![]() You are driving during the zoom meeting, or you participate from a public space with lots of background noise, a poor connection, and people walking by in the background. You don’t show your face during the meeting, so people look at a meme or your name instead of interacting with you. Worse yet, you eat while you are the facilitator! The television or radio is playing in the background and you are not on mute. You eat and drink during a video conference. Here are some things that can qualify you as a 2023 zoom bomber. But today you could be a zoom bomber and not even know it! Thankfully technology has adapted, and the earlier form of zoom bombing is pretty much a thing of the past. During that time a zoom bomber was an uninvited participant who would hijack a meeting sharing images that were offensive, lewd, childish, racist, and more. Think back to the early days of adjusting to the pandemic and the relentless number of video conferences. Still, there are “zoom bombers” to contend with. These calls can create “face to face” meetings when you and your team members are in different locations. A quick video session can be a great way to break isolation. Well-planned and well-facilitated video meetings can provide time for focused productive discussion. How often we meet by video depends on the type of work we are engaged in and the organizational culture. Videoconferencing is now a standard part of most organizational cultures. The past few years have forced a change in how we hold nonprofit business meetings.
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