Meeting vs Dialogue: Choosing the Right Conversation for Impact
Meeting is a formal, scheduled gathering of people to discuss or decide. Dialogue is an open, two-way exchange of ideas, spoken or written, without the rigid structure of a Meeting.
People swap the words because both involve talking. In a busy WhatsApp thread, the CEO might call a quick back-and-forth a “Meeting” when it’s really a Dialogue, blurring the line between agenda and conversation.
Key Differences
Meetings have a chair, minutes, and a finish time; Dialogues flow freely. Meetings aim for decisions; Dialogues seek understanding. One is a calendar invite, the other a coffee chat.
Which One Should You Choose?
Use Meeting when outcomes, roles, and deadlines matter. Pick Dialogue when creativity, empathy, or relationship-building is the goal. Blend both: open with Dialogue, close with a Meeting to lock decisions.
Can a Meeting turn into a Dialogue?
Yes—if the chair loosens the agenda and invites real conversation, a formal Meeting can shift into a productive Dialogue.
Is Dialogue always informal?
No. Scripted interviews and panel talks can still be Dialogues if ideas flow two ways.
How do I signal the shift on a calendar invite?
Rename it “Strategy Dialogue” instead of “Weekly Meeting” to set expectations for open exchange.