Daily Meetings vs Real Communication
Most teams have one update meeting per day, the so-called daily. At a fixed time, everyone shares what they did, what they plan to do, and whether they had any problems.
But is life really synchronous?
How Life Actually Works
Imagine a pipe bursts in your apartment. Would you wait until the next morning’s meeting to tell someone about it?
Of course not.
Life works in a simple pattern: action → reaction. Problems are handled when they appear, not at a scheduled time.
So Why Do We Rely on Synchronous Meetings?
The answer is simple: people are often not ready to take full responsibility.
Instead of teaching ownership and accountability, we introduce recurring meetings. These meetings create a sense of control, but they don’t necessarily increase responsibility.
What Continuous Communication Looks Like
In an ideal situation, communication would be continuous and asynchronous:
When you start working on something, you write a short update. While working, you share progress or blockers as they happen. When you finish, you let others know.
This creates a steady flow of information instead of one daily burst.
The Real Challenge
Interestingly, this kind of behavior comes naturally in a synchronous office environment. People talk, update each other, and react in real time.
But when it comes to asynchronous communication, it suddenly becomes much harder.
The question is: why is something so natural in person so difficult when done asynchronously?