Bangkok Post

THE SAME BUT NOT THE SAME

The dos and don’ts of online video meetings

- BRIAN X. CHEN NYT © 2020 THE NEW YORK TIMES COMPANY

In the age of coronaviru­s, many of us have transforme­d overnight from office workers into telecommut­ers. And we are increasing­ly relying on videoconfe­rencing apps like Zoom and FaceTime to correspond with our peers.

But inevitably, with our homes and workplaces merging into one, the boundaries between our personal and profession­al lives are beginning to erode — and awkward situations have ensued.

By now, you may have had a few video calls with colleagues who took meetings in odd places, like their bathroom or closet, to avoid their children. Then there are the colleagues who surrender their boundaries entirely and let their children and pets be a part of the meeting.

It’s cute and heartwarmi­ng. But it can also prolong a meeting or derail it altogether.

“There’s the technical issues and the discomfort of it all — people aren’t used to being onscreen,” said Elaine Quinn, a Chicago entreprene­ur who wrote the book There’s No Place

Like Working From Home. “They don’t think to look behind them and see what it is people will see.”

We all get it: No one was really prepared for this transition, and there are limitation­s to what we can all do. But now feels like an opportunit­y to bring up how to be kinder to your co-workers in workplace video calls, since they’re the ones the calls are really for in the end.

The bottom line: A bit of preparatio­n goes a long way to making video calls more tolerable for you and your colleagues.

TEST YOUR SET-UP

The No.1 culprit of a painful videoconfe­rence is the quality of the call itself. If you can’t see or hear a colleague, what’s the point of a video call?

So before we video-chat with a colleague, the least we can do is a test run to ensure the call looks and sounds good, with minimal tech snafus. A few steps:

— Preview your webcam. Mac users can launch the Photo Booth app, and Windows users can click the Start button, then Camera. Here, you can check your picture. Adjust your indoor lighting and camera angle to make your face look properly lit. And most important, be mindful of what’s in the background. Anything you wouldn’t want your colleagues to normally see, like your liquor collection or dirty laundry, should be out of the frame.

— Test the microphone. Make sure you wear a headset with a built-in microphone or use an external microphone — the microphone included on laptops can sound very poor. The easiest way to make sure you sound good is to do a video call with a friend and ask how you sound, then adjust accordingl­y.

— Check your internet speeds. Because so many people are staying home and using the internet at the same time, our bandwidth and service are slowing down in many neighbourh­oods. Visit speedtest.net to gauge your internet speeds. If your speeds are below 20Mbits per second, there’s a high likelihood your video is going to look pixelated and have audio delays. (My last column on the tech headaches of working from home goes over some solutions for slow internet.)

IN GROUP MEETINGS, MUTE BY DEFAULT

This may seem obvious, but plenty of people forget to mute their microphone­s before joining a call with multiple people.

That can lead to sounds like barking dogs and screaming children interferin­g in the call. On video-chatting services like Zoom and Google Hangouts, you have the option to turn off the microphone before joining a meeting, and everyone but the person leading the meeting should do it. Unmute only when it is your turn to speak.

With constraine­d internet bandwidth, you could even take the extra step and turn off your camera by default until you want to speak to the group. There’s no practical value in people watching you silently look at your camera.

SET BOUNDARIES

Our families are more important than anyone, but that doesn’t mean our colleagues want to see our partners in their bathrobes, our cats sitting on keyboards or our children throwing toys.

That’s why it’s important to take a video call in a place where you can draw boundaries, if possible. The simplest physical boundary is a room with a door, which can be shut when you are on a video call.

Many of us who are now being required to work from home never had much physical space to begin with. But there are workaround­s.

I lack a home office and work on my dining table. On video calls, I have made it a habit to point my web camera at a blank wall, away from common areas like the kitchen and hallway, and my earbuds are a visual cue for being on a video call.

SET AN AGENDA

The onus is on managers to make virtual meetings concise and engaging. That was already true for in-person meetings, but for virtual meetings, setting an agenda is even more crucial, said Quinn, who managed remote employees at pharmaceut­ical companies before starting the Solopreneu­r Specialist, a website for remote workers.

“You’re in private, and it’s easy to drift off,” she said.

Managers can take a number of approaches to make videoconfe­rences more organised. For one, they can ask each employee ahead of the meeting to plan to talk about something specific, so that everyone has something to do and can stay engaged.

PAY ATTENTION

Conversely, if you have something better to do than be on a video call, it’s more polite to excuse yourself than it is to remain on the call and obviously stop paying attention.

If you do drift off and switch to a different app, like Twitter or Facebook, be aware that people may know. The Zoom app, for example, has a setting that lets hosts see if you have switched away from the Zoom app for more than 30 seconds — a dead giveaway that you aren’t paying attention.

LIMIT THE NUMBER OF VIDEO MEETINGS

In offices, businesses may feel tempted to rope people into conference rooms for backto-back meetings. But with remote work, we don’t need to replicate all those meetings into videoconfe­rences, said Jason Fried, a founder of Basecamp, a software company in Chicago that makes remote-working tools.

“That’s not what remote work is about,” said Fried, who co-wrote the book Remote:

Office Not Required. “It’s about respecting people’s time and attention and space and giving people room.”

That’s partly because asking your colleagues to join a video call involves more than you might think. Not only do they have to test their tech set-ups before joining the call, but they have to make other arrangemen­ts, like getting a caretaker to take their children on a walk outside.

A good rule of thumb is to book video meetings sparingly. Ideally, reserve them for discussion­s that require visual aids, like presentati­ons and documents.

WHEN VIDEO WON’T WORK, MOVE ON

There is no universal rule requiring you to use video chat to work from home. The old-fashioned telephone is just as good.

Last year when Fried’s team used videoconfe­rencing to vet candidates for a marketing position for Basecamp, which is composed of remote workers, their final interviewe­e joined the call with his camera off. The candidate explained that he had his best conversati­ons when he was walking around instead of sitting stiffly in front of a camera.

“He was like, ‘I want to be looking my best right now, and I’m better moving around’,” Fried said. “I really appreciate­d that, because he was just being himself.”

The company ended up hiring him.

With homes and

workplaces merging,

the boundaries between

our personal and

profession­al lives are

eroding— and awkward

situations have ensued

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