--- name: one-on-ones description: "Transform the most important meeting on your calendar. Master the art of 1:1s that build trust, develop people, and surface problems before they become crises. Use when: **New manager** learning to run effective 1:1s; **Improving existing 1:1s** that feel unproductive; **Building relationships** with new direct reports; **Developing talent** through coaching conversations; **Addressing performance issues** early" license: MIT metadata: author: ClawFu version: 1.0.0 mcp-server: "@clawfu/mcp-skills" --- # One-on-Ones > Transform the most important meeting on your calendar. Master the art of 1:1s that build trust, develop people, and surface problems before they become crises. ## When to Use This Skill - **New manager** learning to run effective 1:1s - **Improving existing 1:1s** that feel unproductive - **Building relationships** with new direct reports - **Developing talent** through coaching conversations - **Addressing performance issues** early - **Scaling management** as your team grows ## Methodology Foundation | Aspect | Details | |--------|---------| | **Sources** | Andy Grove (High Output Management), Kim Scott (Radical Candor), Michael Lopp (Managing Humans), Ben Horowitz | | **Core Principle** | "The 1:1 is the direct report's meeting, not the manager's. It's their time to surface what matters to them." | | **Why This Matters** | 1:1s are the highest-leverage relationship-building activity a manager has. Done well, they catch problems early, build trust, and develop people. Done poorly, they're wasted time. | ## What Claude Does vs What You Decide | Claude Does | You Decide | |-------------|------------| | Structures production workflow | Final creative direction | | Suggests technical approaches | Equipment and tool choices | | Creates templates and checklists | Quality standards | | Identifies best practices | Brand/voice decisions | | Generates script outlines | Final script approval | ## What This Skill Does 1. **Structures effective 1:1s** - Cadence, agenda, format 2. **Teaches listening over talking** - Manager as coach, not lecturer 3. **Builds trust systematically** - Through consistency and care 4. **Surfaces problems early** - Before they become crises 5. **Develops direct reports** - Career and skill growth 6. **Handles difficult conversations** - Performance, conflict, change ## How to Use ### Design Your 1:1 System ``` I manage [X] people. Help me design a 1:1 system. Current state: [what you're doing now] Challenges: [what's not working] ``` ### Run a Specific 1:1 ``` I have a 1:1 with [name] who is [context]. Help me prepare for this conversation. ``` ### Address a Specific Issue in 1:1 ``` I need to discuss [issue] with [name] in our 1:1. Help me approach this conversation effectively. ``` ## Instructions ### Step 1: Understand the Purpose of 1:1s ``` ## Why 1:1s Matter ### The Manager's Highest Leverage Activity **Andy Grove:** "The 1:1 is the most important meeting you have because it's the only one where you can develop your people." **Kim Scott:** "1:1s are where you show you care personally and where you give and get the feedback that challenges directly." ### What 1:1s Are For **Information flow:** - Learn what's really happening on the ground - Hear problems before they explode - Understand context you'd otherwise miss **Relationship building:** - Show you care about them as a person - Build trust that enables hard conversations - Create psychological safety **Development:** - Coach on skills and career - Give and receive feedback - Support their growth **Alignment:** - Ensure they understand priorities - Clear blockers and confusion - Connect their work to bigger picture ### What 1:1s Are NOT For **Status updates:** - That's what standups and written updates are for - If you're spending 1:1 time on status, you're wasting it **Manager's agenda only:** - This is their meeting, not yours - Your agenda should be secondary **Lecture time:** - If you're talking 80% of the time, you're doing it wrong - Aim for 10% you / 90% them (or at most 50/50) ``` --- ### Step 2: Set Up the Mechanics ``` ## 1:1 Structure and Cadence ### Frequency | Task-Relevant Maturity | Frequency | Duration | |------------------------|-----------|----------| | New/struggling | 2x/week | 30-45 min | | Developing | Weekly | 30-45 min | | Senior/independent | Bi-weekly | 45-60 min | **Default:** Weekly for most people. **Never:** Less than bi-weekly. Relationship degrades. ### Scheduling **Sacred time:** - Block on both calendars - Rarely cancel, never consistently - Canceling sends a message: "You're not important" **Consistency:** - Same time each week - Builds routine and expectation **Location:** - Walk-and-talks for casual - Private room for sensitive topics - Mix it up to prevent staleness ### Agenda Ownership **Their meeting, their agenda:** - They set the agenda - They share topics in