# Meeting Overload Is Often System Debt
Meeting overload is rarely just a calendar problem.
It is often system debt showing up as time debt.
## Why it happens
Meetings accumulate when the work system lacks other reliable ways to sense, decide, remember, coordinate, and repair.
Common causes include:
- decisions do not create closure
- status updates lack an async home
- priorities are unclear
- decision rights are vague
- people attend defensively because they fear missing context
- recurring meetings have outlived their purpose
- there is no trusted shared memory
- work is invisible until people talk about it again
## Design move
Do not only cancel meetings.
Ask what each meeting is compensating for:
- missing decision rule?
- weak role clarity?
- absent artefact?
- unresolved dependency?
- lack of trust?
- unclear operating rhythm?
- missing knowledge handoff?
## Field question
What would need to be true for this meeting to become unnecessary?
## Go deeper in the garden
- [[System Debt Map]]
- [[Meetings as Operating Infrastructure Map]]
- [[Flow Readiness and Cognitive Load Map]]
- [[Team Cognitive Load and Coordination Burden Map]]
- [[Decision Making as Distributed Judgement Map]]
- [[Knowledge Travel Map]]
## Improvement tip
Treat meeting reduction as system redesign, not calendar dieting.