Also analyzed in: 8 other industries
Analyzed: 2026-04-22
Model: OpenAI GPT-5
Prompts run:
Total responses:
Overall AI Visibility?
47
/ 100
Present

Geometric mean of LBA, Authority and TOM. Penalises any single weak metric.

Latent Brand Association?
79
/ 100
Product-Strong

What the model believes about Webex without web search.

LLM Authority?
22
/ 100
Marginal

Frequency × prominence across organic category prompts.

Top of Mind?
56
/ 100
Specialty-Recall

Unprompted recall on high-volume discovery prompts.

Metric 1 of 3 Latent Brand Association?

Measures what GPT-5 believes about Webex from training alone, before any web search. We probe the model 5 times across 5 different angles and score 5 sub-signals.

LBA Score
79/100
Product-Strong
Quality?
0.66
Meta-factor?
1.00
Familiarity?
0.78
Top associations for Webex
enterprise-grade security 6 reliable video meetings 3 audio and video glitches 3 Cisco ecosystem integration 2 tight Cisco integration 2 collaboration tools 2 large organization fit 2 less simple than Zoom 2 enterprise-grade security 2 less intuitive interface 2 strong reliability 2 online meetings 2 webinars and screen sharing 2 strong admin controls 2 reliable video meetings 2
Control prompt (category baseline)
screen sharing 3 screen sharing 2 easy video calls 2 small business meetings 2 built-in chat 2 small business focus 1 simple video conferencing 1 easy-to-use video conferencing 1 simple remote collaboration 1 cross-device access 1

High overlap with brand prompts shows Webex is firmly in the model's "small business video meeting app" category.

Sample model responses
Prompt: What is Webex known for?

Webex is known for video conferencing and online meeting software, plus tools for webinars, team collaboration, calling, and virtual events.

Iteration: 1 of 5
Prompt: What is Webex known for?

Webex is known for video conferencing and online collaboration tools, including meetings, webinars, calling, and team messaging.

Iteration: 2 of 5

Metric 2 of 3 LLM Authority?

Frequency × prominence across organic category prompts where users ask category questions and AI recommends brands. Measured both with and without web search, then averaged 50/50.

Authority Score
22/100
Marginal
Recall mode (no web)?
22

What the model recalls from training without searching the web.

Retrieval mode (with web)?
23

What the model returns when it can search live web sources.

IntentPromptRecall pos.Retrieval pos.
discovery What are the best video meeting apps for client calls in a small business? not mentioned #5
discovery Which meeting apps work best for internal team check-ins? #5 not mentioned
discovery What video conferencing apps are good for remote sales teams? not mentioned #4
discovery What are the best meeting apps for freelancers and consultants? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which video meeting apps are best for customer support calls? #4 #3
discovery What are the best video meeting tools for hiring interviews? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What meeting apps are easiest for non-technical employees? #4 #4
discovery What are the best video meeting apps for one-on-one meetings? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery Which meeting platforms are best for webinars and small online events? not mentioned #3
discovery What are the best video call apps for distributed teams? #5 #4
discovery What are the best meeting apps for small law firms? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best meeting apps for real estate teams? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What video meeting apps work well on a budget? #5 not mentioned
discovery Which meeting apps are good for quick daily standups? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best meeting apps with calendar scheduling? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best video meeting apps with screen sharing? #4 #4
discovery Which meeting apps are best for collaborating on presentations? #6 #4
discovery What are the best video meeting apps for small agencies? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What meeting apps are best for board meetings at small companies? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What are the best online meeting tools for growing teams? #6 #6
comparison What are the best alternatives to the leading enterprise video meeting platforms for small businesses? not mentioned #3
comparison What are the best alternatives to expensive video conferencing software for small teams? #4 not mentioned
comparison Which are better for small businesses: lightweight meeting apps or full collaboration suites? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to feature-heavy meeting platforms for simple team calls? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to paid meeting software for tiny teams? #6 #3
comparison What are the best alternatives to webinar-focused platforms for everyday meetings? not mentioned #4
comparison What are the best alternatives to desktop-only meeting tools for remote teams? #6 not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to corporate meeting platforms for startups? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to complicated video conferencing systems? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to all-in-one communication suites for small businesses? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I host professional video calls for clients with a small team? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How can I set up recurring team meetings without hassle? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I share my screen during a business meeting? #4 #4
problem How can I schedule video meetings with clients easily? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I run online meetings with remote employees? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I make video calls look more professional for sales demos? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How can I avoid technical issues in small business video meetings? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I keep meeting links and invitations organized? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How can I invite outside guests to a team meeting? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I choose a video meeting app that works for low-bandwidth connections? #4 not mentioned
transactional What is the cheapest video meeting app for small businesses? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Are there free video meeting apps for small teams? #4 #4
transactional What video meeting apps have free plans for businesses? #4 not mentioned
transactional How much do small business video meeting apps cost? #4 not mentioned
transactional What are the best low-cost video conferencing tools? #5 #6
transactional Which meeting apps are worth paying for on a small budget? #5 not mentioned
transactional What video meeting apps include scheduling and screen sharing in the free tier? #4 #4
transactional Which affordable meeting platforms are best for growing teams? #5 #4
transactional What are the best value video meeting apps for small businesses? #4 #5
transactional Do any video meeting apps offer monthly pricing for small teams? not mentioned #2
Sample responses
Prompt: What are the best video meeting apps for client calls in a small business? · discovery · retrieval mode

