10 Tricks to Appear Smart During Meetings

Guest Post by Sarah Cooper

Like everyone, appearing smart during meetings is my top priority. Sometimes this can be difficult if you start daydreaming about your next vacation, your next nap, or bacon. When this happens, it’s good to have some fallback tricks to fall back on. Here are my ten favorite tricks for quickly appearing smart during meetings.

1. Draw a Venn diagram

Getting up and drawing a Venn diagram is a great way to appear smart. It doesn’t matter if your Venn diagram is wildly inaccurate, in fact, the more inaccurate the better. Even before you’ve put that marker down, your colleagues will begin fighting about what exactly the labels should be and how big the circles should be, etc. At this point, you can slink back to your chair and go back to playing Candy Crush on your phone.

2. Translate percentage metrics into fractions

If someone says “About 25% of all users click on this button,” quickly chime in with, “So about 1 in 4,” and make a note of it. Everyone will nod their head in agreement, secretly impressed and envious of your quick math skills.

3. Encourage everyone to “take a step back”

There comes a point in most meetings where everyone is chiming in, except you. Opinions and data and milestones are being thrown around and you don’t know your CTA from your OTA. This is a great point to go, “Guys, guys, guys, can we take a step back here?” Everyone will turn their heads toward you, amazed at your ability to silence the fray. Follow it up with a quick, “What problem are we really trying to solve?” and, boom! You’ve bought yourself another hour of looking smart.

4. Nod continuously while pretending to take notes

Always bring a notepad with you. Your rejection of technology will be revered. Take notes by simply writing down one word from every sentence that you hear. Nod continuously while doing so. If someone asks you if you’re taking notes, quickly say that these are your own personal notes and that someone else should really be keeping a record of the meeting. Bravo compadre. You’ve saved your ass, and you’ve gotten out of doing any extra work. Or any work at all, if you’re truly succeeding.

5. Repeat the last thing the engineer said, but very very slowly

Make a mental note of the engineer in the room. Remember his name. He’ll be quiet throughout most of the meeting, but when his moment comes everything out of his mouth will spring from a place of unknowable brilliance. After he utters these divine words, chime in with, “Let me just repeat that,” and repeat exactly what he just said, but very, very slowly. Now, his brilliance has been transferred to you. People will look back on the meeting and mistakenly attribute the intelligent statement to you.

6. Ask “Will this scale?” no matter what it is

It’s important to find out if things will scale no matter what it is you’re discussing. No one even really knows what that means, but it’s a good catch-all question that generally applies and drives engineers nuts.

7. Pace around the room

Whenever someone gets up from the table and walks around, don’t you immediately respect them? I know I do. It takes a lot of guts but once you do it, you immediately appear smart. Fold your arms. Walk around. Go to the corner and lean against the wall. Take a deep, contemplative sigh. Trust me, everyone will be shitting their pants wondering what you’re thinking. If only they knew (bacon).

8. Ask the presenter to go back a slide

“Sorry, could you go back a slide?” They’re the seven words no presenter wants to hear. It doesn’t matter where in the presentation you shout this out, it’ll immediately make you look like you’re paying closer attention than everyone else is, because clearly they missed the thing that you’re about to brilliantly point out. Don’t have anything to point out? Just say something like, “I’m not sure what these numbers mean,” and sit back. You’ve bought yourself almost an entire meeting of appearing smart.

9. Step out for a phone call

You’re probably afraid to step out of the room because you fear people will think you aren’t making the meeting a priority. Interestingly, however, if you step out of a meeting for an “important” phone call, they’ll all realize just how busy and important you are. They’ll say, “Wow, this meeting is important, so if he has something even more important than this, well, we better not bother him.”

10. Make fun of yourself

If someone asks what you think, and you honestly didn’t hear a single word anyone said for the last hour, just say, “I honestly didn’t hear a single word anyone said for the last hour.” People love self-deprecating humor. Say things like, “Maybe we can just use the lawyers from my divorce,” or “God I wish I was dead.” They’ll laugh, value your honesty, consider contacting H.R., but most importantly, think you’re the smartest looking person in the room.

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38 Comments
no one
no one
December 30, 2018 7:49 am

An amusing piece that made me chuckle a bit, remembering meetings of yore and thinking there are a few of these that I practiced from time to time. Except I was an excellent note taker and ending up in the meeting minutes consulting job when the Admin folks needed to write them up.

Llpoh
Llpoh
December 30, 2018 7:51 am

Wat to seem smart? Keep your mouth shut in meetings.

no one
no one
  Llpoh
December 30, 2018 8:51 am

Is why I wrote down summations of all comments/topics. It was to keep myself awake during very long meetings.

And why I ended up writing most of the meeting minutes. Sigh.

