Silly introvert...the point of meetings is not to get work done, nor is it to generate ideas. It's to energize the team members, build relationships
So not to produce any product beyond good feelings in extroverts and bad feelings in introverts?
and ensure that each person is on the same page and aware of the activities of other members.
The two people who need to be on the same page about any particular issue make it happen offline.
But it sounds like someone is drinking the corporate Kool Aid just like a good extrovert should.
I think more accurately, the point of most group meetings is to diffuse credit, responsibility, and accountability, while giving the illusion of effort and contribution to those providing neither.
You're acting like extraverts get good feelings and introverts get bad feelings via simple contact with other people. It isn't like that at all.
Extraverts get energized by external excitement and get bored or listless in the absence of it.
Introverts get energized by internal excitement, and get worn out when it gets blocked out for prolonged periods via attention-sapping external stimulation.
A meeting isn't going to hurt introverts, any more than reading a book would hurt extraverts. Introverts also derive benefits from making connections with others, even...
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".