For a small business doing client calls, the best picks are usually:

  • Zoom Workplace Pro — best all-around choice for polished client meetings; paid plans remove the 40-minute limit and include up to 30-hour meetings, plus AI Companion and strong meeting controls. (zoom.com)
  • Google Meet (with Google Workspace Business Starter/Standard) — best if your team already uses Gmail/Calendar/Drive; Business Starter includes 100-participant meetings, and Business Standard adds recording and noise cancellation with 150 participants. (workspace.google.com)
  • Microsoft Teams Essentials — best value if you use Microsoft 365 or want built-in chat/docs; it includes unlimited meetings, recordings/transcripts, up to 300 participants, and 10 GB storage for $4/user/month annual. (microsoft.com)
  • Webex Meet — best for security-heavy or more enterprise-style client calls; paid meetings support up to 200 attendees, with recordings, breakout rooms, and screen sharing. (webex.com)

My quick recommendation:

  • Best overall: Zoom
  • Best if you live in Google Workspace: Google Meet
  • Best budget pick: Teams Essentials
  • Best for security/compliance: Webex

If you want, I can also narrow this down by budget, ease of joining for clients, or whether you already use Google/Microsoft.

Prompt: Which meeting apps work best for internal team check-ins? · discovery · recall mode

For internal team check-ins, the best meeting apps are usually the ones that are fast to join, easy to schedule, and good for recurring calls.

Top picks:

  • Zoom — best all-around for reliable video, easy recurring meetings, and good breakout/recording options.
  • Google Meet — best if your team already uses Google Workspace; simple, lightweight, quick to join.
  • Microsoft Teams — best for companies already on Microsoft 365; great for chat + meetings in one place.
  • Slack Huddles — best for very casual, ad hoc team check-ins; super fast for quick audio/video conversations.
  • Cisco Webex — solid for larger companies that want strong meeting controls and security.

Best choice by team type:

  • Small, fast-moving teams: Slack Huddles or Google Meet
  • Mid-size teams: Zoom
  • Microsoft-heavy orgs: Microsoft Teams
  • Enterprise/security-focused: Webex or Teams

If you want, I can also give you the best app for your team size and budget.

Metric 3 of 3 Top of Mind?

Unprompted recall on 15 high-volume discovery prompts, run 5 times each in pure recall mode (no web). Brands that surface here are baked into the model's training, not borrowed from live search.

TOM Score
56/100
Specialty-Recall
Discovery promptVolumeAppearedPositions (5 runs)
What are the best small business video meeting apps? 0 4/5 4, 4, 5, 5
What are the top video meeting apps for small businesses? 0 5/5 6, 5, 6, 6, 5
Which video meeting apps are most popular for small teams? 0 5/5 5, 5, 5, 6, 6
What are the most recommended video meeting apps for businesses? 0 5/5 4, 4, 4, 4, 4
What are the best video conferencing tools for small businesses? 0 4/5 5, 5, 5, 4
Which online meeting apps are best for small businesses? 0 0/5
What are the best affordable video meeting apps for teams? 0 4/5 4, 4, 7, 4
What video meeting apps are easiest for small business teams to use? 0 2/5 5, 4
What are the best video meeting platforms for startups? 0 2/5 7, 5
What are the top online meeting platforms for small teams? 0 4/5 4, 4, 4, 4
What are the best Zoom alternatives for small businesses? 0 5/5 5, 5, 4, 4, 5
What are the best team video call apps for small companies? 0 0/5
What are the best business meeting apps with screen sharing? 0 5/5 4, 4, 4, 4, 4
What are the best video chat apps for work meetings? 0 5/5 4, 4, 4, 4, 4
What are the best meeting apps for remote small businesses? 0 0/5
Sample recall responses
Prompt: What are the best small business video meeting apps? (no web search)

