From Meeting Room to Movement: 3 Strategies to Make Sure Great Ideas Get Implemented
Dr. Marcia F. Robinson is a senior certified HR professional, diversity strategist, and curator of TheHBCUCareerCenter.com job board. She advises organizations on building inclusive talent pipelines and improving diversity recruiting outcomes.
Just read a story from a HR colleague in one of those online groups where we get to vent with fellow HR associates. He was annoyed with the glacial pace of change in his organization and wondering why something he thought was agreed on was still lagging.
We’ve all been there. The brainstorming session was electric. People leaned in. Heads nodded. Energy was high. And then—nothing.
The idea that had everyone fired up in the meeting slowly disappeared into the ether of “we’ll circle back” or worse, the project owner just hadn’t executed.
As a HR strategist, I’ve sat in on enough leadership meetings and employee feedback sessions to know: the biggest breakdown isn’t a lack of ideas—it’s the debilitating failure to move from idea to action. And when promising ideas die in, or right outside the conference room, so does employee trust, engagement, and the spirit of innovation.
Here are three people-centered strategies that I use to keep great ideas alive—and moving.
Assign Ownership Before You Wrap Up
Ideas don’t execute themselves. Before this super productive meeting ends, assign a clear point person (or co-champions) responsible for scoping out next steps. This person doesn’t have to do it all—but they must keep the flame alive. Make this ownership visible in meeting notes and follow-up communications.
Tip: Encourage leaders to rotate ownership roles. It’s a great development tool and builds shared accountability across teams.
Give the Idea a Home
Don’t let good ideas get buried in a 30-page meeting recap. Create a simple, trackable home for ideas—whether that’s a shared dashboard, innovation tracker, or “incubation” workspace. Let people see status updates, barriers, and wins as they happen.
Tip: Tie idea progress to your performance framework if possible. Visibility can really keep momentum alive. Also, if people are unclear how this innovation could support their careers, consider clarifying the connection.
Protect Time for Execution
We have been there - more projects than time. Leaders then often say, “we don’t have time to follow through”—but what they probably mean is: “we haven’t made time.” Block space on calendars, dedicate sprints, or even host “implementation days” to focus on moving ideas forward.
Tip: HR can role model this by piloting minor internal projects that show how ideas can go from suggestion box to success stories. Success can be a great catalyst for employees.
When people see their input turn into action, trust deepens, culture shifts and innovation flourishes.
So the next time your meeting room fills up with energy and breakthrough thinking, ask these questions to spark action:
What will we do with this idea next week?
Who believes we should commit to this?
Who wants to champion this for us?
Who wants to lead us through this?
These kinds of next step questions help to build the runway so projects actually take off.