How To

How to Have a Better Video Conferencing Setup

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Looking and sounding good on video calls doesn't take a full setup overhaul. A few well-placed changes to your camera, lighting, audio, and framing make every call you take noticeably better. This guide covers what to focus on and where small upgrades earn their place.

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Start with your camera and lighting

These two together do more for how you look on camera than anything else.

Camera at eye level

Most laptop cameras sit below your face, which gives viewers a chin-forward angle and makes you look like you're looking down at them. Stack a few books under your laptop, use a monitor mount, or put your laptop on a stand 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.

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Lighting at face level

A camera can only work with the light it's given. Natural light from a window in front of you (not behind) works well. If that isn't an option, a soft light at face level fills in shadows and keeps your image clean. Key Light Neo is a small, easy option that sits next to your monitor and handles most desks.

If you only fix two things, fix these.

Sort out your audio

Your laptop microphone is probably the weakest part of your setup. It sits low on the keyboard, picks up every keystroke, and captures more room noise than voice.

A USB microphone placed close to your face fixes most of it. Wave Neo is a simple entry point with clean audio, plug-and-play setup, and a footprint small enough for any desk. If you want studio-grade sound for higher-stakes calls, Wave:3 MK.2 adds onboard processing and a noticeably richer voice.

Pay attention to your background

Your background is part of how people read you on a call. It doesn't need to be styled, but it does need to be intentional.

  • Keep it clean: A wall, a bookshelf, or a tidy corner all work. Move clutter out of the frame before the call starts.
  • Avoid bright windows behind you: Backlight turns you into a silhouette, even on a good camera.
  • Watch what's at head height: Plants, lamps, or shelves directly behind you can look like they're growing out of your head on camera.

A virtual background works in a pinch, but a real, well-framed background reads better.

Frame yourself well

A few quick rules cover most situations:

  • Eyes in the upper third of the frame: Not centered, not near the top. This is how news anchors and TV hosts are framed for a reason.
  • Head and shoulders visible: Too close feels intense. Too far feels disengaged.
  • A bit of headroom: Leave a small gap between the top of your head and the top of the frame.

Test before the call

Two minutes before a meeting, open your meeting app or system camera preview:

  • Look at the image. Is your face evenly lit? Is the angle right? Is anything distracting behind you?
  • Test your mic. Talk at your normal volume and check the input level. If you can hear keyboard clicks or background hum, move the mic closer to your face.
  • Adjust before, not during. Fixing your setup mid-call always looks worse than fixing it before the call.

Want it all sorted in one setup?

If you'd rather get everything dialed in at once, Conferencing Kit + packages a teleprompter, a premium Full HD webcam, an adjustable stand, and a laptop stand with built-in USB hub into a single setup. Connect it once and you get real eye contact, sharper video, and a tidy desk in one purchase.

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Better calls start with a better setup

You don't need to overhaul your desk to look and sound better on calls. Get your camera to eye level. Light your face. Move your mic closer. Tidy what's behind you. Each one is small on its own, but together they're the difference between blending in and showing up.