Here are the best small-business video meeting apps:

  1. Zoom Meetings

Best overall for ease of use, reliability, and features. Great for client calls, webinars, breakout rooms, and screen sharing.

  1. Google Meet

Best if your team already uses Google Workspace. Simple, solid, and works well in-browser with little setup.

  1. Microsoft Teams

Best for businesses on Microsoft 365. Strong for meetings plus chat, file sharing, and internal collaboration.

  1. Cisco Webex Meetings

Best for security and larger organizations. Good audio/video quality and strong admin controls.

  1. RingCentral Video

Best for phone-centric small businesses. Nice if you already use RingCentral for business calling.

  1. GoTo Meeting

Best for straightforward professional meetings. Reliable and easy for external clients to join.

Quick pick:

  • Best overall: Zoom
  • Best for Google users: Google Meet
  • Best for Microsoft users: Teams

If you want, I can also rank them by price, ease of use, or security.

Iteration: 1 of 5
Prompt: What are the best small business video meeting apps? (no web search)

Here are the best small-business video meeting apps right now:

  1. Zoom Meetings
    • Best overall for ease of use, reliability, and features
    • Great for client calls, webinars, breakout rooms, recording
    • Best if you want the most familiar option
  2. Google Meet
    • Best if your team already uses Google Workspace
    • Simple, lightweight, strong calendar/Gmail integration
    • Best for fast internal meetings
  3. Microsoft Teams
    • Best for businesses using Microsoft 365
    • Excellent for chat + meetings + file sharing in one place
    • Best for companies that want an all-in-one platform
  4. Cisco Webex
    • Best for security, compliance, and larger teams
    • Strong meeting controls and enterprise-grade reliability
    • Good if privacy and admin features matter
  5. GoTo Meeting
    • Best for straightforward professional meetings
    • Solid screen sharing, recording, and scheduling tools
    • Good for client-facing service businesses
  6. RingCentral Video
    • Best if you want phone + video in one system
    • Works well for small teams that need unified communications

My quick picks:

  • Best overall: Zoom
  • Best for Google users: Google Meet
  • Best for Microsoft users: Teams
  • Best simple alternative: GoTo Meeting

If you want, I can also give you the best free options or the best app for 1–10 person teams.

Iteration: 2 of 5

What to do next Recommendations for Webex

Generated automatically from gaps and weaknesses in the analysis above, ranked by potential impact on the AI Visibility Score.

Enter the category conversation

Your Authority is low across category queries. Users asking about your category do not see you. Priority: get listed in "best of" and "top N" articles for your category on domains with strong training-data crawl presence.

+10 to +25 on Authority

Protect and reinforce your LBA

Your LBA is strong. Focus on maintaining authoritative coverage and ensuring new product launches get independent reviews within 12 months of release.

Maintain current LBA

Identify and shore up oscillating differentiators

Core TOM is strong. Watch for specific differentiators (slogans, signature products) that appear in only some iterations. Push those into training-data-crawled headlines.

Maintain / refine TOM

How is this calculated? Methodology

Every score on this page is reproducible. Below is exactly what we ran and how we computed each number.

