Category: Virtual Presentations

04 Jan 2026
Microsoft Teams presentation tips showing professional presenter using PowerPoint Live

Microsoft Teams Presentation Tips: How to Present Professionally in the Corporate Standard [2026]

Last updated: January 2026

My first presentation on Microsoft Teams to a major bank’s risk committee was a disaster I didn’t even recognise as a disaster until afterwards.

The presentation went “fine.” Nobody complained. But when I reviewed the recording, I understood why the engagement felt off: Teams had compressed my video so aggressively that my facial expressions were nearly invisible. The subtle visual cues I relied on to connect — a raised eyebrow, a slight smile — weren’t transmitting.

I looked like a talking head with no humanity.

Microsoft Teams is now the default platform for corporate presentations. Over 320 million people use it monthly. If you’re presenting in a corporate environment, you’re almost certainly presenting on Teams. These Microsoft Teams presentation tips will help you master the platform’s quirks and present with the same impact you’d have in a boardroom.

Free resource: Download my Virtual Presentation Quick-Start Checklist — includes Teams-specific PowerPoint Live setup and the compression workaround checklist.



Teams Presentation Tips: The Video Compression Problem (And How to Fix It)

Teams compresses video more aggressively than Zoom. This is intentional — it’s optimised for corporate networks where bandwidth matters. But it creates a presentation challenge.

High Contrast Is Essential

Subtle visual distinctions disappear. That light grey text on white background? Gone. The nuanced colour palette in your slides? Flattened.

For Teams presentations:

Slides: Maximum contrast. Dark text on light backgrounds, or light text on dark backgrounds. Avoid mid-tones.

Your appearance: Solid colours outperform patterns. A plain dark shirt against a light background reads clearly. A subtle checked pattern becomes visual noise.

Lighting: Needs to be brighter than you think. Teams’ compression handles high-light situations better than low-light.

Exaggerate Facial Expressions

Because compression flattens subtle expressions, dial up your facial animation by about 40%. What feels slightly over-the-top in the mirror will land as normal on the compressed Teams video.

This isn’t about being fake. It’s about compensating for technical limitations that would otherwise make you appear flat and disengaged.

PowerPoint Live: The Teams Feature Most Presenters Miss

If you’re presenting PowerPoint slides on Teams, stop using screen share. Use PowerPoint Live instead.

How to Use PowerPoint Live

Click the Share button → Browse → Select your PowerPoint file → It opens in PowerPoint Live mode.

Why this is better:

You stay visible. Your video remains prominent alongside slides, not shrunk to a tiny corner.

Participants can browse. They can look ahead or back without affecting what others see. Some presenters hate this, but I’ve found it reduces the “wait, go back” interruptions.

You see private notes. Your presenter view includes notes that only you can see — no second monitor required.

Better quality. PowerPoint Live transmits slides as slides, not as compressed video of slides. Text is crisp, images are clear.

The PowerPoint Live Standout Feature

With PowerPoint Live, you can use Standout Mode: your video appears in front of your slides, with your background removed. You become visually integrated with your content.

Use this sparingly — it’s attention-grabbing but can feel gimmicky. Reserve it for key moments when you want maximum presence.

PowerPoint Live vs Screen Share comparison showing advantages of PowerPoint Live in Teams

Teams-Specific Engagement Tools

Teams has different engagement features than Zoom. Here’s how to use them effectively:

Reactions

Teams reactions (👍❤️😂👏😮) appear as floating animations. Prompt them: “Give me a thumbs up if this resonates with your experience…”

The animations create visible engagement and energy, breaking the flat-screen monotony.

The Raise Hand Feature

Participants can click “Raise Hand” to signal they want to speak. As presenter, you’ll see a hand icon on their video.

Acknowledge them by name: “I see David has his hand up — go ahead, David.”

This creates orderly discussion without the chaotic unmuting of people talking over each other.

Meeting Chat

Teams meeting chat persists after the meeting — unlike Zoom, where chat disappears unless you save it. This means:

You can reference chat comments even after the meeting ends. Participants can continue discussions in the chat thread. Links and resources shared remain accessible.