CCRider
CCRider
December 30, 2018 8:44 am

This formulaic bullshit reminds me how much I’m enjoying retirement.

no one
no one
  CCRider
December 30, 2018 8:51 am

Amen

IluvCO2
IluvCO2
December 30, 2018 9:12 am

Meetings. The practical alternative to work. We recently went Agile, have to go through a shit ton of meetings.

anonsortof
anonsortof
  IluvCO2
December 30, 2018 3:13 pm

This Agile shit is a complete waste of time, though if you say that out loud, you’ll be told “Oh, you’re just not doing Agile right”.

no one
no one
  anonsortof
December 30, 2018 3:43 pm

Made me look.
http://agilemethodology.org/
I read a bit and realized they’ve reinvented TQM again. I last worked a “real” on site job when Lean Six Sigma belts were all the rage.

Agile. Dammit… perhaps they should have called it Anti-Fragile Methodology. At least it sounds like something worth learning about. Agile and ScrumMasters. Yikes. Who comes up with this shit.

IluvCO2
IluvCO2
  no one
December 30, 2018 4:16 pm

I ask myself that every day.

Stucky
Stucky
  IluvCO2
December 30, 2018 3:28 pm

What the hell is Agile?? Looked it up. From their web site …………..

“Agile software development is an approach to software development under which requirements and solutions evolve through the collaborative effort of self-organizing and cross-functional teams and their customer/end user. ”

Holy Fucken Bullshit, Batman!! 31 words that convey NOTHING but bullshit.

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no one
no one
  Stucky
December 30, 2018 4:53 pm

http://agilemethodology.org/

It is a whole quality management system… Remember when we adapted the Japanese TQM Model? Did that shit evolve into TQM, then this? Don’t even mention the SixSigma crap. We had a green belt kook on our PM team.

IluvCO2
IluvCO2
  Stucky
December 30, 2018 5:06 pm

Or you could refer to it as a nice pile of beautiful compost and call it working software. Not what the user wanted, but who gives a fuck. I was forced to do the yellow belt thing a few years back, now that is one big pile of shit.

Multi Culti
Multi Culti
  Stucky
December 31, 2018 11:02 am

These programs are for a few things:
1) power. To show everyone who is in charge

2) keep people in their respective places/silos….scared

3) find the weak link (even though you cannot fire them, they must get their fair share of the income even though they probably got their degree under affirmative action and still use basic 4th grade math

4) find the efficient link and work them to death by threatening them often. They must also produce what the affirmative action grad can not, plus some extra production just to keep having the privilege of working there while watching shaquan get promoted every 6 months until he becomes their manager due to diversity quotas.

TC
TC
December 30, 2018 9:29 am

Once worked with a senior engineer who had a solid rep as competent, but we (the fellow engineers) quickly figured out that she was one notch below useless. Her trick was that she found a quiet but super engineer that she would recruit from job to job to do the actual work. In these kinds of meetings when asked for her input, she would pause, then always agree with whatever mgmt was asking, and if pressed would furl her brown, tap her finger to her chin as if in deep thought and nod slowly. In reality she had no fucking clue, and wouldn’t have any clue until she could run it by her guy, but somehow mgmt thought she was a genius. I guess in some way she was, as she had them totally fooled.

anonsortof
anonsortof
  TC
December 30, 2018 3:15 pm

A genuine archetype! I worked on a project with a female engineer who always responded in meetings, “Yes, I will be getting with so-and-so on that task”. Sometimes there were minor variations, like “Yesterday, I got with so-and-so on that task, and today I need to follow up with him”.

Crawfisher
Crawfisher
December 30, 2018 9:48 am

I have a completely different set of rules.
1. Confirm the purpose of the meeting if there is not an agenda, and only if the purpose is not clear (working / status update / decision required) – most meetings are a complete waste of time.
2. Pay attention – no computer use, phone on airplane mode -no ringing (damn sure no texting)
3. Only speak if it adds value or to answer a direct question asked (if you know the answer)
4. Learn to be the one to speak last (see Simon Sinek)

BTW #5 can get one in to trouble if the engineer engages you in a dialog

Neuday
Neuday
December 30, 2018 9:58 am

In my mid-50s, and have worked in IT in small and large private-sector as well as government organizations, and when I saw an article from a female on how to appear smart in meetings, I knew it was either satire or fantasy.

BB
BB
  Neuday
December 30, 2018 10:27 am

That’s the good thing about being owner operator in the trucking business . I don’t have to appear anything and no meetings . Just me and my cat. However I do talk to little bb about world affairs and he looks at me like I’m the smartest person on this planet. Good enough for me.

Llpoh
Llpoh
  BB
December 30, 2018 3:28 pm

BB – nothing you could do to look smart in a meeting.

You must be the only person little BB knows.

?

EL Zorro
EL Zorro
  Llpoh
December 30, 2018 3:45 pm

Poor Little BB talks to himself in his sleep complaining about wasting his life away in the cab of a truck while his siblings are out every night screwing their brains out. There’s a reason it’s called pussy; it’s there when you absolutely gotta have it. FEDEX ain’t delivered shit for Little BB, he got cheated.