Overall AI Visibility Score
Smoothed geometric mean of LBA, Authority and TOM. Authority and TOM are floored at LBA × 0.1 before the geometric mean (the same floor used in the per-metric cards above, so brand cards and the composite tell the same story). Formula: composite = ((LBA + 5)(Authority + 5)(TOM + 5))^(1/3) - 5. The floor keeps brands the model clearly recognises but doesn't yet recommend from collapsing to zero, while a single genuinely weak metric still pulls the composite down. Full methodology.
Latent Brand Association (LBA)
5 brand probes + 1 control prompt, each run 5 times in recall mode (no web search). LBA = quality × meta × stability × share × recognition × 100. Each sub-signal is on a 0-1 scale. Read the full LBA methodology →
LLM Authority
50 organic category prompts (discovery, comparison, problem and transactional intents), each run once in recall mode and once in retrieval mode. Score = frequency × log-decayed prominence × intent weight, then 50/50 averaged across the two modes. Prompts are shared across all brands in the industry. Read the full Authority methodology →
Top of Mind (TOM)
15 high-volume discovery prompts (sourced from Keywords Everywhere search-volume data), each run 5 times in pure recall mode (no web). Score = frequency × (0.5 + 0.5 × log-prominence), volume-weighted. Prompts are shared across all brands in the industry. Read the full TOM methodology →

Analysis run on April 22, 2026 at 7:58 PM

All 210 AI responses for Webex

Click a prompt to expand its responses. 210 total responses across 72 prompts.

LBA — Latent Brand Association (6 prompts)

What is Webex known for?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Webex is known for video conferencing and online meeting software, plus tools for webinars, team collaboration, calling, and virtual events.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Webex is known for video conferencing and online collaboration tools, including meetings, webinars, calling, and team messaging.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Webex is known for video conferencing, online meetings, webinars, and collaboration tools.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Webex is best known for video conferencing and online meetings, along with collaboration tools like screen sharing, messaging, and webinars.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Webex is known for video conferencing, online meetings, webinars, and collaboration tools for businesses and teams.

What are Webex's main strengths and weaknesses?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Webex’s main strengths are strong enterprise security/compliance, reliable large-meeting performance, good admin/IT controls, and tight integration with Cisco hardware and enterprise workflows. It’s especially attractive for organizations that want a very managed, corporate-grade collaboration platform.

Its main weaknesses are a less intuitive user experience than some rivals, slower perceived innovation, and weaker popularity/adoption outside Cisco-heavy enterprises. It can also feel heavier or more complex to set up and use compared with simpler, consumer-friendly tools.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Webex’s main strengths are:

  • Strong enterprise-grade security and compliance
  • Reliable video conferencing and calling for large organizations
  • Good meeting features like breakout rooms, screen sharing, recording, and webinars
  • Tight integration with Cisco networking and collaboration products
  • Solid admin controls and scalability for IT-managed deployments

Main weaknesses are:

  • Interface can feel less intuitive than some competitors
  • Heavier, more “enterprise” feel rather than lightweight and simple
  • Can be more expensive or complex to deploy and manage
  • Brand momentum and user preference often lag behind Zoom or Microsoft Teams in some markets
  • Fewer people are familiar with it for casual or small-team use
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Webex’s main strengths are:

  • Strong enterprise-grade security and compliance
  • Reliable video and audio quality, especially for large organizations
  • Deep integration with Cisco hardware and IT environments
  • Broad collaboration features: meetings, calling, webinars, messaging, and events
  • Good admin controls, scalability, and meeting management tools

Main weaknesses are:

  • Can feel more complex and less intuitive than simpler competitors
  • Interface and user experience are sometimes seen as less modern
  • Best value is often in Cisco-centric or large enterprise setups, so it may be overkill for smaller teams
  • Some users report friction with setup, updates, or joining meetings compared with more lightweight tools
  • Brand perception is sometimes weaker than Zoom or Microsoft Teams in everyday office use
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Webex’s main strengths are its strong enterprise-grade security, reliable video conferencing, solid admin controls, and deep integrations with Cisco hardware and enterprise IT environments. It’s especially good for large organizations that need compliance, scalability, and meeting, calling, and contact-center tools in one ecosystem.

Its main weaknesses are that it can feel more complex and less intuitive than simpler competitors, with a heavier setup/administration burden. Some users also find the interface less polished or innovative than Zoom or Microsoft Teams, and it may be less appealing for smaller teams that want a lightweight, easy-to-use meeting tool.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Webex’s main strengths are its enterprise-grade security, strong reliability for large organizations, and a broad collaboration suite that includes meetings, calling, messaging, and webinars. It also integrates well with business workflows and is familiar to many corporate IT teams.

Its main weaknesses are that it can feel more complex and less intuitive than some rivals, its interface and experience have sometimes been seen as less modern, and it can be pricey for smaller teams. In a crowded market, it also faces strong competition from Zoom, Microsoft Teams, and Google Meet.