Use this: “I’ll drop some resources in chat after we finish, and they’ll be there in your Teams history for reference.”

Polls in Teams

Forms app integrates directly with Teams meetings. Create polls before the meeting in Microsoft Forms, then launch them during the presentation.

Just like virtual presentations generally, use polls every 10-15 minutes as attention resets.

Presenting to corporate executives on Teams? My Executive Slide System (£39) includes high-contrast templates optimised for Teams’ aggressive video compression — your slides stay readable even on bandwidth-constrained corporate networks.

Want opening hooks that cut through the Teams compression? My Presentation Openers Swipe File (£9.99) includes high-impact openings designed for virtual environments where every second counts.

Together Mode: When to Use It

Together Mode places everyone in a shared virtual space — like sitting in an auditorium together. It sounds gimmicky but has genuine uses.

Use Together Mode for:

Longer sessions (30+ minutes) where Zoom fatigue becomes an issue. The shared space reduces the cognitive load of the grid view.

Team meetings where collaboration matters more than formal presentation.

Sessions where you want a more informal, connected atmosphere.

Don’t use Together Mode for:

Formal executive presentations. Client-facing meetings where professionalism matters. Situations where participants might find it frivolous.

Teams Audio: The Corporate Network Challenge

Many corporate Teams users are on locked-down machines where they can’t install optimised audio settings. If you’re presenting to corporate audiences, assume some participants have mediocre audio.

This means:

Speak more clearly than normal. Slight mumbling that’s fine in person becomes incomprehensible over compressed Teams audio.

Pause between key points. Latency can cause slight delays; pauses ensure people catch everything.

Avoid speaking while slides transition. The visual change combined with audio can overwhelm compressed bandwidth.

Starting Your Teams Presentation Right

The Teams waiting room is called the “Lobby.” As host, you control when people are admitted.

Pro tip: Join your own meeting 5 minutes early. Admit people as they arrive, greet them by name. This creates connection before you start and fills the awkward “waiting for everyone” silence.

When ready to begin:

Camera on, no screen share yet. Deliver your opening hook to faces, not slides. Then share PowerPoint Live once you’ve established presence.

“Let me share something that surprised me last quarter…” [30-second hook] “…let me show you what I mean.” [Then share slides]

For more on powerful openings: How to Open a Presentation

Recording Teams Presentations

Teams recordings automatically save to SharePoint/OneDrive. This has implications:

Assume you’re being recorded. Even if you don’t record, participants might. Behave accordingly.

Announce if recording. “I’m going to record this for anyone who couldn’t make it. Any objections?”

Use recordings for self-review. Watch yourself afterwards. Teams recordings include your video, slides, and chat — comprehensive feedback for improvement.

The Teams Presentation Quick Checklist

Before:

☐ Slides optimised for high contrast

☐ PowerPoint file ready for PowerPoint Live

☐ Forms polls created (if using)

☐ Lighting brighter than usual

☐ Solid colour clothing (no patterns)

☐ Test audio with headphones

During:

☐ Use PowerPoint Live (not screen share)

☐ Exaggerate facial expressions 40%

☐ Watch for raised hands

☐ Prompt reactions for engagement

☐ Reference chat by name

☐ 10-minute attention resets

After:

☐ Drop resources in meeting chat

☐ Follow up email within 24 hours

☐ Review recording for self-improvement

Common Teams Presentation Tips Mistakes

Using screen share instead of PowerPoint Live. You lose video prominence, slide quality, and presenter notes.

Ignoring the compression factor. Subtle visuals and expressions don’t transmit. Dial up contrast and expressiveness.

Not testing corporate firewalls. If presenting to a new corporate client, their firewall might block certain features. Test in advance.

Forgetting the persistent chat. Unlike Zoom, Teams chat sticks around. Don’t write anything you wouldn’t want seen later.

Master Teams Presentations

Microsoft Teams is the corporate standard, and it’s not going anywhere. Master these Teams presentation tips and you’ll stand out from the majority who just click “Share Screen” and hope for the best.

