How-To Guide

How to Run an Effective OAC Meeting

Best practices for productive Owner-Architect-Contractor meetings

What is an OAC Meeting?

OAC (Owner-Architect-Contractor) meetings are regular coordination meetings between the three primary parties on a construction project. They're typically held weekly during construction and are essential for resolving issues, tracking progress, and maintaining communication. Much of the meeting time is spent reviewing open RFIs and change orders.

Typical Attendees
Owner
  • • Project Manager
  • • Owner's Rep
  • • Facility Rep
Architect
  • • Project Architect
  • • Project Manager
  • • Consultants (as needed)
Contractor
  • • Project Manager
  • • Superintendent
  • • Project Engineer

Standard OAC Meeting Agenda

1
Safety
5 min

Review any safety incidents, near-misses, or concerns

2
Previous Minutes
5 min

Review and approve previous meeting minutes

3
Schedule Update
10 min

Current progress vs. schedule, upcoming milestones, delays

4
Budget/Cost
10 min

Pay applications, pending change orders, budget status

5
RFIs & Submittals
15 min

Review open items, aging items, bottlenecks

6
Quality Issues
10 min

Non-conforming work, inspection results, punch items

7
Coordination
10 min

Trade coordination, upcoming work interfaces

8
Owner Decisions
10 min

Pending owner decisions needed, upcoming selections

9
New Business
5 min

Items not on agenda, next meeting confirmation

Before the Meeting

Distribute Agenda (24-48 hours prior)

Send agenda with updated RFI/submittal logs, schedule, and any pre-meeting action items.

Update Logs

RFI log, submittal log, change order log, and action item list should be current.

Confirm Attendees

Verify key decision-makers will attend, especially if critical items are on the agenda.

During the Meeting

  • Start on time — Respect everyone's schedule
  • Stick to the agenda — Park tangents for "new business" or offline
  • Document action items — WHO will do WHAT by WHEN
  • Make decisions — The goal is resolution, not discussion
  • End on time — If needed, schedule follow-up for deep-dive topics
Pro Tip

If a topic needs more than 5 minutes of discussion, take it offline. "Let's schedule a separate meeting for that" keeps the OAC on track.

Meeting Minutes Best Practices

Do
  • • Distribute within 24-48 hours
  • • Use clear action items with owners and dates
  • • Track open items meeting-to-meeting
  • • Note decisions and who made them
  • • Include attendance list
Don't
  • • Write a transcript—summarize
  • • Leave action items vague
  • • Skip the approval process
  • • Forget to close out completed items
  • • Wait too long to distribute

Common OAC Meeting Problems

Meetings run long

Solution: Use time boxes for each agenda item. Visibly track time.

Same issues discussed repeatedly

Solution: Improve action item tracking. Escalate if items aren't being closed.

Key people don't attend

Solution: Make attendance a contract requirement. Communicate consequences.

No decisions get made

Solution: Ensure decision-makers attend. Set decision deadlines.

Related Resources

Reduce RFI Discussion Time

A significant portion of OAC meetings is spent reviewing RFIs and submittals. Articulate can help reduce the volume by catching issues during preconstruction—before they become RFIs.

Start Preventing RFIs