Hybrid meetings have become standard for a lot of businesses. Some people are in the room, some are home or remote, maybe one lucky participant is blurring waves crashing in the background. Unfortunately, the result is often a frustrating experience for at least one of those groups.
Remote participants can't hear side conversations happening off-mic in the conference room, one of them keeps dropping connection at the worst moment, or the presenter can't tell whether everyone is following along or have quietly wandered off.
Most of these are not technology problems, the tools are well establish at this point, but what's usually not working is users habits. Thankfully, that's an easy fix!
When half your team is in a conference room and the other half is on a screen, you're really running two loosely connected experiences at the same time.
The in-room group has body language, whiteboard access, easy eye contact with the presenter, and the ability to have a quick side conversation with the person next to them. Remote participants have a video feed, the chat window, and limited visibility into what's actually happening in the room.
Good hybrid meeting etiquette is really about closing that gap.
Companies that do hybrid well treat remote participants as full participants - not an audience watching the real meeting happen somewhere else. That shift is mostly cultural, technology just makes it easier!
For people in the room:
For remote participants:
For the facilitator:
Camera-on improves engagement and helps in-room participants feel like remote attendees are actually present. But requiring cameras at all times can feel intrusive, especially during long meetings or for people working in shared home spaces.
A reasonable middle ground: cameras on for discussion-heavy meetings, optional for longer information-sharing sessions. Setting that expectation in the invite lets people plan accordingly.
Remote attendees are more likely to feel out of the loop if action items are not clearly documented. A short follow-up covering what was decided, who owns what, and what happens next is usually all it takes. Even a few bullet points in a shared channel is enough.
It also helps in-room participants who may have been half-following while managing the room.
Good habits can't fully cover for bad hardware. A conference room microphone that only picks up people sitting directly in front of it will undermine every other effort you make.
If a conference room is seeing regular hybrid use, it's worth looking at:
Most hybrid meeting frustration comes from inconsistency. Some meetings run well, others are a mess, and nobody can predict which it will be.
Agreeing on a shared set of norms removes a lot of that uncertainty and building good meeting habits makes their success easily repeatable!