For the complete virtual presenting framework: Virtual Presentation Tips: The Complete Guide

For Zoom-specific techniques: Zoom Presentation Tips

Ready to command any virtual room? My Executive Buy-In Presentation System includes live practice sessions with real-time feedback on your virtual presence and platform mastery.

Free weekly tips: Join 2,000+ professionals getting my Wednesday newsletter. Subscribe here.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is PowerPoint Live better than screen sharing?

Yes, for presentations. PowerPoint Live keeps you visible, provides presenter notes, delivers crisper slide quality, and offers Standout Mode. Use screen share only when you need to show something other than PowerPoint.

How do I keep people engaged in long Teams meetings?

Use polls and reactions every 10-15 minutes. Break into breakout rooms for longer sessions. Consider Together Mode to reduce video fatigue. And honestly — question whether the meeting needs to be that long.

What’s the best Teams background for presentations?

A real, clean background beats a virtual one. If you must use virtual backgrounds, Teams’ built-in options are optimised for the platform. Avoid custom backgrounds that might glitch with Teams’ compression.

How do I handle Teams technical issues mid-presentation?

Have a backup: phone dial-in number, colleague who can take over sharing, pre-sent materials. When issues occur, acknowledge briefly and move on. “Let me switch to my backup here… right, as I was saying…” Don’t over-apologise.

(This article was created with AI assistance; all stories and insights are based on 35 years of real client work.)

04 Jan 2026
Zoom presentation tips showing professional presenter with optimal camera setup and lighting

Zoom Presentation Tips: How to Present Like a Pro (Not a Pixelated Amateur) [2026]

Last updated: January 2026

Halfway through presenting our Q4 strategy to a client’s executive team on Zoom, I noticed my video had frozen. For how long? No idea. I was still talking, completely unaware that twenty people were staring at my pixelated freeze-frame while my voice carried on about revenue projections.

Nobody interrupted me. They just waited. When I finally noticed, I’d lost all momentum and half my credibility.

That was the moment I became obsessive about Zoom presentation tips — not the generic “look at the camera” advice, but the platform-specific techniques that prevent disasters and create genuine presence.

Here’s everything I’ve learned from hundreds of Zoom presentations to corporate clients, distilled into what actually matters.

Free resource: Download my Virtual Presentation Quick-Start Checklist — includes Zoom-specific settings and the pre-presentation setup sequence.



Essential Zoom Presentation Tips: The Setup That Commands Authority

Most Zoom presentation tips focus on content. But your setup determines whether people take you seriously before you say a word.

The “Hide Self View” Secret

Click your video thumbnail and select “Hide Self View.” You can still see that your video is working, but you won’t see your own face.

Why this matters: watching yourself is cognitively exhausting and distracting. You’ll unconsciously adjust your hair, notice your facial expressions, fixate on how you look. Hide it. Focus on your audience and content instead.

Gallery View vs. Speaker View

When presenting, switch to Speaker View so you can see who’s reacting. Gallery view shows everyone equally — but you want to spot the decision-makers’ responses.

Even better: if you have a second monitor, put participant faces on one screen and your notes on the other. No second monitor? Use your phone as a Gallery View reference while presenting from your laptop.

The “Touch Up My Appearance” Setting

Video Settings → “Touch up my appearance.” Yes, use it. It’s subtle, but it softens harsh video compression effects. Nobody will know you’re using it, but you’ll look slightly more polished.

Also enable “Adjust for low light” if you don’t have ideal lighting. It won’t fix terrible lighting, but it helps with mediocre setups.

Screen Sharing: Where Most Zoom Presentations Fall Apart

The moment you share your screen, you lose face-to-face connection. Here’s how to minimise that damage:

Use “Side-by-side: Speaker” Mode

When you share your screen, Zoom’s default shows only your slides. Your face disappears or becomes tiny.

Ask your audience to switch to “Side-by-side: Speaker” view (they can select this in View Options). This keeps your video prominent alongside your slides.

