Are you losing hours each week setting up video calls?

  1. Home
  2. BLOG
  3. Are you losing hours each week setting up video calls?

Video Calls

Thanks to the hassle of setting up video calls, you could lose a full-time working week for every team member.

Video conferencing has revolutionized team meetings, saving a lot of travel time. But we’re still not getting the full benefit from the new technology, according to new research.

Employees aged between 18 and 24 take up to 10 minutes to get set up for each remote meeting.

Times that by a typical five meetings a week, and it’s suddenly lost you 40 hours every year. That’s a whole working week of wasted time – a figure that gets even higher when you look at older age brackets.

It isn’t necessarily a result of differing technological know-how. Instead, the research shows that employees blame the tech for the loss of productivity.

Almost a third of people said they didn’t have the right tools for the job, and 23% even said they felt excluded from remote meetings thanks to inadequate tech.

Employees often feel that the audio-visual (AV) technology they’re provided for remote and hybrid working isn’t up to the job. That means poor microphones that don’t play ball, jittery webcams that interfere with communication, or the wrong choice of video calling software. All that makes meetings harder to set up and causes them to take longer than they should.

Despite this, businesses that offer remote and hybrid working are reaping the rewards in many other areas, including staff engagement and performance.

But there is a solution.

Assess your employees’ AV technology to ensure their tools are not slowing them down – new webcams and microphones could be a cheap and straightforward fix.

It’s also a good idea to ask your employees to find out where they see that problems are occurring. For example, you should consider alternative options or better training if they find your existing system challenging or slow to log in.

If this is slowing you down, we can help –get in touch.

Published with permission from Your Tech Updates.

Menu