Zoom is still a solid option
So let鈥檚 say you have three or four people in the office at the same time, and three or four folks working remotely. Your best option is to put all the in-person folks in your conference room and have everyone else call-in on Zoom, right? Silverman says not necessarily. While that format can totally work (more on how to pull that off below), it鈥檚 perfectly OK to still conduct staff meetings entirely on Zoom. When you鈥檙e deciding on a meeting format, Silverman says the question you should start with isn鈥檛 how to have a great hybrid meeting; it鈥檚, what are you trying to accomplish? 鈥淎re you trying to prioritize the face-to-face connection of people in the room, or are you trying to prioritize the overall functioning of your team?鈥 she says. 鈥淚f you鈥檙e about half remote and half in-person, the best approach may be simply to continue meeting on Zoom, especially if that was working well for you before.鈥 One advantage of this approach is that it sidesteps many of the common challenges of hybrid meetings, like figuring out additional technology or ensuring the remote staff feel like they鈥檙e on an equal footing. Having in-office staff Zoom in from their individual offices might initially seem weird, but probably only as strange as Zoom itself felt at first. Plus, Silverman says you can easily build in a little social time for the in-office members of your team before or after the meeting 鈥 if they鈥檙e not finding ways to get that already.
Tech options, from no-budget solutions to plug-and-play videoconferencing
If you鈥檇 like to try a hybrid format, you鈥檙e probably wondering if you need to invest in additional technology. For small- or medium-sized teams, Silverman says Zoom is still a great foundation to build your hybrid meeting on, and you don鈥檛 necessarily have to add any hardware to try it out. An easy base setup: Try positioning a laptop at the front of the room where your in-person folks are meeting, using it both for audio and to display everyone who is calling in remotely. If your laptop speakers aren鈥檛 loud enough, try adding an external speaker. Another good-to-know: Laptop cameras typically just capture what鈥檚 right in front of them. So to avoid very intimately huddling all around the laptop, you can add a wide-angle USB camera for about $100 if you want your remote folks to be able to see everyone who鈥檚 in the room. With that simple setup, everyone has the ability to see and hear each other, which Silverman says are the absolute base requirements for a hybrid meeting.
If you鈥檙e looking for a more dedicated in-room setup, Silverman says take a look at technologies like the . This is basically an intelligent soundbar with a wide-angle camera that automatically tracks with the person who鈥檚 speaking, much like Zoom puts the spotlight on the person who has the floor. Plus, it integrates with Zoom and large video displays you may already have in your conference room, so it鈥檚 about as close to a plug-and-play professional setup as you鈥檙e going to find. At around $3,000, it鈥檚 probably a better fit for dedicated meeting room spaces that get lots of traffic. Of course, if you plan on purchasing technology, or have any questions, it's always a great idea to reach out to ITS.
Don鈥檛 forget the skills (and manners) you used for remote meetings
One of the first things you probably noticed about Zoom meetings is that they can get very messy if several people start talking at the same time. Hybrid meetings offer the same potential for a chaotic audio experience, so Silverman says people, particularly the ones meeting together in-person, will still have to use their Zoom manners. That includes things like making sure only one person is talking at a time, maintaining a constant volume, not assuming people can hear your side banter, and being prepared to mute when necessary.
The in-office folks meeting together also might find it useful to bring their laptops and login to Zoom with their audio and video turned off. This 鈥渋n-room virtual meeting鈥 format means everyone can still take advantage of features like the chat or live transcript. Similarly, Silverman says you might stick with a Google doc that everyone has access to for brainstorming and notetaking, rather than trying to train a camera on a physical whiteboard in the conference room.
Whichever options you choose, Silverman says it鈥檚 best to patiently give it a go, and know that there will likely be some wrinkles to iron out in your first few attempts. And if you find some version of a hybrid meeting is just not working for your team, Silverman says there鈥檚 no shame in falling back on Zoom.
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Sarah Silverman is an instructional designer with The Hub for Teaching and Learning Resources. If you鈥檙e a member of the media and would like to interview Silverman about this topic, give us a shout at [email protected] and we鈥檒l put you in touch.