Better yet: at the start of your presentation, say: “Quick tip — if you go to View Options and select ‘Side-by-side Speaker,’ you’ll see my face alongside the slides. Makes it easier to follow.”

You’ve just improved their experience and demonstrated technical competence.

Spotlight Yourself

If you’re the host, use Spotlight Video on yourself. This forces your video to be prominent for all participants regardless of who’s speaking.

Right-click your video → “Spotlight for Everyone.”

This ensures you don’t disappear when someone coughs or their dog barks.

The Strategic Screen Share Toggle

Don’t share your screen for the entire presentation. Share for slides, then stop sharing for key messages.

When you stop sharing, your full-screen face appears. Use this strategically: stop sharing when making your most important point. The visual change recaptures attention, and your face fills their screen with nowhere to hide.

“Let me stop sharing for a moment because this next point is critical…” — powerful technique.

Essential Zoom settings checklist for professional presentations including Hide Self View and Spotlight

The 10-Minute Engagement Rule for Zoom

Zoom’s built-in tools make the 10-minute attention reset easy to execute:

Zoom Polls

Create polls before your meeting (Meetings → Edit → Polls). Launch them at the 10 and 20-minute marks.

Don’t ask for opinions on your content (“Did you find this useful?”). Ask questions that generate useful data (“Which challenge is most relevant to your team?”). Then reference the results: “Interesting — 65% said X. Let me address that specifically…”

Reactions and Raised Hands

“Give me a thumbs up if you’ve experienced this…” Low-friction engagement that creates visible feedback.

Watch for raised hands during Q&A. Acknowledge them by name: “I see Sarah has a question — Sarah, go ahead.”

Chat as Your Engagement Barometer

A silent chat suggests a disengaged audience. Prompt chat activity: “Type in chat: what’s your biggest question about X?”

Reference chat by name: “I see Mark’s question in chat — great question, Mark. Let me address that…”

This creates the feeling of dialogue even in a broadcast format.

Presenting to executives on Zoom? My Executive Slide System (£39) includes high-contrast slide templates designed specifically for video compression — your slides will look sharp even on Zoom’s aggressive encoding.

Want opening hooks that work specifically for Zoom? My Presentation Openers Swipe File (£9.99) includes virtual-specific hooks designed to stop the multitasking before it starts.

Zoom Presentation Tips: Technical Disasters (And How to Prevent Them)

The Frozen Video Problem

If your video freezes, you often won’t know. Prevention: position Zoom so you can see your own thumbnail from the corner of your eye (or use a second device to monitor your feed).

Better prevention: use a wired ethernet connection instead of WiFi. Most freezing comes from bandwidth fluctuation.

The Echo Chamber

Nothing says “amateur” like audio echo. Always use headphones with a microphone. The built-in laptop speakers and mic create feedback loops.

The Notification Disaster

Email popup appears mid-presentation showing a sensitive message. Calendar reminder for “Dentist appointment.” Slack notification from a colleague saying something inappropriate.

Prevention: Enable “Do Not Disturb” at the operating system level, not just individual apps. On Mac: Focus Mode. On Windows: Focus Assist. This catches everything.

The “Wrong Screen Shared” Nightmare

You meant to share your presentation. You shared your entire desktop with visible emails, messages, or worse.

Prevention: Always select “Window” not “Desktop.” And before any important presentation, close everything except what you need. Minimised windows can still send notifications.

Starting Your Zoom Presentation: The First 60 Seconds

Don’t waste your opening on housekeeping. The standard Zoom opener — “Can everyone hear me? Let me share my screen. Can you see this?” — burns your most valuable 30 seconds.

Better approach:

Test everything 10 minutes before. Join at the scheduled time, camera on, ready to present. Open with your hook immediately.

“Last quarter, we left £2.3 million on the table. Today I’ll show you exactly where it went — and how we get it back.”

That’s your opener. Not “Hi everyone, thanks for joining, let me just…”

For more on powerful openings: How to Open a Presentation

Ending Your Zoom Presentation: Don’t Let It Fizzle

Q&A dying with awkward silence? Don’t say “Okay, I guess that’s everything.”

