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Microsoft Teams Blog
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Best practices for successful large meetings in Microsoft Teams

Siunie Sutjahjo's avatar
Feb 23, 2022

Meetings in Microsoft Teams have evolved significantly since Teams initial release in 2017 with COVID-19 being a catalyst for adoption across organizations. With employees being remote, Teams has become an integral tool in facilitating company all-hands gatherings, town halls, webinars, and product launches. We’ll be looking at large meeting options currently available in Teams, recommended practices and real-world learnings that can help drive positive experiences for parties in attendance.


Calendar year 2021 brought substantial investments in increased meeting capacity as one of many enhancements to the overall Teams meeting experience. The culmination of this user capacity investment was Large Meetings and Webinar functionality in Teams. These meeting options are in addition to Teams Live Events, which was previously the only option for hosting large scale meetings.


As the event organizer, you want to make sure you are following all the necessary actions to manage the meeting successfully. For instance, hard muting video for attendees can greatly reduce video bandwidth on a network and remove unintended video sharing in large audiences. Microsoft currently supports the ability to have 1,000-person meetings, which can overflow into a view-only experience for up to 10,000 participants. However, only 1,000 invitees can interact by using chat, audio, and video.


Teams meetings offer a collaborative and interactive experience with options to add structure for large meetings. As you extend the meeting to a larger audience, it is important to take appropriate steps to make the meeting more effective. As a supplement to our Virtual Event Playbook in this blog post, we will provide event organizers with best practices, tips, and preparation steps to optimize the large meeting experience and efficiently handle any issues that might occur.


Consider these practices before starting your meeting

To run a successful event, Microsoft recommends following the practices outlined below, for meeting participants, IT administrators and IT support staff.


Organizer and Presenters

  • For a smooth meeting, event organizers should set pre-defined presenters for the event. This creates the organized structure of presenter and attendee roles. After a meeting has started, presenters also can promote other attendees to the presenter role.
  • Define a co-organizer via meeting options (Public preview).
  • Pre-configure video and microphone settings to control attendees’ experiences.
    • Disable attendees’ microphones to avoid disturbance. If someone needs to interact during the meeting, allow them to unmute when they raise their hand.
    • Disable attendees’ video to avoid visual distractions. During appropriate times in the meeting, video can be permitted for all attendees or specific individuals.
  • Prestage meeting applications such as polls and Q&A will be used during the meeting.
  • Event organizers and presenters should adhere to the following to provide an optimal experience:
    • Run the Microsoft 365 network connectivity test to verify network suitability several days prior to and the day of the event.
    • If presenting from home, verify other devices are not consuming a disproportionate amount of bandwidth (Streaming services, online gaming, large downloads).
    • Present from an endpoint with a wired connection for more reliable audio, video, and screen sharing.
    • Ensure users are on the latest Teams app on a desktop or mobile device.
    • When using a laptop, check for high network connectivity and sufficient power.
  • Schedule a dry run prior to the event to identify device, lighting, or network issues and to ensure organizers/presenters are familiar with features they’ll be using.
    • Schedule additional practice runs if issues were encountered to ensure remediation efforts were successful.
  • Presenters and participants should use the Teams desktop app to provide an optimal experience.
  • Use lobby controls to control meeting entry or lobby holds.
  • Utilize features such as spotlight, PowerPoint Live, meeting recording, captions, and transcriptions to promote engagement and effectiveness.
  • Participants should turn off chat notifications during large meetings to avoid distractions.

Recommended IT administrators and IT support staff monitoring during meetings

  • When necessary, use additional monitoring and support by the IT administrator for important meeting (Quick start for Admins).
  • Ensure that all Microsoft Network Connectivity Principles have been followed both on-premises and for remote users.
  • IT admins can closely examine the real-time data telemetry to monitor the event and identify any possible issue and its source. 
    • Meeting monitors will be able to analyze real-time telemetry data, allowing them to interact in real time with users that may be having a poor experience due to metrics exceeding tolerable thresholds.
    • Meeting monitors should be set as presenters so they can disable rogue video streams, mute inadvertent live mics and in a worst case scenario remove an attendee.

