How Microsoft is rethinking the hybrid meeting room experience with Microsoft Teams

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Meeting room with a table curving around and facing a wall display where virtual attendees and meeting content are shown together.
Reorienting our meeting rooms around a wall display with better AV gives our remote meeting attendees a more inclusive and collaborative experience while making it easier for people in the room to communicate with everyone in the meeting.

Microsoft Digital stories

New Microsoft Teams-powered hybrid meeting room technology is helping us design new experiences for our employees and vendors here at Microsoft and helping customers understand how to achieve these experiences for themselves.

“We want to create an environment that is halfway between the physical and virtual,” says Matt Hempey, a principal program manager with Microsoft Digital Employee Experience, the organization that powers, protects, and transforms the company. “These rooms represent the kind of hybrid experiences that we can deploy at scale around the world.”

We’ve had to look at what technologies we can use to make our remote employees feel more included in a meeting, and vice versa. We had to help the people who are physically present feel more connected to people who are remote.

—Scott Weiskopf, director of the Center of Innovation, Global Workplace Services

By adjusting the AV and swapping out furniture, we have created a more inclusive and collaborative Microsoft Teams meeting experience that is optimized to interact with remote attendees and that is better for both our in-person and remote attendees. We’ve begun selectively deploying this experience in our medium-sized conference rooms.

“We’ve had to look at what technologies we can use to make our remote employees feel more included in a meeting, and vice versa,” says Scott Weiskopf, director of the Center of Innovation for Global Workplace Services. “We had to help the people who are physically present feel more connected to people who are remote.”

[Discover how Microsoft is reinventing the employee experience for a hybrid world. Find out how to advance meetings with the Microsoft Teams Meeting Guide. Unpack five ways Microsoft Teams has transformed Microsoft. Explore powering hybrid work at Microsoft: A conversation with Andrew Wilson and Nathalie D’Hers.]

For a transcript, please view the video on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FQwFvg-kRv4, select the “More actions” button (three dots icon) below the video, and then select “Show transcript.”

See how we’re transforming the Microsoft Teams-powered hybrid meeting room experience by peeking into our new medium-size and small meeting rooms at The Hive, our laboratory where we build and test new meeting experiences at our headquarters campus in Redmond, Washington.

Looking at meeting rooms from a new angle

In the past, those calling into a meeting room may have felt ignored or less engaged with the conversation. The onset of the COVID-19 pandemic—where everyone needed to join remotely—leveled the field a bit, creating new expectations for what meetings should be like for virtual attendees. Now that many of our employees are back at the office for part of the time, there’s a need to reimagine the workplace.

We dedicated this space to really rethink how the meeting room should be redesigned to optimize for hybrid. We cleared out all the tables and all the tech and just started with a blank slate.

—Matt Hempey, principal program manager, Microsoft Digital Employee Experience

Hempey, Weiskopf, and team have been transforming the company’s meeting room experience at The Hive, our experimental workshop where teams from across the company build and validate new physical and virtual experiences and technology.

“We dedicated this space to really rethink how the meeting room should be redesigned to optimize for hybrid,” Hempey says. “We cleared out all the tables and all the tech and just started with a blank slate.”

It was all about being creative within the meeting room space.

Microsoft employees attend a meeting at a curved table that faces a large wall display showing virtual attendees and meeting content.
Microsoft employees meet using a new hybrid meeting room experience that allows for equal attention to be paid to those attending virtually with those in the room.

“We had to rethink things from the ground up,” says Sam Albert, a principal program manager on Hempey’s team and whose specialty is reimagining how meeting rooms can be built, often with a circular cutting saw in hand.

“The first thing we did was to rotate the room,” Albert says, explaining how seating configurations work to optimize the new front row layout in Microsoft Teams Rooms. “That allowed us to have the people in the room look at each other, but importantly, also look at the people who were calling in.”

This is done by re-orienting attention from the center of the room towards the display and camera. “This allows us to approximate face-to-face interaction,” Albert says. “Our front row alignment is a core part of our hybrid meeting room experience.”

But in order to implement this vision—whether it be to deploy a new meeting room optimized for a hybrid experience or to work with a traditional meeting room with a table at its center—new equipment and standards had to be developed.

We started off with a very large and complex assembly. What we did is to take the projectors off the ceiling, the speakers off the walls, and we eliminated all those wiring runs. Then we invented a stand to hold everything together at the front of the room.

—Sam Albert, principal program manager, Microsoft Digital Employee Experience

Gearing up for a new meeting room experience

Portable meeting room AV kit with a screen projector stacked on top of an AV unit.
Taking meeting room AV equipment off the wall and ceiling and bundling it into a kit that can easily be moved in and out of a room has made it easier to deploy our new Microsoft Teams-powered hybrid meeting experience to our conference rooms.

Changing the guts of a meeting room—all the AV equipment and wiring—has always been challenging.