Have a prepared close:

“If no more questions, let me leave you with this: [your key message]. I’ll send a summary email today with [resources/next steps]. Thank you for your time.”

Stop sharing your screen. Let your face fill the frame. Deliver your close looking at the camera. End on your terms, not with a whimper.

The Zoom Presentation Quick Checklist

Before:

☐ Hide Self View enabled

☐ Touch Up Appearance enabled

☐ Do Not Disturb on (system-level)

☐ Polls created (if using)

☐ Ethernet connected (if possible)

☐ Backup audio ready (phone dial-in)

During:

☐ Spotlight yourself when presenting

☐ 10-minute engagement resets

☐ Toggle screen share at key moments

☐ Reference chat by name

☐ Watch for raised hands

After:

☐ Send summary email within 24 hours

☐ Include any resources mentioned

☐ Clear next steps and owners

Level Up Your Zoom Presentation Skills

These Zoom presentation tips will take you from competent to commanding. But the platform features are just tools — what matters is how you use them to connect, engage, and persuade.

For the complete framework on virtual presenting: Virtual Presentation Tips: The Complete Guide

For Teams-specific techniques: Microsoft Teams Presentation Tips

Ready to master presentation skills across every platform? My Executive Buy-In Presentation System includes live practice sessions where you’ll present via video and get real-time feedback on your Zoom presence.

Free weekly tips: Join 2,000+ professionals getting my Wednesday newsletter. Subscribe here.

Frequently Asked Questions

Should I use a Zoom virtual background?

Only if your real background is distracting. Virtual backgrounds can glitch at the edges of your body, especially with movement. A clean, simple real background is ideal. If you must use virtual, choose something static and professional — not a beach or outer space.

How do I stop people from multitasking during my Zoom presentation?

You can’t force attention. But you can earn it: strong opening hook, engagement every 10 minutes, strategic screen share toggling, and making your content genuinely valuable. Also keep it short — if it could be an email, send an email.

What’s the best Zoom setting for presentations?

Original Sound for Musicians (for clearer audio), HD Video enabled, Touch Up Appearance on, and Spotlight yourself when presenting. Also ensure you’re using Speaker View so you can read the room.

(This article was created with AI assistance; all stories and insights are based on 35 years of real client work.)

04 Jan 2026
Virtual presentation tips comparison showing disengaged audience versus engaged presenter commanding attention through screen

Virtual Presentation Tips: How to Command Attention Through a Screen [2026]

Last updated: January 2026

Three minutes into my first virtual presentation to Equinox Financial’s leadership team, I realised nobody was listening.

I could see it in the tiny thumbnails — people checking phones, eyes drifting to second monitors, one person clearly typing emails. The same executives who hung on every word in boardrooms had mentally checked out the moment I shared my screen.

That was 2020. Since then, I’ve delivered over 200 virtual presentations to financial institutions, trained thousands of professionals on remote presenting, and discovered something uncomfortable: everything you know about presenting in person actively hurts you on camera.

This guide covers the virtual presentation tips that actually work — not the generic “look at the camera” advice you’ve read everywhere else, but the specific techniques I’ve refined through real client work at HSBC, UniCredit, and dozens of corporate teams struggling with the same problem you’re facing.

Free resource: Grab my Virtual Presentation Quick-Start Checklist — a one-page reference covering setup, engagement triggers, and the 10-minute rule framework.

Why Virtual Presentations Fail (It’s Not What You Think)

Most virtual presentation advice focuses on technology — lighting, microphones, backgrounds. That’s like telling someone to buy a better suit before fixing their terrible content.

The real problem is attention economics. In a physical room, you have a captive audience. On Zoom, you’re competing with:

Email notifications. Slack messages. The entire internet. Their phone. Whatever’s happening in their kitchen. The cognitive load of video itself.

Research from Stanford shows that video calls drain mental energy 15% faster than in-person meetings. Your audience is literally exhausted before you start.

Here’s what this means for your virtual presentation tips strategy: you can’t just adapt your in-person style — you need to completely rebuild your approach.