Create more interactive and engaging meetings with these tips

  • Use polls to gather information about attendees before and during meetings.
  • Interact with attendees using chat and/or Q&A. Use the Q&A app for both open and moderated meetings and webinars. You can mark best answers, filter responses, moderate and dismiss questions, and pin posts such as a welcome message. Currently, anonymous attendees are not supported but will be available later this year.
  • During meetings, organizers can use different views like Dynamic View, Together Mode, or Presenter mode. In addition, they can use Spotlight to highlight a single or multiple presenters to make them stand out. Note that Spotlight cannot be used in Large Gallery or Together Mode.
  • Remind and encourage attendees to raise their hands before speaking. With ordered raised hands, you know the order of who to call on first so that no participant is missed.
  • Reactions are excellent for the attendees to provide sentiment within the meeting.
  • Enable captions and transcription for a more inclusive meeting. Both transcription and recordings are helpful for those who missed the meeting or need a recap.

 

Tips for Meeting Scheduling & Webinar Creation

When creating meeting invitations for Webinars or Large Meetings, Microsoft recommends defining presenters in advance so that attendee microphones and cameras will be disabled when joining. By following this structured meeting methodology, we avoid disruptions during the event while still allowing attendee participation at the discretion of the Presenters during interactive periods. At the beginning of the event, Presenters or Moderators should set expectations on interactive periods promoting the raise hand feature for attendee speaking order.


Why does Microsoft recommend the structured meeting approach?
Consider attending an in-person town hall event. Everyone isn’t speaking at once, and especially not over top of the presenters. There are defined speakers with dedicated times for audience interaction. During the interactive portion of the event, attendees will speak one at a time at a defined location that has a…microphone. This translates nearly verbatim to Webinars and Large Meetings where people are “handed” the microphone by Presenters or Moderators.


Users can create any meeting type from the Microsoft Teams client calendar through the drop down menu on the top right of the window, but note that Webinars and Live events can only be scheduled through the Teams client calendar, while standard/large meetings can be scheduled from the Outlook calendar.

 

To manage the meeting options in Teams or Outlook, click the Meeting options button and define the settings as required.

 

In the screen shot below, announcements are disabled, Siunie is selected as a presenter, with attendee mic and cameras being disabled.

 

To schedule a Webinar, please follow the detailed guidance at the following Microsoft support pages as it requires a few more steps than a standard meeting.


Webinar Scheduling

 

Options you can choose for large meetings

There is a plethora of information, documentation and blog articles that detail the features available for the following three meeting types, so we’ll skip the minutiae and list a few items that will be relevant to upcoming topics.


Teams Large Meetings (View-Only)

  • Full interactive capabilities for the first 1,000 users, with subsequent users in view-only mode
  • Expands the previous 300 user capacity up to 1,000*
  • Meetings from 1,001 to 20,000 are View-Only
  • Configurable Interaction Options
  • Disabled by default and must be enabled with PowerShell

Teams Webinars

  • Up to 1,000 participants
  • Registration that can be public or organization only
  • Configurable Interaction Options
  • Disabled by default and must be enabled with PowerShell

Teams Live Events

  • Broadcast to large audiences
  • Moderated Q&A for interaction
  • Supports advanced production capabilities
  • 20,000 user capacity that can be expanded up to 100,000**
  • Disabled by default and must be enabled with PowerShell
    *The usual 10,000 is increased to 20,000 through June 30, 2022.
    **Events beyond 20,000 users must go through the Live Events Assistance Program


Breakout rooms cannot be utilized for any meeting that exceeds 300 users at any time during the meeting. If the user count drops below 300, Breakout rooms are still not available.


Before attempting to schedule a Large Meeting or Webinar, confirm that the features have been enabled.

 

Closing Notes for Large Meetings

In this post, we covered the different types of meetings Microsoft Teams can host, guidance for selecting the proper meeting type for an event and reviewed recommended practices for scheduled large Teams meetings. 

 

To get the best overview of your meeting options, visit our Virtual Event Playbook which covers the various ways you can host an engaging and inclusive event, or take it a step further with our Virtual Event Producer course on Microsoft Learn.


