Yeah...I'm extraverted too and I like meetings only if I like the people who are at the meeting and there is no clear leader of the group leading it.
He did mention that not all extraverts like meetings though.
Of course, most people I know hate meetings simply because meetings are work and they can't slip away to goof off.
That said, there is probably truth somewhere in what he said. I'm just mad at how he didn't say it in a way that was useful or effective in communicating any of it to me. I can't update on this type of evidence.
I need to know why he thinks he knows what he knows, and I need to know which tasks lower in productivity as a result of meetings.
Of course, most people I know hate meetings simply because meetings are work and they can't slip away to goof off.
Hmm, I have a bit of the opposite impression - meetings are the goofing off where everyone is trying to jabber on and on about their opinion on something nobody else cares about, or two people are talking about some obscure issue the other eight people here don't care or know about, or someone has to crack lame jokes all the time, and I keep wishing they would shut up and the meeting could end so we could get back to work because there's a g...
A fun article by Alan Jacobs. Check out the paper he cites, if anyone finds an non-paywalled version, I'll edit in the link here. HT for the link to Michael Bloom.
I really do need to find more written by this author. But while I certainly do very much share this sentiment I have a hard time figuring out how common it is. After all people don't look good saying they "don't like meeting new people".