Want the complete virtual presenting toolkit? My Public Speaking Cheat Sheets (£14.99) include a dedicated virtual presentations quick-reference — camera setup, engagement triggers, platform-specific shortcuts all on one page.

The 10-minute attention rule timeline showing engagement resets for virtual presentations

The 10-Minute Rule for Virtual Presentations

In person, you might hold attention for 20-30 minutes before needing an interaction. Virtually, that window shrinks to 10 minutes — maximum.

Every 10 minutes, you need what I call an attention reset:

Minutes 1-10: Your opening hook and first major point. This is where you win or lose them.

Minute 10: First interaction — poll, question, or shift in visual format.

Minutes 11-20: Your second major point with different visual approach.

Minute 20: Second attention reset — breakout discussion, exercise, or dramatic reveal.

I learned this the hard way. A 45-minute presentation I’d delivered successfully in boardrooms completely bombed on Zoom. Same content. Same delivery. But without the physical presence and social pressure of a room, people simply… left. Cameras off, then gone entirely.

Now I structure every virtual presentation around these 10-minute blocks. The content quality didn’t change — but the engagement transformed.

Want 20+ opening hooks designed for virtual presentations? Grab my Presentation Openers & Closers Swipe File — includes specific hooks that work when you’re competing with email.

Camera Presence: The 3 Things That Actually Matter

Camera presence tips showing eye contact, energy amplification, and frame dominance techniques

Forget the advice about “professional backgrounds” and “good lighting.” Those are table stakes. Here’s what actually differentiates great virtual presenters:

1. The Eye Contact Illusion

Looking at your camera lens — not your screen — creates the illusion of eye contact. You know this. But here’s what nobody tells you: it only matters at specific moments.

You don’t need to stare at the camera constantly (that’s actually creepy). Use camera eye contact strategically:

When making your key point. When asking a question. When you want to create connection. During your opening 30 seconds. During your close.

The rest of the time? Look at your notes, your slides, your audience thumbnails. It’s fine. The strategic moments are what create presence.

2. The Energy Amplification Rule

Video flattens your energy by about 30%. The enthusiasm that feels natural in person comes across as flat and monotone on camera.

This doesn’t mean you should be manic or performative. It means you need to consciously dial up your vocal variety and facial expressions by about one-third.

If you normally speak at energy level 5, aim for 6.5 on camera. If you’re naturally reserved, push to what feels like “slightly too much” — it will land as normal to your audience.

I cringe watching recordings of my early virtual presentations. I thought I was being engaging. I looked half-asleep.

3. The Frame Dominance Principle

Most people sit too far from their camera. They appear small in the frame, surrounded by distracting background. This communicates low status and low confidence.

Your face should fill roughly 60-70% of the vertical frame. Your eyes should be in the upper third. This is the same framing used in news broadcasts and professional video — it communicates authority.

Adjust your camera height so you’re looking slightly down at it, not up. Looking up at a camera makes you appear submissive. Looking straight or slightly down communicates confidence.



Slide Design for Virtual: What Changes

Your beautifully designed boardroom slides will fail on Zoom. Here’s why and how to fix it:

The Screen Real Estate Problem

When you share your screen, your slides appear in a fraction of your audience’s display. They’re also viewing on everything from 27-inch monitors to phone screens.

This means:

Font size minimum: 28pt (what looked fine at 24pt in a conference room is illegible on a laptop).

Reduce text by 50% compared to in-person slides. If you had 5 bullet points, cut to 2-3.

Higher contrast colours. Subtle colour variations disappear on compressed video.

One idea per slide. The cognitive load of video means people can’t process complex slides while also processing you.

The Show-Your-Face Strategy

Most presenters share their screen and disappear. Their slides fill the entire view. Bad move.

Keep your camera on and visible alongside your slides. On Zoom, this means using “Side-by-side: Speaker” view for your audience. On Teams, ensure your video remains prominent.

Why? People trust faces more than slides. Your physical presence — even in a tiny thumbnail — maintains connection and credibility in ways slides alone cannot.