advance - You add to it, not replace it **Shared document:** - Running notes doc both can access - They add topics before meeting - You both reference during - You document key points after ### Time Allocation **Sample 30-minute breakdown:** | Time | Activity | |------|----------| | 0-5 min | Check-in: How are you? | | 5-20 min | Their agenda items | | 20-25 min | Your questions/topics | | 25-30 min | Commitments and close | **Ratio target:** They talk 70-90% of the time. ``` --- ### Step 3: Master 1:1 Conversations ``` ## The 1:1 Conversation Framework ### Opening: The Check-In **Purpose:** Understand where they're at as a person. **Good openers:** - "How are you doing, really?" - "What's on your mind this week?" - "How's your energy level?" - "What's going well? What's challenging?" **Listen for:** - Energy and mood - Life context (personal stuff affecting work) - Things they might not put on the agenda ### Middle: Their Agenda **Your job:** Listen. Ask questions. Help them think. **Key questions:** - "Tell me more about that." - "What have you tried?" - "What options are you considering?" - "What do you think you should do?" - "How can I help?" **Coaching mode:** Ask → Listen → Ask more → Let them reach conclusions Don't jump to solving unless they ask for a solution. **When they bring problems:** - Resist the urge to fix immediately - "What have you already considered?" - "If you had to decide today, what would you do?" - Give advice only after exploring their thinking ### Middle: Your Topics **Keep these secondary to their agenda.** **Topics you might raise:** - Feedback (positive or constructive) - Important context/information - Questions you have about their work - Development check-ins - Things you've observed ### Closing: Commitments **Before ending:** - "What did we agree to?" - "What are you committing to?" - "What am I committing to?" - "Anything else before we wrap?" **Document commitments.** Review next time. ``` --- ### Step 4: Different 1:1 Types ``` ## 1:1 Conversation Types ### The Standard 1:1 **When:** Regular weekly/bi-weekly **Focus:** What's on their mind **Your role:** Listen, coach, unblock ### The Career Development 1:1 **When:** Monthly or quarterly **Focus:** Longer-term growth **Questions:** - "Where do you want to be in 2-3 years?" - "What skills do you want to develop?" - "What would make this the best job you've ever had?" - "What are you curious about learning?" - "What's not in your role that you'd like to try?" **Output:** Development plan or action items ### The Feedback 1:1 **When:** When there's specific feedback to give **Structure:** 1. Context: "I want to share something I noticed..." 2. Observation: Specific, not general 3. Impact: Why it matters 4. Discussion: Their perspective 5. Forward: What should change **See:** Radical Candor skill for detailed approach ### The Performance Conversation **When:** Performance is concerning **Structure:** 1. Clear statement of gap 2. Specific examples 3. Their perspective 4. Clear expectations 5. Support and timeline 6. Consequences if not addressed **Key:** Document this conversation. ### The Trust-Building 1:1 **When:** New relationship or rebuilding **Focus:** Learning about each other **Questions:** - "Tell me about your path to here." - "What do you like best about your work?" - "How do you like to receive feedback?" - "What do you need from me to do your best work?" - "What's something I should know about you?" ### The Skip-Level 1:1 **When:** You meet with people 2+ levels down **Purpose:** - Build relationship directly - Hear unfiltered perspective - Develop talent beyond your directs **Respect the middle manager:** - Don't give directives to their reports - Share context back (with permission) - Support, don't undermine ``` --- ### Step 5: Handle Common Challenges ``` ## 1:1 Challenges and Solutions ### Challenge: "Everything is fine" **Symptom:** They say nothing is wrong every week. **Solutions:** 1. Wait in silence longer. Discomfort opens up conversation. 2. Ask different questions: - "What would you change if you could?" - "What's annoying you lately?" - "If you were me, what would you do differently?" 3. Share your own challenges first. Model vulnerability. 4. Ask about specific people/projects. ### Challenge: Turns into status update **Symptom:** They just list what they did. **Solutions:** 1. Interrupt gently: "I can read status—what do you need from me?" 2. Redirect: "What's challenging about that?" 3. Start differently: "What's on your mind?" not "What's the update?" 4. Use a shared doc for status, use meeting for discussion. ### Challenge: Venting without action **Symptom:** Same complaints every week, nothing changes. **Solutions:** 1. Acknowledge, then redirect: "I hear you. What do you want to do about it?" 2. Ask: "What would you need to see to feel better about this?" 3. Name the pattern: "I notice we've talked about this for several weeks. Are you ready to address it?" 4. Offer help: "Do you want me to intervene, or do you want to handle it?" ### Challenge: Only surface-level **Symptom:** Conversation stays professional and distant. **Solutions:** 1. Ask personal questions (appropriately): "How's [hobby]?" 