Why Can't People Hear Clearly In Our Meetings?
Fix The Audio Problems Holding Meetings Back
Benefits
01
Improve Speech Clarity
Clear audio allows participants to understand every speaker without constantly asking people to repeat themselves or move closer to a microphone.
02
Support Remote Participants
Hybrid meetings depend on high-quality audio. When remote participants struggle to hear the room, engagement and productivity suffer.
03
Reduce Meeting Fatigue
Poor audio forces participants to concentrate harder, leading to frustration, misunderstandings, and less effective meetings.
How it Works
01
Assess The Environment
Room acoustics, microphone placement, speaker coverage, and background noise all impact how clearly people can hear and be heard.
02
Identify The Root Cause
Audio problems may be caused by insufficient microphones, poor room acoustics, incorrect equipment selection, or improper system configuration.
03
Implement The Right Solution
The right combination of microphones, speakers, DSP technology, and room design can dramatically improve meeting quality and participant experience.
Audio Problems Are The Number One Meeting Complaint
Studies consistently show that poor audio quality has a greater negative impact on meeting satisfaction than poor video quality. Participants are generally more willing to tolerate a blurry image than they are to tolerate missing parts of a conversation.
Audio issues are one of the leading causes of frustration in hybrid and conference room meetings.
Poor microphone coverage often results in remote participants missing important parts of the discussion.
Room acoustics can significantly impact speech intelligibility even when high-quality equipment is installed.
Over 20 years helping organizations improve communication through professional audio and collaboration solutions.
Experience designing audio systems for boardrooms, meeting spaces, training rooms, council chambers, and public facilities.
FAQ
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This is often caused by poor microphone coverage, improper microphone placement, room acoustics, or participants sitting outside the effective pickup area.
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Not always. Audio performance is influenced by room acoustics, speaker placement, system configuration, and overall room design in addition to microphone selection.
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If participants frequently ask people to repeat themselves, remote attendees struggle to follow conversations, or certain seats are harder to hear than others, the room may benefit from an audio assessment.