Members of Healthier Fosston committee, Michelle Landsverk, Mark Nohner, Barbara Muesing, Chuck Lucken, and Kirsten Fageland practice what they preach. |
How many of us have
experienced the drudgery of sitting around a table at a meeting while secretly
wishing we could be outside, enjoying the beautiful weather?
Well, there is a growing
trend in our country that is literally moving people out of the board room and onto the sidewalks – walking meetings.
Yes, from the sidewalks of
Fosston to the hills and dales of Silicon Valley, people are re-imagining what
a productive meeting looks like; realizing that it is not necessary to sit
slumped around a table for hours on end.
Walking meetings have
become the norm at LinkedIn, the professional social media platform. On any
given day, you can find workers strolling and talking together on the bike path
at the company’s Mountain View, California, headquarters. The path takes about
20-25 minutes to circle — perfect for a half-hour one-on-one with a colleague.
The first and most obvious
benefit is the exercise. Desk-bound office workers are prone to sitting disease
– sitting too much is killing us. (See the Healthy U blog for more on Sitting Disease).
One of the less expected
results is the way it amps up creativity and out-of-the box thinking. Walking
together breaks down formalities, removes barriers, and fosters camaraderie. It
also minimizes distractions like phones, emails, texts, and other
interruptions.
Business innovator, Nilofer
Merchant, has been helping to grow businesses -- from Fortune 500s to web
startups -- for 20 years, working for major companies like Apple, Autodesk, Logitech,
Symantec, HP, Yahoo, and many others.
Merchant was recently
featured on a TED talk and shared the impact that walking meetings have had on
her life. Merchant was started out as an unlikely advocate for walking
meetings, but found that social interaction was what got her moving.
“Someone invited me to a
meeting,” Merchant said, “but couldn't manage to fit me in to a regular sort of
conference room meeting, and said, "I have to walk my dogs tomorrow. Could
you come then?" It seemed kind of odd to do, and actually, that first
meeting, I remember thinking, "I have to be the one to ask the next
question," because I knew I was going to huff and puff during this
conversation. And yet, I've taken that idea and made it my own. So instead of
going to coffee meetings or fluorescent-lit conference room meetings, I ask
people to go on a walking meeting, to the tune of 20 to 30 miles a week. It's
changed my life.”
In recent weeks, I have
become an advocate of walking meetings, too. I do business out of my home
office, and though I work alone, I spend quite a bit of time on the phone each
day. In an effort to get moving, I decided to use a headset for my phone and
walk while I talk. I have found that it increases my energy, creativity, and in
general – it just helps the conversation flow.
Merchant concluded her TED
talk with “Walk and talk. Walk the talk. You’ll be surprised at how
fresh air drives fresh thinking, and in the way that you do, you’ll bring into
your life an entirely new set of ideas.”
Check out our other articles and please share your
comments with us! We would love to hear your thoughts, your story, or your
healthy recipe!
HealthyU is being brought to you by SHIP, Polk County
Public Health, the City of Fosston, Essentia Health, and several other private
partners. Launched in 2008 as part of Minnesota’s bipartisan health reform
effort, SHIP works to help Minnesotans live longer, healthier lives while
building healthy, vital communities. SHIP encourages healthy eating, active
living, and avoiding commercial tobacco by working with schools, communities,
workplaces, and healthcare to make healthy choices easier.
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