---
name: client-meeting-agenda-builder
description: Build a focused client meeting agenda and a one-page prep brief so the meeting is productive and the firm shows up prepared. Use this skill whenever a firm has a client meeting coming up and says 'build an agenda for this client meeting', 'prep me for the client call', 'what should we cover with the client', or 'we keep having unfocused client meetings'. Trigger whenever a client meeting needs an agenda and the team needs to walk in ready.
---

# Client Meeting Agenda Builder

## What this does and why it matters
Unfocused client meetings waste the most expensive hour in professional services: partner time in front of the client. This skill builds a tight agenda and a one-page brief so the meeting has a purpose, a plan, and a next step, and so whoever walks in has the context to sound prepared. Clients judge a firm heavily on how it runs the meeting; a sharp agenda signals a firm that respects their time and knows what it is doing.

## Inputs to gather
1. The client, the attendees on both sides, and the meeting's purpose.
2. What has happened since the last meeting (progress, issues, open items).
3. The decisions or outcomes the firm wants from this meeting.
4. Any sensitive topics, risks, or relationship dynamics to handle.
5. Time available for the meeting.

## Method
Start from the outcome: what does the firm need to be true when the meeting ends, and build the agenda backward from that. Order topics by importance, not chronology, so the meeting achieves its goal even if it runs short. Time-box each item against the total, and mark which items are for decision versus information. In the prep brief, give whoever is leading the meeting the context they need in a glance: where things stand, what the client cares about right now, and any landmine to handle with care. End every agenda on next steps and owners, because a meeting without a documented next step is a meeting that has to happen again.

## Output format
ALWAYS use:

# Meeting Agenda and Brief: [Client] | [Date]
## Purpose and desired outcome (one line)
## Attendees (both sides, roles)
## Agenda (item | time | decision or info)
## Prep brief (where things stand, what the client cares about now)
## Landmines to handle with care
## Decisions to secure
## Next steps template (owner | action | date)

## Anti-patterns to avoid
- An agenda ordered by chronology so the key item gets cut when time runs short.
- No stated outcome, so the meeting wanders.
- A prep brief that restates the whole history instead of what matters now.
- Ending without owners and dates on next steps.

## Example
An agenda for a quarterly check-in with a retainer client leads with the renewal conversation as the primary outcome, time-boxes a results recap and two open issues, briefs the partner that the client has been quiet about a recent invoice, and includes a next-steps block to capture the renewal decision and its owner.