For critical points, consider stopping screen share entirely and speaking directly to camera. The visual break recaptures attention, and your full-screen face communicates importance.

Virtual Presentation Tips for Engagement

The engagement techniques that work in person often fall flat virtually. Here’s what to do instead:

Polls Over Questions

Asking “Any questions?” to a silent Zoom room is painful. Polls work better because they require no social courage — people click anonymously.

Use polls not just for feedback, but as attention resets. A poll at minute 10 forces everyone to engage, breaking the passive viewing pattern.

Pro tip: Show poll results and comment on them. “Interesting — 60% of you said X. Let me address that directly…” This creates dialogue even in a one-to-many presentation.

The Chat Thread Technique

Ask people to respond in chat rather than unmuting. This works because:

Lower barrier to participation. Introverts participate more easily. Creates visible engagement (others see the chat filling up). You can reference specific responses by name.

“Type in chat: what’s your biggest challenge with X?” Then read and respond to 2-3 answers. You’ve just created interaction without the awkward unmuting dance.

Breakout Rooms for Longer Sessions

For presentations over 30 minutes, breakout rooms are essential — not optional. A 2-minute paired discussion every 15-20 minutes prevents the passive viewing death spiral.

Give breakout rooms a specific task: “Discuss how this applies to your team. You have 90 seconds.”

Short timeframes create urgency and prevent off-topic drift.

The Technology Setup That Commands Authority

Now we can talk about tech — but strategically, not generically.

Audio Quality Trumps Video Quality

People will tolerate mediocre video. Bad audio kills credibility instantly.

Get a dedicated microphone. Even a £30 USB microphone dramatically outperforms your laptop’s built-in mic. The difference is immediate and obvious to your audience.

Test your audio before every important presentation. Not just “can they hear me” but “do I sound professional?”

Lighting: The One-Light Setup

Forget complicated three-point lighting setups. You need one thing: a light source in front of your face.

This can be a window (face the window, don’t sit with your back to it) or a simple ring light or desk lamp positioned behind your monitor.

The goal: even illumination on your face, no harsh shadows, no backlight turning you into a silhouette.

Background: Boring Beats Busy

A plain wall beats a cluttered home office. A professional virtual background beats a distracting real one.

But here’s what matters more than either: consistency. Use the same background every time. This builds recognition and professionalism.

I’ve used the same slightly blurred bookshelf background for three years. It’s not exciting. But it’s become part of my professional presence.

Opening a Virtual Presentation: The First 30 Seconds

Your opening matters even more virtually. You have seconds before people start multitasking.

Start with your camera on, slides off. Make human connection before showing content.

Skip the housekeeping. “Can everyone hear me? I’ll share my screen now…” is a waste of precious attention. Test tech before; assume it works.

Open with a hook, not an agenda. “Today I’ll cover three things…” is invisible. “We’re losing £2 million a month to a problem nobody’s talking about…” stops the scroll.

For more on powerful openings, see my complete guide: How to Open a Presentation.

Ready to master virtual openings that stop the multitasking? My Public Speaking Cheat Sheets (£14.99) include a dedicated virtual presentations quick-reference guide.

Handling Q&A in Virtual Presentations

Q&A is where virtual presentations often collapse. The awkward silence. The “you’re on mute” dance. People talking over each other.

Here’s how to manage it:

Seed questions in advance. Ask one or two trusted participants to prepare questions. This breaks the ice and encourages others.

Use the chat for question collection. “Drop your questions in chat. I’ll answer the most common ones.” This removes the unmuting barrier and lets you curate.

Name people before unmuting them. “Sarah, I saw your question in chat — let me unmute you.” This prevents the chaos of multiple people unmuting simultaneously.

Have a closing ready, not dependent on Q&A. If questions dry up, you need an exit that isn’t “Okay, I guess that’s it?” Prepare a strong closing statement you can deploy.

For more on handling difficult questions with confidence, see: Handle Difficult Questions in Presentations.

Presenting to executives virtually? My Executive Slide System (£39) includes virtual-specific templates designed for the compressed attention spans and higher stakes of remote executive presentations.