Who should use Webex? Who should avoid it?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Webex is best for teams and organizations that need reliable video meetings, webinars, screen sharing, and enterprise-grade security—especially for remote/hybrid work, customer meetings, training, and large internal collaboration.

People should avoid it if they only need very simple casual calls, want the lightest/most playful experience, or are looking for a tool that’s mainly optimized for social messaging rather than formal meetings. It may also feel like overkill for small groups that don’t need its business features.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Webex is best for teams and organizations that need reliable video meetings, webinars, screen sharing, and enterprise-grade security—especially companies already using Cisco tools, remote/hybrid teams, customer support, sales, education, and healthcare. It’s a good fit when you care about meeting controls, compliance, and large meetings.

People who may want to avoid it are solo users or very small teams who only need simple, casual video calls, users who want the lightest/cheapest option, or teams that prefer a more consumer-friendly interface and already live in another collaboration ecosystem (like Google or Microsoft).

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Webex is best for teams, businesses, schools, and organizations that need reliable video meetings, webinars, screen sharing, and enterprise-style collaboration—especially if they already use Cisco tools or care about security and admin controls.

You should avoid it if you want the simplest, most casual, low-cost option for small personal calls, or if you prefer a more lightweight app with a very minimal interface and fewer enterprise features.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Webex is best for teams and organizations that need reliable video meetings, webinars, calling, and collaboration—especially businesses already using Cisco tools or needing strong enterprise security and admin controls.

Who should use it:

  • Companies of any size running frequent meetings or remote/hybrid work
  • Enterprises that value security, compliance, and centralized IT management
  • Teams that need webinars, large meetings, phone integration, or room devices
  • Organizations already invested in Cisco networking/collaboration products

Who should avoid it:

  • Very small teams or individuals who only need simple, low-cost video calls
  • Groups that prefer a more lightweight, consumer-friendly interface
  • Users who don’t need advanced admin, security, or enterprise features
  • Teams that want the simplest possible setup and learning curve

In short: Webex is a strong fit for business and enterprise collaboration, but may be more than casual users need.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Webex is best for organizations and teams that need reliable video meetings, webinars, calling, and collaboration—especially medium to large businesses, remote or hybrid teams, customer-facing teams, schools, and enterprises that care about security, admin controls, and integrations.

People who may want to avoid it are those who only need very casual, occasional video calls, want the simplest possible consumer app, or are on a tight budget and don’t need enterprise features. It can also be a poor fit if your team already standardizes on another collaboration platform and doesn’t want a separate tool.

How does Webex compare to its main competitors?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Webex is generally strongest in enterprise-grade security, reliability, and compliance, especially for large organizations and regulated industries. Compared with Zoom, Webex often feels more formal and feature-heavy, while Zoom is usually viewed as simpler and easier to adopt. Against Microsoft Teams, Webex is less tightly integrated into a broader productivity suite, but Webex can be better as a dedicated meetings platform; Teams wins when a company already lives in Microsoft 365. Compared with Google Meet, Webex tends to offer more advanced meeting controls and enterprise administration, while Meet is lighter and easier for casual use. Against GoTo Meeting, Webex is usually considered more robust and scalable for big enterprises. Overall: Webex is a top choice for security, governance, and large-scale business use, but it can be less intuitive and less cost-competitive than some rivals.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Webex is generally strongest as an enterprise-grade video conferencing and collaboration platform. Compared with its main competitors:

  • Zoom: Webex is often seen as stronger for large enterprises, security, compliance, and admin controls. Zoom is usually simpler, more popular for quick meetings, and often easier to use.
  • Microsoft Teams: Teams is better if a company already lives in Microsoft 365, since chat, files, and meetings are tightly integrated. Webex is often preferred for dedicated meeting quality and Cisco-centric enterprise environments.
  • Google Meet: Meet is lightweight and easy, but Webex usually offers more advanced meeting and admin features for larger organizations.
  • Slack: Slack is mainly for messaging and teamwork, not full-scale video meetings; Webex is much stronger for meetings and webinars.
  • GoTo Meeting / RingCentral: Webex is typically more robust for large-scale enterprise use, though competitors may be simpler or cheaper.

