1-1 meetings

A 1-1 ("one-on-one") meeting is a weekly meeting between a manager and a person who directly reports to them. Every manager has a 1-1 with each of their direct reports.

The purpose of 1-1s is to:

How we do 1-1s

  1. In most cases, 1-1s should be weekly recurring 25-minute meetings.
  2. Create a Google Doc shared with only the manager and the direct report to keep notes from the current meeting and a list of topics to discuss next time (which can be added to throughout the week). {#google-doc}
  3. Use a consistent agenda (GitLab's suggested 1-1 agenda).
  4. Both people should be contributing to the 1-1 agenda (things to talk about). If either person is not contributing much, that is an indication of a larger problem that you need to solve.
  5. Do not wait for the 1-1 to give positive or negative feedback.
  6. To avoid diluting the meaning of and expectations for 1-1 meetings, avoid referring to a meeting that is not between a manager and direct report as a "1-1" meeting.
  7. If you have too many direct reports to have effective weekly 1-1s with all of them, that is an indication of a larger problem that you need to solve (e.g., by finding new managers for some of your reports, or prioritizing management over other tasks).
  8. When someone is switching managers, usually both the old and new manager should join the 1-1 with the person for a couple weeks (so it's actually a 3-person meeting).

Helpful links