The problem
Why most OneNote meeting templates fail
Most OneNote meeting templates fail for the same reason most note templates fail: they ask the user to do too much during the meeting. A template with twelve sections, four sub-sections, a tag scheme, and a colour code is a template that gets ignored by the third meeting. The note-taker is trying to listen, contribute, and write at the same time; the template is asking them to do all three plus formatting. Friction wins.
The template that survives has six sections, fixed order, no decoration. Date and attendees auto-populate; agenda comes from the calendar invite; discussion is free-form prose; decisions are bullets; action items are a checkbox list with owner and due date; next-meeting block carries forward. Anything more than that and the template loses to a blank page.
The build
The six-section OneNote meeting template, step by step
Section 1: meeting metadata
Date, time, location or link, attendees (named, not generic). Set this as the page title block and lock the format. OneNote will auto-fill the date if you set the title to {Meeting Name} – {Date}; everything else is manual or pasted from the calendar invite.
Section 2: agenda
Three to five items maximum. Copy from the calendar invite if there is one. If there is no agenda in the invite, ask the organiser to send one. A meeting without an agenda is a status update; do not use a meeting template for status updates.
Section 3: discussion notes
Free-form. No bullets, no tags during the meeting. Write in prose because prose is faster than formatting, and the goal during the meeting is to capture, not to structure. Structuring is what step 5 is for.
Section 4: decisions
Bullet list. Each bullet starts with the verb (Approved, Rejected, Deferred, Investigating). One line per decision. This is the section future readers will reach for first when they need to know what the meeting actually concluded.
Section 5: action items (with the rule)
Checkbox list. Each item has owner, action, and due date. The rule: an action item without an owner is not an action item. An action item without a date is not an action item. Either fill in both during the meeting or the line gets cut. This is the rule that makes the template work.
Section 6: parking lot and next meeting
Topics raised but not resolved go to parking lot. Next-meeting block carries forward the unresolved items, links the next meeting’s OneNote page once scheduled, and notes any pre-reading the attendees need to do. Two minutes of cleanup at the end of every meeting beats two hours of reconstruction the week after.
Saving as a template
How to save it as a real OneNote template
OneNote has built-in page-template support that most users do not use because it is buried. The path is Insert tab, Page Templates, then at the bottom of the templates pane click “Save current page as a template.” Give the template a name like “Meeting (standard).” From that point forward, every new meeting page can be created from the template via Insert / Page Templates / My Templates.
The classic OneNote 2016 desktop client has full template support; the OneNote for Windows 10 app has limited support; OneNote on the web has no template support. If your organisation runs the modern OneNote app, the workaround is to save a “template page” in the section as the first page, and duplicate it (right-click, Move or Copy, This Section) for each new meeting. Less elegant, same effect.
An action item without an owner is not an action item. An action item without a date is not an action item.From the build section
Variants
Three variants for different meeting types
- Weekly team meeting
- Six-section template as written. Action-items section is the load-bearing one. Carry-forward block essential.
- One-on-one
- Drop section 4 (Decisions); replace with “Reflection and feedback.” Keep action items but expect fewer per meeting.
- Project status review
- Add a section before Decisions for project metrics (RAG status, deadline drift, blockers). Keep the rest.
- Client meeting
- Add a section for follow-up commitments to the client (separate from internal action items). Tag the client name in the section title.
- Vendor meeting
- Add a section for cost and contract changes discussed. Keep dates and amounts in the section so the line is findable later.
- Stand-up
- Skip the template. Stand-ups should be too short to need notes. If your stand-up runs long enough to need notes, the stand-up is broken.
For teams that run more than one meeting type per week, save each variant as a separate template. OneNote will list all your saved templates in the My Templates pane. The variants share six sections in common and differ in one or two; the consistency across meeting types is part of what makes the team’s notes findable across the year.
If you keep a OneNote dashboard for project tracking, the meeting template should link to the relevant project dashboard at the top of every meeting page. We covered the dashboard structure in a companion OneNote project dashboard piece; the meeting template and dashboard work together.
FAQ
Common questions, answered briefly
How do I save a OneNote meeting template?
What sections should a OneNote meeting template have?
Can OneNote for the web use page templates?
What is the action-item rule?
How do I handle multiple meeting types?
If yours isnt above, drop the question in the comments and well answer it under the next OneNote piece.
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