Overall: Webex competes best on security, reliability, compliance, and enterprise controls. It usually loses to Zoom on simplicity and to Teams on ecosystem integration.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Webex is generally strongest in enterprise security, compliance, and deep meeting-room hardware integration, especially for large organizations already using Cisco. Compared with key competitors:

  • Zoom: usually simpler, more polished for quick meetings and external collaboration; Webex is often better for IT control, security, and enterprise deployments.
  • Microsoft Teams: stronger if a company is centered on Microsoft 365 and needs chat, files, and meetings in one place; Webex often offers a better dedicated meeting experience and stronger room-system heritage.
  • Google Meet: easier and lightweight, but less feature-rich for advanced enterprise calling and device management; Webex is more robust for large-scale business use.

In short: Webex is a top choice for regulated, IT-managed, enterprise environments. It is less dominant than Zoom in ease of use and less integrated than Teams in Microsoft-heavy workplaces.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Webex is generally strongest in enterprise-grade security, reliability, and tight integration with Cisco networking/collaboration tools. It’s a solid choice for large organizations, regulated industries, and customers already using Cisco.

Compared with main competitors:

  • Zoom: Zoom is usually seen as easier to use, with a simpler interface and very strong video quality. Webex is often better for enterprise controls, compliance, and deeper admin features.
  • Microsoft Teams: Teams wins when a company is already on Microsoft 365 because of seamless docs/chat/calendar integration. Webex is typically better as a dedicated meeting platform and can feel cleaner for external meetings.
  • Google Meet: Meet is lightweight and easy for Google Workspace users. Webex usually offers more advanced meeting controls, security, and enterprise conferencing features.

Overall: Webex is an enterprise-focused, security-first platform, while Zoom is the usability leader and Teams is the collaboration-suite leader.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Webex is generally strongest in enterprise-grade security, reliability, and deep meeting/collaboration features, especially for large organizations already using Cisco. Its main competitors are Microsoft Teams, Zoom, and Google Meet.

  • vs Microsoft Teams: Teams is usually better if a company lives in Microsoft 365, since chat, docs, and meetings are tightly integrated. Webex is often seen as simpler for meetings and stronger in some advanced enterprise calling/contact-center use cases.
  • vs Zoom: Zoom is often preferred for ease of use, quick setup, and a very polished meeting experience. Webex is typically more enterprise-focused, with stronger administration, security controls, and Cisco ecosystem integration.
  • vs Google Meet: Meet is easy and lightweight, especially for Google Workspace users, but Webex usually offers more advanced meeting controls and enterprise features.

Overall: Webex is a top-tier enterprise collaboration platform, but it usually loses on popularity and everyday simplicity to Zoom, and on suite integration to Teams.

What do people typically complain about with Webex?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

People typically complain that Webex can be clunky or unintuitive, has a heavier desktop/app experience, and can be more prone to audio/video glitches or connection issues than some competitors. Common gripes also include frequent updates, occasional login or meeting-join friction, and a UI that feels dated or overly complex for simple meetings.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

People typically complain that Webex can feel clunky or less intuitive than competitors, with a dated interface and too many clicks for common tasks. Others mention occasional audio/video glitches, meeting join issues, heavy CPU usage, and notification/scheduling quirks. In larger organizations, complaints also include admin complexity and inconsistent experience across devices.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

People often complain that Webex can feel clunky or unintuitive, with a busy interface and more steps than alternatives. Common issues include audio/video glitches, meeting join problems, occasional lag, heavy system resource use, and friction around updates or desktop app installs. Some also dislike its file sharing, chat/search, and admin settings compared with simpler tools.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

People typically complain that Webex is clunky or unintuitive, has occasional audio/video glitches, can be resource-heavy on computers, and sometimes makes joining meetings or managing invites more cumbersome than competitors. Some also mention inconsistent call quality, admin complexity, and higher cost for certain features.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

People commonly complain that Webex can feel clunky or unintuitive, with a steeper learning curve than some competitors. Other frequent complaints include occasional audio/video lag or connectivity issues, a bulky desktop app, notification or login problems, and meeting/admin settings that can be confusing. Some users also dislike the interface compared with Zoom or Teams.

