Interactive Virtual Meetings

Explore top LinkedIn content from expert professionals.

Summary

Interactive virtual meetings are online gatherings where participants actively contribute, share ideas, and interact using digital tools, making remote collaboration more engaging and productive. By intentionally designing these meetings for real participation, teams can create spaces that are energizing, inclusive, and lead to better outcomes.

  • Create engaging openings: Start each meeting with a quick poll or focused check-in question to help everyone feel involved right from the start.
  • Facilitate real interaction: Use features like breakout rooms, live chats, and polls throughout the session to encourage participation from everyone, not just the most vocal.
  • Prioritize accessibility: Make meetings welcoming by enabling captions, supporting different communication styles, and inviting participants to share any needs they have for full participation.
Summarized by AI based on LinkedIn member posts
  • View profile for Matthijs Welle

    CEO @ Mews

    47,157 followers

    While I usually rave about being remote-first, the one thing we still struggle with are departmental meetings. When you have more than 50 people on a call, it often turns into a very one sided PowerPoint exercise and rather than being a value-add, it becomes a value-drain. This week I casually dropped into our People Team meeting, because I was surprised to see they blocked not just 1 hour, but 1,5 hours with 50+ people online. Of course, I should not have worried. 😃 It was incredible to see how teams at Mews have learned in the last 3 years to move away from soul-sucking-PowerPoint, to leveraging digital tools to keep a highly engaged audience, adding real value. What did they do in this specific meeting? 1️⃣ The meeting is run by the department Chief of Staff, and she spends several hours preparing for the meeting. Better to have 1 person spend several hours, than 50 people waste 1,5 hour each. 2️⃣ The call kicked off with a poll, asking people how they are feeling, getting a sense of the temperature in the room and how people are showing up. 3️⃣ New team members have to then intro themselves through 2 truths and 1 lie, and then we use a poll to get everyone to vote. A really small thing, but by using polls you ensure people stay fully engaged. 4️⃣ To engage the team on key KPI’s and achievements, we leveraged the chat. Here a number was shown and everyone had to guess/comment what business metric it represented. Another way to get everyone thinking about the metrics that matter most. 5️⃣ Then the group broke out into virtual breakout rooms, each group getting a different assignment, discussing things we got wrong or right in the past month. The small groups ensure we hear everyone’s input and voice. 6️⃣ Throughout all, the chat was where the real fun happened. The team was highly engaged and celebrating each other’s success. we really used digital tools to the max for all elements. 7️⃣ The Chief People Officer trusted her team to run the meeting, because she expects her team leaders to have their own voice and vision. She reserved 5 minutes at the end where she shared her insights and some inspiration. True leaders, really do eat last. Getting remote-first right is really hard work, but we are seriously committed to learning and constantly changing when things don’t work for us. Thank you Naomi Trickey for allowing me to creep into your team meeting this week. 😂 🥰

  • View profile for Nancy Duarte
    Nancy Duarte Nancy Duarte is an Influencer
    222,037 followers

    Regardless of how great your ideas are in your virtual sales pitch, webinar, or team meeting… People are most likely checking their email, browsing social media, or working on other things while you present. How can you prevent that and actually get your audience to pay attention? Here are 4 of the most powerful techniques we use for our own virtual training courses: 1. Win the first five seconds According to research from the University of Toronto, people need only five seconds to gauge your charisma and leadership as a speaker. In virtual environments, this first impression is even more critical. To establish instant rapport: - Keep your posture open and inviting (avoid fidgeting, crossed arms, and closed-off postures) - Use open gestures that welcome the audience into your space - Gesture with your palms showing at a 45-degree angle - Speak with clear articulation and energy from the very first word The quickest way to lose your audience? Starting with tentative body language that signals you’re unsure or unprepared. 2. Design your presentation for virtual viewing When designing slides, assume varied viewing conditions. Design for the smallest likely device and the slowest likely Internet speed. Make your slides accessible by: - Using larger fonts (24-32pt) - Applying higher contrast colors - Limiting each slide to ONE clear idea - Adding more space between lines when using smaller text - Stripping excess content (you can provide additional information in a separate document) 3. Vary your delivery Our research shows the optimal length for linear presentations is just 16-30 minutes, while interactive ones can maintain engagement for 30-45 minutes. People’s attention will go through peaks and valleys during that time, so try these techniques to keep their attention: - Vary your speaking pace (faster to convey urgency, slower to express gravity) - Use intentional pauses to let key points land - Adjust your vocal tone (lower pitch for authority, higher for approachability) - Shift between slides, stories, and data at regular intervals Each change helps reset your audience’s attention and signals importance. 4. Build in structured interaction Don’t make your audience wait until the end of your presentation to interact. According to our research, presentations that incorporate audience engagement through polls, chat responses, or breakout discussions maintain attention longer. For the highest engagement: - Use a variety of interaction types throughout your presentation - Incorporate breakout rooms for small-group discussions - Switch modalities regularly to keep it interesting Remember: In virtual environments, you need to recreate the natural engagement that happens in person. Your virtual presentation success isn’t measured by perfection…it’s measured by action. Master these techniques and your audience won’t just pay attention, they’ll respond. #VirtualPresentations #CorporateTraining #WorkplaceLearning

