“Do you have time for a quick coffee meeting?”
“I love your blog. Can I buy you a quick coffee and pick your brain?”
“Can I buy you lunch and tell you a bit about my new startup?”
Sound familiar?
Obviously, there’s the issue of free consulting vs. charging for your time and that’s been covered well in some great blog posts by Jason Falls, Chris Brogan, Peter Shankman, Nicole Jordan and many more.
How you decide to charge for your time is up to you.
What I wanted to discuss here is the productivity drain from “random coffee meetings”.
Seth Godin has a simple answer when people ask how he ships so frequently and so consistently:
“I don’t have meetings and I don’t watch TV.”
Excellent advice.
We don’t watch much TV, but we love meeting new entrepreneurs and hustlers. A lot of people have helped us out and we love to give back. But a bunch of random coffee meetings spread throughout the week (and the city) take a lot of time and kill our productivity flow.
Below are three ways to solve the “random coffee meeting” productivity problem:
1. Schedule Once
We used ScheduleOnce to create “cafe office hours”, a weekly 2-hour slot where we work from a particular cafe for a couple hours.
Here’s how to set it up:
- Create a free account at ScheduleOnce.
- Connect ScheduleOnce to your GoogleCalendar (you can also connect with Facebook).
- It’s two more clicks to fully connect your calendar.
- Under “Inbound Settings”, set your recurring availability. We set it for Tuesdays from 3:00pm – 5:00pm ET.
There are premium features in the paid version but the free plan served us well enough for now.
Now, whenever anyone (except Sir Richard) asks for a quick coffee meeting, we evaluate the request (again, this is not free consulting) and if it makes sense, we reply to them with this simple ScheduleOnce link:
Anyone can propose a 30 minute slot in the 2 hour window. We confirm and boom. It’s booked.
This works for remote meetings, too. If someone isn’t in New York City, we can connect via GoToMeeting* or Clarity.fm (more below).
2. Google appointment slots
Google appointment slots works pretty much exactly like ScheduleOnce but with one unfortunate difference.
Both parties have to use a Google account.
We love Google (much of our our life resides in Google’s cloud) but we understand that not everyone has a Google account, so this was a deal-breaker for us using the service.
If Google lifts this restriction, we’ll probably switch from ScheduleOnce to Google appointments.
3. Clarity.fm
Clarity.fm is an innovative new startup (currently in private beta – launching soon) that allows anyone to accept or request short phone calls for advice from experts using only a mobile phone.
Using Clarity, I set the same timeslot as our “cafe office hours”, 3:00pm – 5:00pm ET on Tuesdays.
My personal Clarity page is: clarity.fm/clayhebert.
It’s currently free but soon we may charge a fee and donate the money to charity: water, one of our favorite charities.
Dedicated time. Increased productivity.
By dedicating a specific slot like this, we still get to meet and help interesting entrepreneurs without killing our productivity flow.
What do you think? Do random coffee meetings disrupt your productivity? Would you use any of these tools?
* Disclaimer: Citrix, parent company of GoToMeeting, is a WorkHacks client.
Love the “cafe hours” idea. I might not use the apps, but it’s a great way to remind yourself to set good boundaries on your time. I sometimes suggest coffee in the office (30 mins) as
alternative to lunch across town (2 hrs.)
Yup, you’re exactly right. The most important part is setting boundaries on your time and avoiding the “switching cost”. If your brain is in advice / coffee meeting mode once a week, you minimize the switching cost.
Good post, and a tricky topic to write about so I appreciate your candidness. I always want to give people my time because SO many people have helped me out, but at some point I’ve gotta realize that I need to be where I need to be and no where else. Gotta focus. I definitely only do coffee in Cambridge though… commuting time in the city is a huge time killer.
[…] profiled Clarity in an earlier post, but Dan isn’t just a rockstar entrepreneur, he’s also a productivity […]
This is a great article, I have been wondering how best to schedule “coffee shop” appts. BTW this link (in the popup for the next article) is bad http://workhacks.com/2012/%month%/productivity-interview-1-dan-martell-founder-of-clarity/ – and I’d love to read that interview!