“Sorry! You go.”“No, you go ahead.”“That’s OK. What were you trying to say?”After more than a year of virtual meetings, this scenario is all too familiar. Conversations in virtual meetings don’t flow as naturally as in-person groups—especially when the group is large. Why is this?The problems with our current meetings are well documented. For example, researchers from Stanford say we’re under cognitive overload during virtual meetings, based on what we see too much of (eye contact and ourselves) and not enough of (non-verbal communications). When body language is obscured, social cues are too, including signs of who should speak when. The more people in the meeting, the more challenging the dynamic becomes.To read this article in full, please click her
Read More