2. Share about yourself. Model appropriate vulnerability. 3. Take some 1:1s outside (coffee, walk). 4. Be patient. Trust takes time. ### Challenge: They want to quit **Symptom:** Disengaged, looking elsewhere. **Solutions:** 1. Ask directly: "Are you thinking about leaving?" 2. Listen without defending: Why? What would change it? 3. Be honest about what you can and can't change. 4. If they're leaving, help them do it well. ### Challenge: You're too busy for 1:1s **Symptom:** Frequent cancellations, rushed meetings. **Reality check:** - If you don't have time for 1:1s, you have too many direct reports - Or you're not delegating enough - Or your priorities are wrong **1:1s are not optional.** They're core management work. ``` --- ## Examples ### Example 1: Starting 1:1s with a New Report **Input:** > "I have a new direct report starting next week. How should I structure our first few 1:1s?" **Output:** ## First 1:1s: New Direct Report Onboarding ### Week 1: Getting to Know You **Duration:** 60 minutes **Agenda:** **Part 1: Your story (20 min)** - "Tell me about your path to here." - "What drew you to this role?" - "What are you most excited about?" - "What questions do you have?" **Part 2: Working together (20 min)** - "How do you like to receive feedback?" - "What does great management look like to you?" - "How do you prefer to communicate?" - "What do you need from me to succeed?" **Part 3: Context and questions (20 min)** - Share team context and priorities - Explain how 1:1s will work - Answer their questions **After the meeting:** - Send notes summarizing what you learned - Share resources they mentioned needing - Schedule next 1:1 ### Week 2-4: Frequent Check-Ins **Duration:** 30-45 minutes (2x/week initially) **Focus areas:** - How's onboarding going? - What's confusing? - What do you need? - Early wins to celebrate - Course corrections **Questions:** - "What's surprised you so far?" - "What's harder than expected? Easier?" - "Who have you connected with?" - "What do you wish you knew that you don't?" ### Week 4+: Establish Routine **Transition to:** - Weekly 1:1s (standard) - Shared running doc for agenda - Development topics added **90-Day check-in:** - How's it going overall? - What's working? What's not? - What do you want to focus on next quarter? - Feedback both directions --- ### Example 2: Turning Around Unproductive 1:1s **Input:** > "My 1:1s have become boring status updates. Neither of us looks forward to them. How do I reset?" **Output:** ## 1:1 Reset: From Status to Substance ### Diagnose the Problem **Common causes:** - No clear agenda ownership - Habit of status reporting - Lack of trust for deeper topics - Manager talking too much - No action coming from meetings ### The Reset Conversation **In your next 1:1:** "I want to talk about our 1:1s themselves. I've noticed they've become mostly status updates, and I don't think we're getting as much value as we could. I want to use this time for things you can't get elsewhere— career development, challenges you're facing, feedback, things that are stuck. What would make these meetings more valuable for you?" **Listen. Take notes. Commit to change.** ### New Structure **1. Implement a shared agenda doc** ``` ## 1:1 Running Notes: [Name] ### This Week [Their topics] - - [Your topics] - ### Notes [Capture during meeting] ### Commitments [ ] They will: [ ] You will: ### Previous Weeks [Archive old notes below] ``` **2. Change your opening question** Old: "What's your update?" New: "What's on your mind?" **3. Add explicit time for development** "Let's spend the last 10 minutes every week on your development—skills, career, what you want to learn." **4. Experiment with format** - Take a walk - Get coffee - Change location - Do a longer monthly instead of weekly (try temporarily) ### Week-to-Week Improvements **Week 1:** Announce the reset. Try new format. **Week 2:** Ask: "How did last week feel? What should we adjust?" **Week 3:** Start adding development topics. **Week 4:** Review: Is this working? What's missing? --- ### Example 3: Preparing for a Difficult 1:1 **Input:** > "I need to address repeated missed deadlines with a direct report in our 1:1. They're generally good but this is becoming a pattern. How do I approach this?" **Output:** ## Difficult 1:1: Addressing Missed Deadlines ### Before the 1:1 **Gather specifics:** - List the missed deadlines (dates, projects) - Note the impact of each - Consider: Is there context you might be missing? **Check your intent:** - Am I trying to help them improve? ✓ - Am I coming in angry or punitive? (If yes, wait) ### In the 1:1 **Part 1: Open with care (2 min)** "Hey [Name], I want to talk about something that's been on my mind. It's coming from a place of wanting to see you succeed here, so I want to be direct with you." **Part 2: State the pattern (3 min)** "I've noticed a pattern of missed deadlines: - [Project A] was due [date], delivered [date] - [Project B] was due [date], delivered [date] - [Project C] was due [date], still outstanding This is becoming a pattern, and I want to understand what's going on." **Part 3: Ask and listen (10 min)** "Help me understand—what's happening?" **Listen without interrupting.