  • View profile for Deborah Riegel

    Wharton, Columbia, and Duke faculty; Harvard Business Review columnist; Speaker, facilitator, coach; bestselling author, “Aim High and Bounce Back: A Successful Woman’s Guide to Rethinking and Rising Up from Failure”

    40,981 followers

    Ever notice how some leaders seem to have a sixth sense for meeting dynamics while others plow through their agenda oblivious to glazed eyes, side conversations, or everyone needing several "bio breaks" over the course of an hour? Research tells us executives consider 67% of virtual meetings failures, and a staggering 92% of employees admit to multitasking during meetings. After facilitating hundreds of in-person, virtual, and hybrid sessions, I've developed my "6 E's Framework" to transform the abstract concept of "reading the room" into concrete skills anyone can master. (This is exactly what I teach leaders and teams who want to dramatically improve their meeting and presentation effectiveness.) Here's what to look for and what to do: 1. Eye Contact: Notice where people are looking (or not looking). Are they making eye contact with you or staring at their devices? Position yourself strategically, be inclusive with your gaze, and respectfully acknowledge what you observe: "I notice several people checking watches, so I'll pick up the pace." 2. Energy: Feel the vibe - is it friendly, tense, distracted? Conduct quick energy check-ins ("On a scale of 1-10, what's your energy right now?"), pivot to more engaging topics when needed, and don't hesitate to amplify your own energy through voice modulation and expressive gestures. 3. Expectations: Regularly check if you're delivering what people expected. Start with clear objectives, check in throughout ("Am I addressing what you hoped we'd cover?"), and make progress visible by acknowledging completed agenda items. 4. Extraneous Activities: What are people doing besides paying attention? Get curious about side conversations without defensiveness: "I see some of you discussing something - I'd love to address those thoughts." Break up presentations with interactive elements like polls or small group discussions. 5. Explicit Feedback: Listen when someone directly tells you "we're confused" or "this is exactly what we needed." Remember, one vocal participant often represents others' unspoken feelings. Thank people for honest feedback and actively solicit input from quieter participants. 6. Engagement: Monitor who's participating and how. Create varied opportunities for people to engage with you, the content, and each other. Proactively invite (but don't force) participation from those less likely to speak up. I've shared my complete framework in the article in the comments below. In my coaching and workshops with executives and teams worldwide, I've seen these skills transform even the most dysfunctional meeting cultures -- and I'd be thrilled to help your company's speakers and meeting leaders, too. What meeting dynamics challenge do you find most difficult to navigate? I'd love to hear your experiences in the comments! #presentationskills #virualmeetings #engagement

  • View profile for Jen Bokoff

    Connector. Agitator. Idea Mover. Strategist.