We are here to support you. Join our Virtual Events community, contact our Live event assistance program, and as always, share your feedback on the Teams Feedback portal.

 

Updated Aug 25, 2022
Version 14.0
  • Thank you to summarize all tips for meeting arrangements! it's very helpful~

  • I would like to see a template set of meeting settings including a greenroom breakout room for presenters, and video/audio mute controls.

     

  • Tim_Banting's avatar
    Tim_Banting
    Iron Contributor

    Great insights; however, all this is far too complicated for most. 

     

    I would like to see:

     

    • Q&A app added to the native experience and enabled by a check box. (it's there in Live events- why does it need to be added to every single meeting?)
    • Microsoft FindTime integration so you can poll for a suitable time between attendees inside or outside your organization rather than schedule assistant
    • Lobby video clips that attendees can see while waiting in the lobby- perhaps quick Teams hints on raising hands and using Q&A etc?
    • A "green room" for presenters to meet prior to going "on stage"

     

    Please work on the user experience. Make it simpler to use. 

     

  • Anna_Petts I believe you are asking about using PowerPoint Live? We've been successful with PowerPoint Live (800+ presentations so far) by following a few tips. The most important thing we've found is paying attention to the storage size of the PowerPoint file. We try to get them down around 20-30MB maximum (most end up under 10MB). The first place to look is at images - often users will take photos from their smart phone and directly use them without understanding the file size (or image resolution). PowerPoint has a built-in feature to reduce image size (and remove cropped portions of images). We've taken a 520MB file down to 11MB using this feature. As PowerPoint Live pushes the deck to attendees, loading 11MB is much quicker to load and manage than 520MB. If presenters are embedding video, those can also be optimized with PowerPoint (good to drop the resolution down to the size of the video on the slide - for example, if only taking half a slide, drop the resolution to 720 or 360). We typically recommend embedding a YouTube video (instead of the entire MP4 in the slide). With those changes to a deck, we'll put them through a quick PowerPoint Live session to check them - and observe if there are any key issues with animations or transitions - just have to understand not all animations/transitions are supported in a browser.

    If you have problems with the slides staying coordinated with attendees, you want to "click the eyeball" icon to prevent attendees moving on their own through the slides.

     

    We love PowerPoint Live because:

    • it enables the presenter to easily see their slide notes (presenter view) on a single monitor or laptop; 
    • allows multiple presenters on the same deck to switch between controlling the slides (no need to EVER say "next slide");
    • if the presenter drops their connection, the deck remains active and visible in the meeting, ready for the presenter when they get reconnected;
    • less bandwitdth needed by attendees (important with our increase remote work);
    • for our international attendees, they can translate the slide text into their native language;
    • and (super cool) any hyperlinks on the slides can be clicked on by the attendees - the slides are interactive!

     

  • Anna_Petts's avatar
    Anna_Petts
    Copper Contributor

    When will it be possible use PowerPoint with slide builds and animation via Teams live?

    My last experience resulted in slides not syncing or working properly.

  • This looks like our OneNote... nice share Siunie Sutjahjo !

    We've been using Teams as a platform for virtual events for a couple of years now. Our playbook is solid now and just finishing our 12th event - now at almost 1000 presentations and over 5500 attendees total. We run our events in a team dedicated to the event (usually multi-day). We make liberal use of the underlying SharePoint site - Microsoft Lists and SharePoint pages make great Teams tabs for the agenda and speaker information - you can link straight into a channel (or "room") or to a tab in a channel (speaker/exhibitor/sponsor content). When there are concurrent sessions/meetings active, running in their subject matter based channels, users are amazed how easy it is to move between them - just like at a real conference center (we've had 50 concurrent meetings running...) And don't forget SharePoint spaces - a great way to highlight speaker content and more. Our trick is to explain to the attendees that Teams is your virtual conference center - you virtually "enter" the Team for the day and all the info you need is at your fingertips. Your attendees aren't spending their time in email searching for links to individual meetings for which they had to individually register. If you are running a bunch of siloed, disconnected meetings, consider running the event in a Team. You can run a few thousand attendee events for a few dollars a month vs $15K to $64K on other platforms. Can't wait to see what we can do with Mesh.  A few links on how we run our events.