Platform-Specific Virtual Presentation Tips

Each platform has quirks. Quick essentials:

Zoom Presentations

Use “Hide Self View” to avoid the distraction of watching yourself. Enable “Touch up my appearance” if you’re tired (subtle but effective). Use Spotlight to keep your video prominent during slides.

For deep dive: Zoom Presentation Tips

Microsoft Teams Presentations

Teams compresses video more aggressively — high contrast visuals matter even more. Use PowerPoint Live for better slide control. The “Together Mode” can reduce Zoom fatigue for longer sessions.

For deep dive: Teams Presentation Tips

Google Meet Presentations

More limited features, but lower bandwidth requirements. Good for international audiences with variable connections. Use the “Pin” feature to control what participants see.

The Virtual Presentation Checklist

Before every important virtual presentation, run through this:

24 hours before: Test all technology on the actual platform. Send calendar invite with clear join instructions. Prepare backup contact method if tech fails.

1 hour before: Close unnecessary applications. Silence phone and notifications. Check lighting and camera framing. Have water nearby.

5 minutes before: Join early to greet people as they arrive. Confirm audio and video working. Have slides ready but not shared. Take three deep breaths.

During: 10-minute attention resets. Camera eye contact at key moments. Energy level +30%. Watch chat for questions and engagement.

Common Virtual Presentation Tips Mistakes to Avoid

After training thousands of professionals on virtual presenting, these are the mistakes I see constantly:

Reading slides. Even worse on video than in person. Your audience can read faster than you can speak.

No interaction for 30+ minutes. You’ve lost them by minute 12. Build in engagement every 10 minutes.

Over-apologising for technology. “Sorry, let me just… sorry, can you see this… sorry…” Projects incompetence. Handle tech smoothly or ignore minor glitches.

Ending weakly. “So, yeah, that’s basically it. Any questions? No? Okay, bye.” Have a prepared closing statement that ends with impact, regardless of Q&A.

Forgetting the post-presentation follow-up. Send a summary email within 24 hours. Include key points, any resources mentioned, and clear next steps.

Take Your Virtual Presentations From Surviving to Commanding

Virtual presenting isn’t going away. If anything, hybrid work means you’ll present through screens more often, not less.

The professionals who master these virtual presentation tips will have an enormous advantage — because most people won’t bother. They’ll keep using their in-person approach and wondering why engagement keeps dropping.

You now have the framework. The 10-minute rule. The camera presence techniques. The engagement strategies. The technology setup. What you do with it is up to you.

Want to master presentation skills systematically? My Executive Buy-In Presentation System includes dedicated modules on virtual presenting, plus live practice sessions where you’ll get real-time feedback on your camera presence and remote engagement.

Get weekly presentation tips that actually work: Join 2,000+ professionals getting my Wednesday newsletter — real techniques from real client work, not recycled theory. Subscribe free here.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long should a virtual presentation be?

Aim for 20-25 minutes of content with 5-10 minutes for Q&A. If you must go longer, build in interaction every 10 minutes and consider breaking into multiple sessions. Attention spans are significantly shorter virtually than in person.

Should I use a virtual background?

A professional virtual background is better than a distracting real background. But a clean, simple real background is best of all. Whatever you choose, use it consistently to build professional recognition.

How do I keep people engaged when I can’t see their faces?

Use polls and chat to create visible engagement. Ask specific people by name to contribute. Build in breakout discussions for longer sessions. And accept that some disengagement is inevitable — focus on making your content valuable enough that people want to stay focused.

What’s the biggest mistake in virtual presentations?

Treating them like in-person presentations. The attention dynamics are completely different. You need shorter segments, more interaction, higher energy, and simpler visuals. Adapt your entire approach, don’t just turn on your webcam.

How do I handle technical problems during a presentation?

Have a backup plan: phone number for audio, colleague who can take over screen sharing, pre-sent materials participants can reference. When problems occur, stay calm, briefly acknowledge the issue, and keep going. Over-apologising makes it worse.