    7,987 followers

    I’ve been thinking a lot about the 90 minute virtual meeting paradox. We spend the first 30 minutes on welcoming everyone and introductions, the next 15 on framing, and then a few people share thoughts. Then, just when the conversation gets meaningful, the host abruptly announces "We're out of time!” and throws a few rushed closing thoughts and announcements together. Sound familiar? We crave deep, meaningful, trust-based exchanges in virtual meeting environments that feel both tiring and rushed. It seems like as soon as momentum builds and insights emerge, it’s time to wrap up. Share-outs become a regurgitation of top-level ideas—usually focused on the most soundbite-ready insights and omitting those seeds of ideas that didn’t have time to be explored further. And sometimes, we even cite these meetings as examples of participation in a process, even when that participation is only surface level to check the participation box.  After facilitating and attending hundreds (thousands?) of virtual meetings, I've found four practices that create space for more engagement and depth: 1. Send a thoughtful and focused pre-work prompt at least a few days ahead of time that invites reflection before gathering. When participants arrive having already engaged with the core question(s), it’s much easier to jump right into conversation. Consider who designs these prompts and whose perspectives they center. 2. Replace round-robin introductions with a focused check-in question that directly connects to the meeting's purpose. "What's one tension you're navigating in this work?" for example yields more insight than sharing organizational affiliations. Be mindful of who speaks first and how difference cultural communication styles may influence participation.  3. Structure the agenda with intentionally expanding time blocks—start tight (and facilitate accordingly), and then create more spaciousness as the meeting progresses. This honors the natural rhythm of how trust and dialogue develop, and allows for varying approaches to processing and sharing.  4. Prioritize accessibility and inclusion in every aspect of the meeting. Anticipating and designing for participants needs means you’re thinking about language justice, technology and materials accessibility, neurodivergence, power dynamics, and content framing. Asking “What do you need to fully participate in this meeting?” ahead of time invites participants to share their needs. These meeting suggestions aren’t just about efficiency—they’re about creating spaces where authentic relationships and useful conversations can actually develop. Especially at times when people are exhausted and working hard to manage their own energy, a well-designed meeting can be a welcome space to engage. I’m curious to hear from others: What's your most effective strategy for holding substantive meetings in time-constrained virtual spaces? What meeting structures have you seen that actually work?

  • View profile for Cindy Huggett, CPTD

    Virtual, AI & Hybrid Learning Architect for Fortune 500s | 6x Published Author

    7,540 followers

    Over the last few weeks, I've facilitated dozens of virtual classes in Microsoft Teams. While I still prefer the user-friendliness of Zoom, the reliability of WebEx, and the custom layouts found in Adobe Connect, here are three specific things I've been doing to make Teams a more engaging virtual learning environment: 📽️ Themes! By enabling the meeting themes option in my Teams account, I customize the pre-join screen (see below for an example) to help participants get ready to learn. 🧭 Meeting Options! By adjusting the default roles in the Teams meeting options, I ensure that all participants join as ''attendees" and my producer joins as the "co-organizer." These settings make the learning experience run smoothly for everyone. 🤝 Breakout Rooms! By quickly moving participants into very small groups (pairs or trios) near the start of the session, they form social bonds that enhance engagement. I'll give them 5 or 6 minutes to briefly share their response to a topic-related question... just enough time to start building a connection that will continue throughout the session. Logistically, I've been using Teams' chat to share JPG files to each room with activity instructions. How about you?? What Teams-specific tips have you discovered to create engaging virtual learning programs? #virtualfacilitation #virtuallearning #msteams #onlinelearning #engagement

  • View profile for Kerri Sutey

    Executive Coach & Facilitator | Turning Complexity into Clarity for Leaders & Organizations | Author | Ex-Google

    7,753 followers

    Last quarter I ran a hybrid workshop where our co-located team dominated the conversation and our remote colleagues went radio-silent. I realized my setup and approach (camera pointing in the room, no set meeting protocols) were effectively muting half the group. Studies show that without explicit turn-taking structures, remote participants speak up 30% less than in-room attendees. When you find yourself facilitating a hybrid meeting (of any length), consider these tips: ✅ Dual Facilitator Pairing: One in-room, one online. Each person watching for hand-raises and chat cues. ✅ Virtual First Round-Robin: Start each topic by asking a remote attendee for input first. ✅ Shared Digital Whiteboard: Everyone posts ideas in real time, no physical flipcharts. Give the virtual group the first chance to speak before going to the room. You’ll be surprised how quickly the energy shifts. What’s your hybrid meeting hack? Drop it below! 👇 #Facilitation #HybridWork #InclusiveMeetings #VirtualCollaboration #MeetingTips Sutey Coaching & Consulting ---------- 🎯 Want to elevate your hybrid meetings? Let's chat: https://lnkd.in/gGJjcffw

Explore categories