What is a typical small business video meeting app known for? control
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

It’s typically known for simple, reliable video conferencing for small teams—easy meeting setup, screen sharing, and online collaboration.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

A typical small business video meeting app is known for easy video calls, screen sharing, chat, recording, and simple joining for clients or teams.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

A typical small-business video meeting app is known for easy online meetings, screen sharing, chat, and simple scheduling/joining from any device.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

A typical small business video meeting app is known for easy video calls, screen sharing, chat, and simple remote collaboration.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

A typical small business video meeting app is known for easy-to-use video conferencing, screen sharing, chat, and remote collaboration.

Authority — LLM Authority (50 prompts)

What are the best video meeting apps for client calls in a small business? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

For small business client calls, the best picks are usually:

  1. Zoom Workplace
    • Best overall for reliability, ease of use, and client familiarity.
    • Good screen sharing, recording, breakout rooms, and scheduling.
    • Best if you want the fewest “how do I join?” issues.
  2. Google Meet
    • Best if you already use Google Workspace.
    • Simple, fast, browser-based, and easy for clients to join.
    • Great for straightforward calls without extra complexity.
  3. Microsoft Teams
    • Best if your business runs on Microsoft 365.
    • Strong for calendar integration, chat, file sharing, and internal collaboration.
    • Slightly heavier than Zoom/Meet for external client calls.
  4. Whereby
    • Best for a polished, client-friendly experience.
    • Very easy to join in a browser with minimal friction.
    • Great for consultants, agencies, and service businesses.
  5. RingCentral Video
    • Best if you want video calls plus business phone features in one platform.
    • Useful for teams that need calling, messaging, and meetings together.

My quick recommendation:

  • Best overall: Zoom Workplace
  • Best for simplicity: Google Meet
  • Best for client-facing polish: Whereby
  • Best for Microsoft users: Teams

If you want, I can also give you the best choice by business type (agency, law firm, coach, sales team, etc.).

retrieval Mentioned

For a small business doing client calls, the best picks are usually:

  • Zoom Workplace Pro — best all-around choice for polished client meetings; paid plans remove the 40-minute limit and include up to 30-hour meetings, plus AI Companion and strong meeting controls. (zoom.com)
  • Google Meet (with Google Workspace Business Starter/Standard) — best if your team already uses Gmail/Calendar/Drive; Business Starter includes 100-participant meetings, and Business Standard adds recording and noise cancellation with 150 participants. (workspace.google.com)
  • Microsoft Teams Essentials — best value if you use Microsoft 365 or want built-in chat/docs; it includes unlimited meetings, recordings/transcripts, up to 300 participants, and 10 GB storage for $4/user/month annual. (microsoft.com)
  • Webex Meet — best for security-heavy or more enterprise-style client calls; paid meetings support up to 200 attendees, with recordings, breakout rooms, and screen sharing. (webex.com)

My quick recommendation:

  • Best overall: Zoom
  • Best if you live in Google Workspace: Google Meet
  • Best budget pick: Teams Essentials
  • Best for security/compliance: Webex

If you want, I can also narrow this down by budget, ease of joining for clients, or whether you already use Google/Microsoft.

Which meeting apps work best for internal team check-ins? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For internal team check-ins, the best meeting apps are usually the ones that are fast to join, easy to schedule, and good for recurring calls.

Top picks:

  • Zoom — best all-around for reliable video, easy recurring meetings, and good breakout/recording options.
  • Google Meet — best if your team already uses Google Workspace; simple, lightweight, quick to join.
  • Microsoft Teams — best for companies already on Microsoft 365; great for chat + meetings in one place.
  • Slack Huddles — best for very casual, ad hoc team check-ins; super fast for quick audio/video conversations.
  • Cisco Webex — solid for larger companies that want strong meeting controls and security.

Best choice by team type:

  • Small, fast-moving teams: Slack Huddles or Google Meet
  • Mid-size teams: Zoom
  • Microsoft-heavy orgs: Microsoft Teams
  • Enterprise/security-focused: Webex or Teams

If you want, I can also give you the best app for your team size and budget.

retrieval Not mentioned

For internal team check-ins, these are usually the best picks:

  • Slack Huddles — best for fast, informal check-ins inside a chat-first team. You can start a huddle right in Slack, use video/screen share, and keep notes in the thread. (slack.com)
  • Microsoft Teams — best if your team already lives in Microsoft 365. Teams has meeting chat, collaborative notes, transcripts, AI recaps, and action-item support. (support.microsoft.com)
  • Google Meet — best for teams centered on Google Workspace. It integrates cleanly with Calendar and now has scheduling/help-me-schedule features plus AI meeting features in Workspace. (workspace.google.com)
  • Zoom Workplace — best if you want a strong all-in-one meeting + chat setup. Zoom links meetings with Team Chat, continuous meeting chat, summaries, and action-item workflows. (zoom.com)

My quick take:

  • Small, frequent check-ins: Slack Huddles
  • Enterprise/internal ops: Microsoft Teams
  • Google-first orgs: Google Meet
  • If you want the most polished meeting workflow: Zoom

If you want, I can narrow this to best free option, best for remote teams, or best for 5–10 minute daily standups.

