Showing 1- 10 of 48 questions
"If you want to ensure that new Meet features (Q&A, polls, breakout rooms, or AI summaries) are applied within 30 days, your plan must be created with all awareness, practical use, and feedback considerations at the same time. You begin with a What’s New in Meet session, no more than 30 minutes. You can review the new features in real time while discussing anything immediate that is already successful for them (AI summaries that automatically take notes in meetings!). Short, visual, contextual documentation always works better than long. Then you follow up with short how-to movies or GIF-based tutorials that you send out twice a week, in email or Slack.
Next, identify power users or team champions in each department to run micro-sessions (10–15 minutes) where they walk others through real use cases — say, using meeting transcripts for project updates. Create an adoption leaderboard or reward program (e.g., Top 5 users who tried the new Meet features this week) to gamify engagement.
From a data side, track usage metrics directly from the Meet Admin console e.g., number of meetings using polls, reactions, or recording and send weekly progress updates to leadership and team channels. Finally, close the loop with a feedback form after 30 days asking what worked and what didn’t. The trick is to keep training micro, continuous, and connected to everyday workflows — not buried in an onboarding deck no one reads.
When you do have Google Meet available, hold an organized training session, walking the team through how to use Meet, some common terms and any issues that could be potentially problematic. In order to prepare the support staff for massive tickets, this program should be backed by a well-organized knowledge base and simulated ticket tasks. From there, use pre-written communication templates, established escalation procedures and SLAs to diagnose the issue to conclusion. And lastly, by looking at ticket data, asking the end users and support reps for feedback, and continually improving resources you can institute a cycle of endless improvement.
SIP (Session Initiation Protocol) is used internally in video conferencing software.
The other video conferencing software apart from team and zoom are Google Meet, Webex Meetings, Jitsi Meet and a few more.
Zoom is a web based application software which supports video conferencing.
Devices include Webcam, speakers display, while software includes Google Meet, Skype, Cisco Webex.
TrueConf is the best LAN video conferencing software without the internet.
To restrict Google Meet features to a pilot group, you need to use Google Workspace's built-in controls for user and group management. Unlike custom software development that uses feature flag services like Azure App Configuration or Firebase Remote Config, Google's platform-as-a-service model requires you to leverage its native administrative controls for a managed and secure rollout.
Hardware used for video conferencing are camera, microphone, display. Software used include Microsoft Teams, Zoom, Webex Meetings.
Yes, Oovoo is a video conferencing software that allows users to connect through free messaging, voice and video calls.
Top Product with Questions
Have you used any product in this category?
Help others make informed decisions by reviewing your experience.
Add ReviewDisclaimer
Techjockey’s software industry experts offer advice for educational and informational purposes only. A category or product query or issue posted, created, or compiled by Techjockey is not meant to replace your independent judgment.
20,000+ Software Listed
Best
Price Guaranteed
Free Expert
Consultation
2M+
Happy Customers