Imagine yourself as a tour guide charged with keeping everyone in the meeting oriented and engaged. Because the temptation to multitask is so great, you need to continually generate relevance for everyone involved. That means "micro-framing" each section of the discussion and the expectations for how individuals should participate. For example:
Thanks, Sally, for the clear recap of the customer issue. Does anyone have any clarifying questions?
Okay, now let’s spend a few minutes brainstorming how best to solve it. Since each of you is a subject matter expert, I’m going to go around the line and have everyone share one idea. Extra points if you integrate your idea with one that someone else has shared.
This isn't reinventing the wheel, nor does it require any high-tech proficiency. It simply means opening the floor, then asking—or actually, requiring—everyone to contribute something before moving on. And rather than just forcing discussion for its own sake, you're setting (and resetting) expectations about why you need to discuss it in the first place. That helps move things along.
2. SEND EVERYONE VIRTUAL LINKS AND MAKE VIDEO MANDATORY
Most meetings today happen in mixed settings, where a subset of the participants are together in a room and a few are remote. This is a recipe for exclusion. The remote parties turn into vague presences on the margins—where they usually wind up staying. Instead, skip the conference room altogether and have everyone participate remotely. While this increases the temptation to multitask, it levels the playing field for participation.
Second, scrap the dial-in number you've been using all this time. Conference calls aren't the same as virtual meetings, and participating simply through audio, as a disembodied voice, rarely works well. You need to turn on video in order to maximize engagement. Make this a norm for your team—no exceptions. To do that, don't hesitate to coach to your remote team members on how to set up a home office or workspace for a good video experience (hint: lighting and camera angles are key).
3. USE ONLY TECHNOLOGY THAT ENABLES THE CONVERSATION AND DUMP WHATEVER DISRUPTS IT
Even two years ago, you could expect that at least 10 minutes of each meeting would be lost to technological mishaps—there was basically no way around it. At one company I've worked with, an IT associate still shows up at the beginning of every videoconference just to make sure the connection is working.
Hopefully those days are dwindling as virtual meeting technologies get more reliable. If your team is virtual, you owe it to them to master the tools you're using together. Skype for Business, WebEx, and GoToMeeting (just to name a few of the common platforms) all allow participants to see each other on video while sharing documents in real time.
Used well, these platforms allow for multidimensional engagement, too—not just conversation. They're best when a group is building something that they can all see taking shape digitally. For instance (and depending on the task at hand), try bringing a straw-model prototype to the table, putting it on screen, and manipulating it in real time. Whatever the case, processing both auditory and visual information simultaneously is generally much more engaging, and user-friendly tools are widely available for creating that experience.
Whatever you do, don't succumb to the illusion that an OK virtual meeting is an OK outcome. Invest the time to make it good. It’s not just your time—it’s everyone’s.
Shani Harmon cofounded Stop Meeting Like This to address the alarming misuse of time and energy in the workplace, particularly in meetings. She has spent over 10 years as an organizational effectiveness consultant to Global 500 corporations.