a stop/start/continue or similar activity.
What Should Your Norms Cover?
A useful norms conversation usually touches on five categories. To help you remember them, they spell NORMS. You do not need to address every question below. Use them as prompts to think comprehensively about what your group needs.
Needs: Physical Comfort