The toolkit · Meeting timer

Meeting timer for standups and workshops.

A countdown timer for standups, workshops, lightning talks, and icebreakers. Presets, fullscreen, round-robin speaker mode.

02:00

Duration per timebox

Space play/pause · R resetF fullscreen

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How to run a short, respectful standup

A standup is a daily habit, not a status meeting. The whole point is to sync quickly so the team can get back to work. When standups drift past fifteen minutes, they stop paying for themselves.

The fastest way to fix a sprawling standup is to put a visible timer on the screen. A clock that everyone can see shifts the pressure from the facilitator (“we need to keep moving”) onto a neutral object. Nobody feels cut off by a ding.

Ninety seconds or two minutes per person?

Two minutes is the sweet spot for most teams. Under ninety seconds people either rush or stop bothering. Over three minutes and the standup stops being standing. If you have more than eight people, split into smaller squads rather than racing the clock.

Why shuffle the order?

When the order is fixed, the first person gets more time to prepare and the last person gets less attention. Shuffling every day evens out the energy and makes sure the quieter people at the end of the alphabet are not always going last.

Does the ding still count if someone is still talking?

The ding is a nudge, not a hard stop. Let people finish their sentence. If the same person is going over by a minute every day, the issue is not the timer. It's the shape of the conversation, and that belongs in a 1:1, not the standup.

What if we're remote?

The timer goes into fullscreen on whoever is sharing their screen. A big shared clock works better than individual timers because the whole team sees the same signal. Pair it with the round-robin mode so everyone knows who's next without anyone having to chair.

Beyond standups

The same round-robin mode fits workshop timeboxes, lightning talks, conference Q&A, icebreaker rounds, classroom presentations, and demo days. Anywhere a group takes turns speaking in fixed slots, the shared timer is the piece that saves everyone from the uncomfortable job of cutting people off.

How long should a standup be?+

A team of five to eight should finish in 10 to 15 minutes total, about two minutes per person. Over 20 minutes and you're running a status meeting, not a standup.

How long should an icebreaker question run?+

Thirty seconds to two minutes per person is the sweet spot. Long enough for a real answer, short enough that nobody dreads being called on.

Does the timer make a sound when it ends?+

Yes. A soft two-note ding plays at zero, with a short warning beep in the last five seconds. You can mute it from the toolbar.

Will it keep running if I switch tabs?+

Yes. The timer is driven off a real timestamp rather than a tick counter, so it stays accurate if the browser throttles the tab.