Meeting Minutes for Clubs: Why Your Committee Needs a Better System


Table of contents
Minutes Are Not a Transcript
Too many clubs either skip minutes entirely or record every word of every debate. Both are wrong. Minutes are a record of decisions and actions. Nothing more.
For each agenda item: what was discussed (one sentence), what was decided (the resolution), and what happens next (the action, the owner, the deadline). That is a good minute.
Why Minutes Matter
When the new secretary takes over next year and asks "why did we change the membership fee in July?", the minutes tell them. When the governing body asks whether the committee approved the safeguarding policy, the minutes prove it. When a member disputes a decision at the AGM, the minutes provide the record.
Minutes are legal documents for incorporated associations. They protect the club and the committee.
The Template Approach
Create a standard meeting template:
- Meeting called to order (time, attendees, apologies)
- Minutes of previous meeting (confirm as accurate)
- Business arising from previous minutes (action item review)
- Reports (president, treasurer, secretary, subcommittees)
- New business
- General business
- Next meeting date
- Meeting closed (time)
Every meeting follows the same structure. The secretary fills in the template. Consistency makes meetings efficient and minutes reliable.
From Template to System
A Word document template is better than nothing. A system that creates the agenda, distributes it before the meeting, records minutes against agenda items, and tracks action items with owners and deadlines is better still.
TidyHQ's meeting management does this. Outstanding action items from the last meeting automatically appear on the next agenda. Nothing falls through the cracks.
The Handover Problem Solved
When minutes live in someone's personal Google Drive, they leave when the person leaves. When minutes live in a committee workspace, they persist for years. The new secretary opens the meeting history and sees every meeting for the last three years.
That is institutional memory. Not in someone's head. In the system.
Consistency Across a Federation
For governing bodies, consistent meeting practices across clubs means consistent governance quality. If every club uses the same meeting template, every club produces the same standard of minutes. The governing body can verify that decisions are being made properly, not just that meetings are happening.
This is governance at scale. Not by checking on every club individually, but by standardising the process that every club follows.
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