I've never understood why people have such trouble with having their camera on during video meetings. Is it just some people being conscious of the always true fact that everybody else in the meeting can see you zoning out of the meeting?
As far as I can tell the rule is simple: If you are not expected to speak in the meeting, your camera should be off; otherwise your camera should be on the entire meeting.
Some days I don't shower and I look like a gremlin and I just want to get work done without worrying about my appearance. I don't work in a position where appearance actually matters for anything.
Also, what is the value in having it on? I've worked places where they want your cameras on during all staff meetings with 100+ people on them. I don't actually understand the upside to having it on.
If leadership wants to have their own cameras on because they feel it conveys intent and emotion better when I can see their face... that sounds like they made a decision. Leaders often have to lead with emotion so wanting to convey emotion better might be a good choice for them. Most of the meetings I'm in are about facts. And I dont feel like I need facial expressions to express data more effectively.
Anyone who worked pre-Zoom for a large corporation with offices spanning multiple cities will remember having conference calls simply because everyone was in office, but there were 2-3 offices to connect together. And you could see people in your own office, but you couldn't see people in other offices, and not being able to see people was never an issue back then. This isn't even a new concept. It worked for DECADES just fine.
It wasn't just fine, otherwise there would be no need for business travel, and Skype's been around since 2003 so video calls have also been around for decades at this point.
No matter which turn on or off, the most important thing is visual line, I think. People naturaly eager to watch his eyes in talking a critical story, because eyes tell braveness and honest.I mean turning on is preferable if the meeting were big deal, but it is not nessesary in case of oridinary ones.
I work for two companies as a contractor. One company likes us all to have our cameras on. Because I've been there so long, I can usually have my camera off in most meetings and nobody cares, except if it's with upper-level management.
The other company is strictly no cameras. I love it. I don't think I've had one meeting where anyone had their cameras on.
I've never understood why people have such trouble with having their camera on during video meetings. Is it just some people being conscious of the always true fact that everybody else in the meeting can see you zoning out of the meeting?
As far as I can tell the rule is simple: If you are not expected to speak in the meeting, your camera should be off; otherwise your camera should be on the entire meeting.
Some days I don't shower and I look like a gremlin and I just want to get work done without worrying about my appearance. I don't work in a position where appearance actually matters for anything.
Also, what is the value in having it on? I've worked places where they want your cameras on during all staff meetings with 100+ people on them. I don't actually understand the upside to having it on.
If leadership wants to have their own cameras on because they feel it conveys intent and emotion better when I can see their face... that sounds like they made a decision. Leaders often have to lead with emotion so wanting to convey emotion better might be a good choice for them. Most of the meetings I'm in are about facts. And I dont feel like I need facial expressions to express data more effectively.
Anyone who worked pre-Zoom for a large corporation with offices spanning multiple cities will remember having conference calls simply because everyone was in office, but there were 2-3 offices to connect together. And you could see people in your own office, but you couldn't see people in other offices, and not being able to see people was never an issue back then. This isn't even a new concept. It worked for DECADES just fine.
It wasn't just fine, otherwise there would be no need for business travel, and Skype's been around since 2003 so video calls have also been around for decades at this point.
I prefer to keep video off and I think everyone should do whatever please them. If I’m taking notes, I’m not watching others videos at all.
No matter which turn on or off, the most important thing is visual line, I think. People naturaly eager to watch his eyes in talking a critical story, because eyes tell braveness and honest.I mean turning on is preferable if the meeting were big deal, but it is not nessesary in case of oridinary ones.
I work for two companies as a contractor. One company likes us all to have our cameras on. Because I've been there so long, I can usually have my camera off in most meetings and nobody cares, except if it's with upper-level management.
The other company is strictly no cameras. I love it. I don't think I've had one meeting where anyone had their cameras on.
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