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I'm always on camera and I think it's more awkward to switch to off camera. I think you feel like you're doing something wrong, hence the judgement. I don't care if the other person is camera on or off.
Work on identifying your real feelings here. Are you uncomfortable? |
| Our rule is, if you are not on camera, you are in the office for in person meetings. |
That is the thing about it - if you are looking at the camera lens, you are not actually making eye contact. That's the weird thing about video calls. |
Don’t be dense. If you’re talking you ARE making eye contact with them via looking at the camera lens. They absorb more of your message and know you are paying attention. The person talking is more impactful if they see your eye contact. Not vice versa. There are multiple talks and demos on this. |
My staff is all over the US there is no office. |
Aren’t you looking at the demo not the people? |
I’d be looking at my computer taking note not staring at your ruddy nose. |
That's eye stabbing, not eye contact |
OK. No blouse. Got it! |
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During Covid our Teams/IT support was a mess. It quickly became obvious there was some sort of bandwith issue if everyone was cameras on so the culture became cameras off. To this day there are still issues with calls dropping with cameras on. However, we got a new boss who is cameras on...........and just doesn't get why meetings are sh&t shows with folks dropping all the time. Plus, everyone can tell when the boss has his camera on he's multi tasking, so like WTH?
Plus the majority of our meetings could have been an email, so I'm literally getting work done while someone else is dronning on and on. |