| name | one-on-one |
| description | **1:1 Meeting Prep & Notes**: Helps prepare for and document one-on-one meetings with direct reports, skip-levels, and your own manager. Use this skill whenever the user wants to prepare for a 1:1, create meeting notes, structure feedback conversations, plan career development discussions, or handle difficult management conversations. Trigger when the user mentions '1:1', 'one-on-one', 'check-in with', 'meeting with [person]', 'feedback for', 'performance review', 'career conversation', or asks how to have a difficult conversation with a team member. |
| category | management |
| preferred-model | haiku |
| min-confidence | 0.8 |
| depends-on | [] |
| estimated-tokens | 2000 |
| triggers | {} |
| tags | ["1on1","management","feedback","career"] |
1:1 Meeting Prep & Notes
Great 1:1s are the highest-leverage activity a CTO has. They build trust, surface problems early, unblock people, and develop future leaders. This skill helps you prepare for and document them effectively.
1:1 Prep Template
Before each 1:1, quickly fill this out (5 min max):
# 1:1 Prep: [Person] — [Date]
## Their Context
- Current project/focus: [What are they working on?]
- Recent wins: [Ship something? Solve a hard problem?]
- Potential concerns: [Blockers, frustration signals, team dynamics?]
## My Agenda (pick 1-2, not all)
- [ ] Check in on [specific project/task]
- [ ] Give feedback on [specific behavior/output]
- [ ] Discuss [growth opportunity / career topic]
- [ ] Address [concern / issue]
## Questions to Ask
- [Open-ended questions, not yes/no]
- [Focus on their perspective, not yours]
## Key Message
[If there's ONE thing they should take away from this meeting, what is it?]
1:1 Notes Template
# 1:1 Notes: [Person] — [Date]
## Key Takeaways
- [Most important things discussed]
## Action Items
- [ ] [Owner]: [Specific action] — by [date]
- [ ] [Owner]: [Specific action] — by [date]
## Follow-up Topics
- [Things to revisit next time]
## Signals to Watch
- [Engagement, energy, concerns detected]
Types of 1:1 Conversations
Regular Check-in
Focus: Their priorities, blockers, and wellbeing.
Good questions:
- "What's the most important thing you're working on this week?"
- "What's slowing you down?"
- "Is there anything you need from me?"
- "How's the team dynamic feeling?"
Feedback Conversation
Structure: SBI (Situation-Behavior-Impact)
- Situation: "In yesterday's sprint review..."
- Behavior: "...you presented the technical trade-offs before recommending a solution..."
- Impact: "...which helped the team make an informed decision and got buy-in faster."
For constructive feedback, add:
- Request: "Going forward, I'd like to see [specific change]."
- Then ask: "What do you think? Does that resonate?"
Career Development
Focus: Their growth trajectory, not just current performance.
Questions to explore:
- "Where do you want to be in 1-2 years?"
- "What skills do you want to develop?"
- "What kind of work energizes you most?"
- "Is there a project or responsibility you'd like to take on?"
Map their answers to concrete opportunities: stretch assignments, mentoring, conference talks, tech lead roles.
Difficult Conversation
When you need to address underperformance, behavior issues, or deliver hard news.
Framework:
- State the observation (facts, not interpretation): "I've noticed the last three PRs had significant bugs caught in review."
- Share the impact: "This is slowing down the team's velocity and affecting the release timeline."
- Seek their perspective: "I want to understand what's going on from your side."
- Collaborate on a plan: "Let's figure out together how to improve this."
- Set clear expectations: "Here's what I need to see in the next two weeks."
Skip-Level 1:1
Focus: Organizational health and hidden problems.
Questions:
- "What's the biggest thing slowing your team down?"
- "If you could change one thing about how we work, what would it be?"
- "Do you feel like you understand the company's direction?"
- "Is there anything you want me to know that I might not be hearing?"
Anti-Patterns to Avoid
- Status update meetings — If all you discuss is project status, use async updates instead. 1:1s are for the human stuff.
- Only talking when there's a problem — Regular cadence builds trust. Don't skip 1:1s when things are going well.
- Doing all the talking — Aim for the other person to talk 60-70% of the time. Your job is to listen and ask good questions.
- No follow-through — If you commit to an action item, do it. Nothing erodes trust faster than broken promises.