Looking professional on a video call isn't about expensive gear. It's about a few small things working together: how you appear on camera, how you sound, what's visible behind you, what you're wearing, and how you show up in the conversation. This guide walks through what actually makes the difference.
This is the single biggest fix, and it costs nothing. A camera below your face creates a chin-forward angle that makes you look like you're looking down at people. Raise your laptop or webcam with a stand or a few books until the camera is roughly at eye level. For a deeper look at why this matters, see our guide on eye contact on video calls.
A camera can only work with the light it's given. Natural light from a window in front of you is the easiest option, and it's free. If that isn't possible, a soft light at face level fills in shadows and keeps your image clean. Key Light Neo is a small option that sits next to your monitor. Avoid backlight from a window behind you, since it turns you into a silhouette even on a good camera.
Your background frames you. Keep it intentional, not distracting.
How you sound matters as much as how you look. Maybe more.
Built-in laptop microphones sit low on the keyboard, pick up every keystroke, and capture a lot of room noise. A USB microphone close to your face fixes most of it. Wave Neo is a simple entry point. Wave:3 MK.2 adds onboard processing for cleaner, richer audio on the calls that matter most.
Headphones also help. They prevent your speakers from feeding sound back into your mic, which is what causes the echo people often hear on calls.
A professional setup only works if you're actually present in the conversation.
If your main focus is video calls and you want the gear side handled in one purchase, Conferencing Kit + packages a high quality webcam, a teleprompter for real eye contact, and an adjustable laptop stand with a built-in USB hub.
Looking professional on video calls isn't about looking perfect. It's about removing the small things that distract from what you're actually saying. Get your camera up. Light your face. Wear something the camera handles well. Tidy what's behind you. Use a real microphone. Show up engaged.