The Best Meeting I Hosted

No slides. No agenda. Just real conversations.

Surabhi Shenoy profile photo
Surabhi Shenoy

2x Exit · Entrepreneur · Creator of CEO Mastery

At my tech company, Tejora, I hosted a monthly lunch.

Anyone celebrating their work anniversary that month — whether one year or ten — was invited to join me.

Titles didn’t matter.

A junior developer, a program manager, or a CXO sat at the same table.

It wasn’t fancy. Sometimes pizza. Sometimes brown-bag style.

No slides. No speeches. No formal agenda.

This simple monthly ritual helped me stay close to the ground as we grew.

It strengthened my presence without micromanaging.

And it gave me unfiltered insight into what was really happening inside the company.

It allowed me to understand the business beyond dashboards and reports.

How I prepared for the meeting

Before each lunch, I reviewed the list with HR. 

I wanted to know who they were — their history with us, their aspirations, their strengths. What they were proud of. What they were struggling with. Even what was happening in their personal lives, if it was relevant.

This preparation helped me move conversations beyond small talk.

What I Learned at the Table

I usually opened with a simple icebreaker and then gave them the floor.

They shared stories. We laughed. Someone would bring up an old mistake, and we would tease each other about it. It was informal and relaxed.

Occasionally, I would ask a question.

“What are you learning right now?“
“What was a recent win?“
“What are you seeing outside the company?“
“What tools or trends are catching your attention?“

The most interesting part?

I received an enormous amount of information — and they didn’t feel like they were “reporting” anything.

Inside those stories were signals.
Where friction existed. Which managers were strong. Which processes were slowing things down. Where morale was high, and where it wasn’t.

I could also spot leadership potential in that relaxed environment.

Who is quiet but has a mind of their own.
Who speaks with clarity.
Who takes ownership naturally.
Who sees the larger picture.

Some of our future leaders first stood out to me at those lunches.

The Question That Changed The Room

The most important tool I have used was a question: 

“What do you think?”

This question is the highest form of appreciation. 

When the founder genuinely wants to know what you think, the dynamic changes. People feel seen. They become part of what you are building, not just executors of tasks. It inspires ownership.

As companies grow, information travels upward through layers. By the time it reaches you, it is often filtered, softened, or summarized. 

These lunches gave me direct access to reality. 

Sometimes the insights were operational.
Sometimes cultural.
Sometimes deeply personal.

All of them were valuable.

A small word of caution: Listening is not the same as committing. When you give people space to speak, they may assume change will follow. Be explicit about what you are promising and what not. Clarity protects trust.

Close the Loop

Follow-through mattered.

When something changed as a result of these conversations, I would reference it, “This came up in one of our anniversary lunches.”

This reinforced the value of speaking up. It showed that their input had an impact. Over time, more people contributed with substance rather than surface commentary.

If your team is remote, I believe this ritual will matter even more. 

Host a small roundtable over Zoom. Cameras on. No slides. No hierarchy in the room. Do your homework the same way. The format is different, but the goal is the same: create one protected space where hierarchy dissolves and truth travels freely.

You don’t need a degree in leadership to do this well.

You need preparation.
You need discipline.
And you need the humility to ask, “What do you think?” — and be genuinely interested in the answer.

As founders, we spend a lot of time deciding, directing, and correcting. 

Make time to hang out with the people who spend hours building your dream. Give them a sense of kinship. 

You may discover that the clearest strategy signals are already inside your company, waiting for an invitation to speak.

See you next Thursday,
Surabhi

PS: All the organizational benefits on one side, I must mention that I personally had great fun in these lunches. I used to look forward to them, they created so many internal jokes that we would laugh about for months. 

Would you try this in your organization? Reply to this mail and tell me how you would structure it.

Articles to Deepen Your Understanding

Title
Read Time

Your replies made me think

2 min

Slow sales?

6 min

People say, “You are a strong woman”

6 min

If rockets can be standardized, so can your business

6 min

My Take On Delegation

7 min

Why I Started CEO Mastery

6 min

The Best Meeting I Hosted

4 min

Want to Grow 10x?

3 min

What’s Your Founder DNA?

4 min

Muji vs Red Bull: What strong brands refuse to do

4 min
Title
Read Time

Made to Stick for Founders: How to Craft Ideas People Remember

3 min

Radical Candor for Founders: How to Care Deeply and Challenge Directly

4 min

Crucial Conversations for Founders: How to Communicate Under Pressure

4 min

Man’s Search for Meaning: The Leadership Guide Founders Don’t Know They Need

4 min

Eat That Frog!: The Productivity Playbook Every Founder Needs

4 min

The Power of Now: How Founders Reclaim Clarity

3 min

Surrounded by Idiots: A Founder’s Guide to Managing Different Personalities

4 min

Grit: Why Successful Founders Outlast the Odds

4 min

The Art of Thinking Clearly: Cognitive Biases Every Founder Must Avoid

3 min

The Godfather: Leadership Lessons Every Founder Should Learn

4 min
Title
Read Time

Business Exit Strategy: How Smart Founders Increase Valuation And Sell For a Premium

13 min

Founder Growth: How to Scale Yourself as Your Company Grows

15 min

How to Grow Revenue as a Founder: The System Behind Sustainable, Profitable Growth

11 min

Love him or hate him, but you can’t ignore him.

6 min

People: Asset or Liability?

5 min

Outsmarting Your Brain: How Thinking, Fast and Slow Improves Business Decisions

5 min
Title
Read Time

Scaling Without Burnout: Building a Buyable Business Without Chasing Endless Capital

1 min

Unlocking Creativity in Business: From Founder Mindset to Innovative Execution

1 min

From Engineer to Entrepreneur to CEO Coach: Lessons in Building and Exiting Businesses

1 min

Building Buyable Businesses: Scaling, Exiting, and Doing It on Your Own Terms

2 min

CEO Mastery Newsletter

Get the exact strategies I used to scale and exit two 7-figure businesses — in your inbox every Thursday. 4-min read.

Share this article

More from CEO Mastery

MORE FROM CEO MASTERY

Your replies made me think

Last week, I broke down sales into four stages — reach, relevance, resonance, and conversion. It was systems thinking applied to sales — and a new way to look at what shapes revenue growth. The replies were honest. Mainly two problems were shared. “I can see where my system is

Slow sales?

I recently started working with a B2B SaaS founder as a growth strategist. Their AI product is genuinely impressive. I watched the demo recordings. I studied the use cases. There is a real need in the market. The team is committed. They are sponsoring events, running ads, networking. And yet,

People say, “You are a strong woman”

Last week, on a coaching call, a founder confessed. “I lost my cool in a team meeting. I raised my voice. I was rough with a team member.” Then he added some context. His baby had kept him up most of the night. He was exhausted. And in that meeting,

Don't miss the next insight

Join thousands of founders building with clarity, not chaos.

Scroll to Top
I will never spam or sell your info. Ever.