One-on-ones that actually move things
The one-on-one is the most undervalued meeting on a manager’s calendar. Done badly, it’s a status update you could have got from a message — a recap of work you already know about, padded out to fill thirty minutes. Done well, it’s where trust gets built, problems surface early, and people actually grow.
The difference is almost entirely about what you choose to talk about.
Status is the wrong default
The gravitational pull of a one-on-one is toward status: what did you do, what’s next, any blockers. It feels productive because it’s concrete. But status is the least valuable thing to cover here, because it’s the easiest to cover any other way — async, in a tool, in a team meeting.
If the whole conversation is status, you’re spending your scarcest, most personal channel on your most replaceable content.
What the time is actually for
The one-on-one is for the things that don’t fit anywhere else:
- What’s hard right now — not the task, but the friction. Where they feel stuck, unsupported, or unsure.
- The conversation they wouldn’t start in public. Doubts, disagreements, early concerns. Your job is to make raising these feel safe and normal.
- Direction and growth. Are they heading somewhere they want to go? What would make the work more meaningful? These erode silently if no one asks.
A simple shift in opening question changes the whole meeting. Not “what’s the update?” but “what’s on your mind?” The first invites a report. The second invites the truth.
It’s their meeting
The most useful reframing I know: the one-on-one belongs to the person, not the manager. You’re not there to extract a status report; you’re there to be useful to them. That means more listening than talking, and being genuinely comfortable with a session that produces no action items — because it built trust, which is the thing that makes every other conversation work.
Protect the time. Don’t cancel it when you’re busy — especially don’t cancel it when you’re busy, because that’s exactly when the things people aren’t saying are worth the most.