EL Zorro
EL Zorro
  BB
December 30, 2018 3:36 pm
no one
no one
  Neuday
December 30, 2018 3:48 pm

I took it as satire, but there are some rather truisms tossed in. It is the sort of essay I’d expect to see submitted to “Working Woman” magazine, if such a rag still exists or if it is allowed to be so titled.

Hollywood Rob
Hollywood Rob
December 30, 2018 10:26 am

The take away from this piece is…Don’t hire cunts.

EL Zorro
EL Zorro
  Hollywood Rob
December 30, 2018 3:46 pm

Your about as smart as a sack of potatoes, this is satire, dumbfuck.

nocte_volens
nocte_volens
December 30, 2018 1:04 pm

Lol. What shit advice. If you aren’t smart, pretending to be won’t fool anyone in the meeting…except for the other stupid people in the room .

splurge
splurge
  nocte_volens
December 30, 2018 2:07 pm

No matter how smart you are you can never convince the stupid person of their stupidity.

Unprofessional
Unprofessional
  nocte_volens
December 30, 2018 3:05 pm

If you aren’t smart, pretending to be won’t fool anyone in the meeting…except for the other stupid people in the room .

And that was the wit behind this piece.

But, still, a good discernment.

It perfectly explains why the collective IQ of some groups diminishes to below the IQ of the dumbest person in attendance.

What is the common denominator of all ten tricks? They are initiated to affect the perceptions of others; as opposed to delivering actual results.

In every organization, there are decision-makers and posers; meetings and popularity contests. Some dress for success and the others are empty suits.

no one
no one
  Unprofessional
December 30, 2018 3:52 pm

Every Thursday morning, we met to discuss weekly progress. First item on the agenda? Who would be assigned to bring bagels or donuts next Thursday?

Then, an hour of agonizing discussion about why no one got anything done while we consumed bagels and/or donuts.

Hell, yes… I kept my head down and took detailed notes. Munched my bagel and tried to shut my mouth.

Just couldn’t, most times. Am better at it now.

Donkey Balls
Donkey Balls
December 30, 2018 1:17 pm

Pro Tip: BE the smartest GUY in the room. Go after every person in the room with sarcasm, threats or a challenge of some sort. Do this only as long as needed to cement yourself as THE Big Dog. After that, become a furry kitten until someone challenges you. If so, repeat Big Dog tactics.

IluvCO2
IluvCO2
  Donkey Balls
December 30, 2018 1:51 pm

Are you talking about Stuckey?

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
December 30, 2018 1:25 pm

If there’s free food, get as much as you can – because free. Smart. If there’s no free food, don’t go. Also smart.

speaker of m.b.a
speaker of m.b.a
December 30, 2018 2:23 pm

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innovation. authoritatively reintermediate bleeding-edge
interfaces. authoritatively fashion client-focused data. competently
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via: The Corporate B.S. Generator

Donkey Balls
Donkey Balls
  speaker of m.b.a
December 30, 2018 3:59 pm

Oh man, that was great. The free food comment above was great also.

Stucky
Stucky
December 30, 2018 2:48 pm

If it’s just a meeting of your peers then do as Llpoh suggests …. keep your mouth shut. (And I would add — nod a lot. Nodders get a lot of respect.)

If your manager/boss/etc. is in the meeting then mimic them!!

For example, if your boss looks bored, you should fake sleeping. If your boss is smiling … walk up to him after the meeting and let him know that was one of the most informative meetings you’ve ever attended. If your boss rolls his eyes them you should immediately interrupt the presenter, furrow your brow, and say something like; — “Well, Bob, considering all the variables involved, not to mention the question of the unknown unknowns, well, I just don’t think your idea will ever work.” Sit down and look at your boss and smile smugly … he’ll think you’re brilliant. (Stay away from Bob for at least three months, lest he kill you.)

Donkey Balls
Donkey Balls
  Stucky
December 30, 2018 4:02 pm

That was a post all by itself. But work in the Corporate B.S. Generator comment above also.

Donkey Balls
Donkey Balls
  Stucky
December 30, 2018 4:08 pm

Nodders are leaders.

no one
no one
December 30, 2018 4:59 pm

I am willing to bet that most women here at TBP, like me, entered the workforce with the goal of doing a good job and making the product (whatever it might be) better, if we could.

I am also willing to bet the drudgery involved in all the meetings, planning sessions, refinement sessions, and whatever creative names your “team” used for another damn meeting to waste our time.

It was awful, the time wasting. Of course, I was in government contract work, so part of our overhead was for time wasting meetings. I even had a code for my weekly report.

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
December 30, 2018 10:54 pm

Silly me. I always tried to contribute something positive and made sure that nobody left the meeting without being acutely aware of how REALITY was going to impinge upon everything they were discussing. I guess that’s why people started having me run the meetings. Also the reason I will never get elected to political office.