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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
npx skill4agent add guia-matthieu/clawfu-skills one-on-onesTransform 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.
| 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. |
| 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 |
I manage [X] people. Help me design a 1:1 system.
Current state: [what you're doing now]
Challenges: [what's not working]I have a 1:1 with [name] who is [context].
Help me prepare for this conversation.I need to discuss [issue] with [name] in our 1:1.
Help me approach this conversation effectively.## 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)## 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.## 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.## 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## 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."I have a new direct report starting next week. How should I structure our first few 1:1s?"
"My 1:1s have become boring status updates. Neither of us looks forward to them. How do I reset?"
## 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]"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?"
## 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## 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]## 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?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