Learn how to prepare for 1:1 meetings effectively with this 24-hour guide. Research-backed tips to transform your manager-employee conversations and boost engagement.
Research shows that exactly zero organisations provide training on how to run 1:1 meetings effectively. Yet having an agenda is a strong predictor of effectiveness, and employee involvement in creating that agenda predicts even higher ratings.
Most managers show up unprepared. The calendar reminder pops up 10 minutes before the meeting. Rather than admit lack of preparation, it’s easier to cancel. Even when meetings happen, managers organise around their own priorities rather than employee needs.
This guide will show you how to prepare for 1:1 meetings effectively, not just 10 minutes before, but with a structured 24-hour approach that transforms routine check-ins into powerful tools for team growth and engagement.
Steven Rogelberg surveyed managers across organisations and found that having an agenda is a strong predictor of 1:1 effectiveness. Even more critical: employee involvement in creating that agenda predicts even higher ratings.
The data is clear:
But here’s the reality: most managers don’t prepare. They show up cold, ask “So what’s on your mind?” and hope the employee brings substance. This approach leads to:
Preparation isn’t just nice to have. It’s the foundation of effective 1:1 meetings.
What to do:
Why this matters: Julie Zhuo from Facebook spends no less than 30 minutes preparing for each 1:1. She reviews goals, recent feedback, and notes from previous meetings. This preparation enables her to have meaningful, focused conversations rather than surface-level check-ins.
What to do:
Best practice from high performers: Kimber Lockhart’s five-step formula includes preparation as the first step. She looks through notes for the person, reflects on the tone and topic of the last discussion, and aggregates follow-up items. This systematic approach prevents repetitive conversations and ensures continuity.
What to do:
Why this matters: Research shows that managers who show up without reviewing previous notes signal that the meeting isn’t important. Being late is seen as disrespectful. Multitasking during the meeting destroys psychological safety. These small preparation steps show you care and set the tone for a productive conversation.
What to look for:
Why it matters: Research shows action item completion sits at 40–50% without tracking. When managers don’t review previous notes, they forget commitments, leading to repetitive conversations and broken trust. The lack of continuity undermines the relationship.
What to review:
Why it matters: Recognition must happen within 7 days for optimal engagement. Those who receive recognition are 4 times more likely to be engaged. By reviewing recent work, you can provide specific, timely recognition rather than generic praise.
What to check:
Why it matters: Only 50% of American workers said they firmly knew what was expected of them at work. Regular 1:1s provide clarity on expectations and priorities. When managers connect individual work to team goals, employees feel more aligned and purposeful.
What to review:
Why it matters: Research shows meetings rated most highly when direct reports contributed to or established the agenda themselves. When employees drive the agenda, they’re more engaged, and the conversation addresses their actual needs rather than just manager information requirements.
Best practice: Top managers ask approximately 10 questions per 15 minutes. They use open-ended questions that encourage employees to share, rather than yes/no questions that shut down conversation. The goal is to understand, not to direct.
Research is clear: employee involvement in creating the agenda predicts higher meeting ratings. Yet 22% of managers can’t get employees to contribute to meeting agendas.
Why this matters: When employees drive the agenda, meetings address their actual needs. They feel heard and valued. The conversation becomes about their development and challenges, not just status updates. This is the difference between a check-in and a meaningful 1:1.
The problem: The calendar reminder pops up 10 minutes before, you open a blank document, and ask “So what’s on your mind?”
The impact:
The fix: Follow the 24-hour timeline. Even 15 minutes of preparation makes a huge difference.
The problem: You come with your list of topics but ignore what the employee wants to discuss.
The impact:
The fix: Review and prioritise the employee’s agenda items. Their topics should come first.
The problem: You forget what was discussed last time, leading to repetitive conversations.
The impact:
The fix: Always review previous meeting notes. This is non-negotiable for effective 1:1s.
The problem: Without preparation, you fall back to “What are you working on?” and “What’s the status of X?”
The impact:
The fix: Prepare questions that go beyond status. Focus on development, challenges, and support.
When you prepare effectively, your 1:1s transform.
For employees:
For managers:
For organisations:
Research shows that employees with twice as many effective 1:1s are 67% less likely to be disengaged. When 1:1s work well, employees who report high benefits are 43 times more likely to rate their manager as the best they’ve ever had.
Preparation is the foundation that makes all of this possible.
Preparation transforms 1:1 meetings from routine check-ins into powerful tools for team growth and engagement. Yet most managers show up unprepared, leading to repetitive conversations, lost context, and broken trust.
The 24-hour preparation approach outlined here is based on research and best practices from high-performing managers. It’s not complicated. It’s systematic. It’s not time-consuming. It’s efficient. And it’s not optional. It’s essential.
When you prepare effectively, you show your team that these meetings matter. You demonstrate that you care about their development and their challenges. You build trust through consistency and follow-through.
Ready to transform your 1:1 meetings?
Workcom helps managers prepare better for every 1:1 with structured preparation tools, shared agendas, and automatic reminders. See how it works: try Workcom free or get a demo.
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