“Hey, I’ll give you ten minutes back.”
I’ve said it. You’ve heard it. It gets delivered in the tone of a man handing over a wrapped present, and for a second the room actually warms up, because ending early is the closest thing corporate life has to snow day.
But look at the grammar. Give it back. To give something back, it had to be yours. The hour was never mine. I borrowed it, from you, from everyone on the invite, and now I’m returning a fraction of the loan and waiting for applause. No bank teller has ever handed you part of your own deposit and called it a gift.
And even calling it a return is generous, because of what the minutes come back as. Ten minutes in the middle of a stacked afternoon is change in pennies. Technically money. Try buying anything with it.
You know this because you’ve watched what happens next. The meeting ends twelve minutes early. Nobody stands up. The little squares hang there for a beat, then go black one by one, and every single person slides the same six inches to the left, into Slack. The inbox eats the gift whole. Nobody stretches. Nobody steps outside. Nobody walks the dog. The dog, who heard the blip sound of a meeting ending and had opinions about it, goes back to sleep.
I spent years behind a bar, and here’s what the bar taught me about gifts: a comped beer costs the house something. That’s the whole reason it means something. Generosity has a receipt. When I end your meeting early, I spend nothing. My calendar didn’t get lighter, yours didn’t get freer, and the phrase cost me four words. Any gift that costs the giver nothing is not a gift. It’s positioning.
Companies run this same play on customers all day. “We’re giving back to you” usually means points, and points usually mean handcuffs with a bow on them. Customers can smell generosity that doesn’t cost anything, the same way your team can. The smell is identical.
There is a version of this I’d respect. It’s heavier. End the meeting early and then ask, out loud, “What will you do with your twelve minutes?” Make everyone say it. Watch how fast the room gets uncomfortable, because the honest answer is Slack, and now everyone has to hear themselves say Slack.
I haven’t done it yet. I’m not sure I want to be asked, either. Customers probably don’t either. Probably time to rewrite our value statements.
Stay Positive & Let’s Walk The Dog Next Time, Shall We?