“We started off with a very large and complex assembly,” Albert says. “What we did is to take the projectors off the ceiling, the speakers off the walls, and we eliminated all those wiring runs. Then we invented a stand to hold everything together at the front of the room.”

After a few iterations, the result was a single enclosure that contains all the audio, video, projection, compute, and networking needs. This one piece of equipment, with its simplified design, can be brought into a room and plugged in.

Other technology added to the AV standard includes a wide-angle camera, which captures everything in the room. This same camera can use artificial intelligence to provide in-video close-up views of participants in the room, making it a better experience for remote attendees. Simultaneously, AI-powered audio devices reduce echo and howling, the kind of nuisances that used to haunt virtual attendees in the past.

Some assembly required

Rooms designed for hybrid experiences are also being equipped with optimized furniture as part of the new AV standard.

For medium-sized spaces, a curved table encircles the AV equipment stack and faces a large 21:9 aspect ratio projector screen directly.

“That gives us a nice wide surface area to show all the remote attendees in the room,” Hempey says. “You’re seeing them at eye level and about human size, so they’re true life-sized folks. The camera can see everyone sitting around the table, so you’ve got that same great hybrid experience.”

These large screens also have space for content, including chat activity, raised hands, and other critical meeting items that might go unnoticed in traditional layouts.

For smaller rooms, a gumdrop or guitar pick-shaped table is installed to maintain that same degree of face-to-face engagement, while an equally camera-visible and taller table located at the back of the room maximizes the usability of the space. The addition of this second table increases occupancy to 10 seats and creates another working area, giving smaller rooms extra versatility. This back area can include a Microsoft Surface Hub to further support and promote collaboration. Smaller groups can utilize this space for digital whiteboarding, either in-person or as part of the hybrid experience.

The new AV standard for hybrid optimized meeting rooms can be adjusted to account for rooms that break the mold. Ultra-wide LED screens, for example, replace projectors in executive suites with large windows. These screens can handle the bright conditions without compromising the experience for in-person attendees.

A platform to bring the team together

While equipment, furniture, and arrangement of space drive a big part of the global AV standard that we’re developing, it’s Microsoft Teams that we use to bridge the physical and virtual divide.

“As we work across our rooms to make them optimized for hybrid, Microsoft Teams gives us the platform that allows us to be flexible, to deploy the right experience, with the right equipment, for each audience in each space,” Hempey says.

We’re literally real-time developing standards, for things that we would like to roll out quicker than our normal life cycle or refresh cycle, so that we can get those kind of enhanced hybrid and meeting experiences in the hands of our employees and guests, and customers much faster.

—Scott Weiskopf, director of the Center of Innovation, Global Workplace Services

From an operations and engineering standpoint, Microsoft Teams enables Microsoft to plug components into the meeting rooms. Various technologies can be selected during setup, integrating seamlessly into the collaboration platform.

Microsoft Teams also gives users a familiar meeting experience, whether they’re remote or in-person. It’s also a flexible platform, one that has been easy to experiment with, Weiskopf says.

“We’re literally real-time developing standards, for things that we would like to roll out quicker than our normal life cycle or refresh cycle, so that we can get those kind of enhanced hybrid and meeting experiences in the hands of our employees and guests, and customers much faster,” he says.

Empowering simple, consistent, and reliable hybrid experiences at scale

As Microsoft brings this new global AV standard to our meeting rooms, attendees—both remote and in-person—will benefit from a more inclusive engagement. The standards introduce simplicity and a unified design, creating an easy-to-utilize and consistent workspace for users. And for those who manage and operate meeting rooms, the new global standards make it straightforward to deploy and maintain.

Our goal is to design fantastic meeting space experiences that deliver value across a variety of scenarios and price points. And we want to show customers how we do it so they can do the same things at their companies.

—Matt Hempey, principal program manager, Microsoft Digital Employee Experience

Microsoft Teams gives attendees and operators a friendly and familiar platform to engage with. A variety of AV devices at a range of prices can be quickly added and onboarded into a Microsoft Teams Rooms-powered conference room.

“Our goal is to design fantastic meeting space experiences that deliver value across a variety of scenarios and price points,” Hempey says. “And we want to show customers how we do it so they can do the same things at their companies.”

Key Takeaways

  • Hybrid meetings start with inclusivity and accessibility. Designs should be user-centric and account for everyone, in-person or virtual.
  • Microsoft’s new global AV standards address the intersection of furniture, AV equipment, physical arrangement, and software to support the hybrid meeting room experience.
  • Meeting rooms optimized for hybrid aren’t just for remote attendees, they create the experiences that make it worth the trip to the office.
  • Microsoft Teams serves as the backbone for hybrid meetings. It offers attendees a consistent interface and experience while also serving as an easy-to-use platform for those responsible for creating and maintaining meeting spaces.

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