** **Possible responses:** - Overwhelm → Discuss workload, priorities - Personal issues → Offer support, adjust if needed - Skill gap → Identify training or support - Didn't realize impact → Explain consequences - Excuse/deflection → Gently redirect to pattern **Part 4: Impact (3 min)** "Here's why this matters: - [Downstream impact] - [Team/customer effect] - [Your credibility/career] I need this to change because [reason]." **Part 5: Path forward (5 min)** "What do you need to commit to realistic deadlines and hit them?" Options to offer: - Smaller scope - Earlier escalation when at risk - Buffer in estimates - Different support "Here's what I'll commit to: [support]" **Part 6: Agreement (2 min)** "So we're agreeing that: - You will [specific commitment] - I will [specific support] - We'll check in on this in next two 1:1s Does that feel fair?" ### After the 1:1 **Document:** - What was discussed - What was agreed - Follow-up timeline **Follow through:** - Check in next 1:1 - Recognize progress - Address backsliding immediately --- ## Checklists & Templates ### 1:1 Preparation Checklist ``` ## Before Each 1:1 ### Logistics □ Confirmed time is still working □ Private space reserved (if needed) □ Phone/laptop distractions removed ### Review □ Read their agenda items □ Review last 1:1 notes □ Check on their commitments □ Check on your commitments ### Your Topics □ Feedback to give (if any) □ Context to share (if any) □ Questions to ask (1-2 max) ### Mindset □ Entering curious, not judging □ Ready to listen more than talk □ Focused on this person ``` --- ### Running 1:1 Doc Template ``` ## 1:1 Notes: [Name] + [Manager] ### Meeting Info - Frequency: Weekly - Day/Time: [Day] at [Time] - Location: [Room/Remote] --- ## [Date] ### Their Topics - Topic 1 - Topic 2 ### My Topics - ### Discussion Notes [Key points from conversation] ### Commitments - [ ] [Name]: - [ ] [Manager]: ### Feedback Given [Note any feedback exchanged] --- ## [Previous Date] [Archive older notes below] ``` --- ### 1:1 Question Bank ``` ## Questions for 1:1s ### Opening Questions - What's on your mind? - How are you, really? - What's been your highlight this week? - What's been challenging? ### Work Questions - What's blocking you? - What would make your work easier? - What's something you're proud of recently? - What's worrying you about the project? ### Development Questions - What do you want to be doing in 2 years? - What skills do you want to develop? - What would make this the best job you've had? - What's not in your role that you'd like to try? ### Relationship Questions - How can I better support you? - What's something I should do differently? - What do you need more of from me? - What don't I know that I should know? ### Closing Questions - Anything else before we wrap? - What are you committing to? - What am I committing to? - Is there anything we didn't cover that we should? ``` --- ## Skill Boundaries ### What This Skill Does Well - Structuring audio production workflows - Providing technical guidance - Creating quality checklists - Suggesting creative approaches ### What This Skill Cannot Do - Replace audio engineering expertise - Make subjective creative decisions - Access or edit audio files directly - Guarantee commercial success ## References - Grove, Andy. "High Output Management" - 1:1 fundamentals - Scott, Kim. "Radical Candor" - Caring + challenging in 1:1s - Lopp, Michael. "Managing Humans" - Practical 1:1 advice - Horowitz, Ben. "The Hard Thing About Hard Things" - Difficult conversations - Manager Tools podcast - 1:1 episodes ## Related Skills - [high-output-management](../high-output-management/) - Grove's system - [radical-candor](../radical-candor/) - Feedback in 1:1s - [customer-discovery](../../validation/customer-discovery/) - Interview techniques - [mom-test](../../validation/mom-test/) - Asking good questions --- ## Skill Metadata - **Mode**: cyborg ```yaml name: one-on-ones category: leadership subcategory: management version: 1.0 author: MKTG Skills source_expert: Multiple (Grove, Scott, Lopp) source_work: High Output Management, Radical Candor, Managing Humans difficulty: beginner estimated_value: $2,000+ management training tags: [management, 1:1, one-on-one, coaching, feedback, development, trust] created: 2026-01-25 updated: 2026-01-25 ```