What video conferencing apps are good for remote sales teams? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

For remote sales teams, the best video conferencing apps are usually the ones that make it easy to join fast, record calls, integrate with CRM, and support screen sharing + meeting notes.

Good options:

  • Zoom Meetings — best all-around choice; reliable, easy for customers to join, strong recording and webinar options.
  • Microsoft Teams — best if your team already uses Microsoft 365; great internal collaboration and calendar integration.
  • Google Meet — simple and lightweight; best for teams using Google Workspace.
  • RingCentral MVP — strong for sales teams that want calling + video + messaging in one place.
  • Dialpad Meetings — good if you want AI features like live transcription and call summaries.
  • GoTo Meeting — solid for professional sales demos and screen sharing.
  • Whereby — very easy browser-based meetings; good for low-friction client calls.

If I had to pick:

  • Best overall: Zoom
  • Best for Microsoft users: Teams
  • Best for Google users: Google Meet
  • Best sales-focused all-in-one: RingCentral MVP or Dialpad

If you want, I can also rank these for sales demos, outbound prospecting, or team coaching.

retrieval Mentioned

For remote sales teams, the best choices are usually:

  • Zoom — strong all-around choice for external customer calls, with AI meeting summaries and sales-friendly workflow features. (news.zoom.com)
  • Microsoft Teams — best if your team already lives in Microsoft 365; it supports recording, transcription, and sales meeting insights via Copilot for Sales. (support.microsoft.com)
  • Google Meet — good if you use Google Workspace; it supports recordings, transcripts, long meetings, and large meetings on eligible plans. (workspace.google.com)
  • Cisco Webex — a solid enterprise option, especially if security and AI summaries/action items matter. (webex.com)

My quick pick:

  • Best overall: Zoom
  • Best for Microsoft shops: Teams
  • Best for Google shops: Meet
  • Best for large enterprise/security-heavy teams: Webex

If you want, I can also rank them for sales calls, demo meetings, recording/transcription, or CRM integration.

What are the best meeting apps for freelancers and consultants? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

For freelancers and consultants, the best meeting stack is usually:

  1. Calendly — best for booking and scheduling
    • Easy client self-booking
    • Auto time-zone handling
    • Great with Zoom, Google Meet, and Teams
  2. Zoom Workplace — best overall meeting app
    • Most familiar to clients
    • Reliable audio/video
    • Strong screen sharing and recording
    • Good breakout rooms and webinar options
  3. Google Meet — best if you live in Google Workspace
    • Simple, fast, no-fuss
    • Great for one-on-one and small team calls
    • Works well from email/calendar invites
  4. Microsoft Teams — best for enterprise clients
    • Ideal if your clients use Microsoft 365
    • Strong chat, file sharing, and meeting notes
    • Better for ongoing client collaboration than casual calls
  5. Whereby — best for lightweight client calls
    • No app download for guests
    • Clean, simple interface
    • Good for consultants who want an easy join link

Best combo for most freelancers:

  • Calendly + Zoom

or

  • Calendly + Google Meet

If you want, I can also give you the best free options or the best meeting apps for coaching, sales calls, or client workshops.

retrieval Not mentioned

If you mean scheduling/booking meetings, my top picks for freelancers and consultants are:

  1. Calendly — best all-around. Easy booking links, embeds, reminders, workflows, branding, and strong solo/small-team fit. (calendly.com)
  2. SavvyCal — best premium feel. Great for branded links, calendar overlay, buffers, preferred slots, and polished client booking. (savvycal.com)
  3. Cal.com — best if you want open-source/customizable scheduling and consulting workflows. (cal.com)
  4. Doodle — best for group scheduling and client polls, with booking pages, reminders, time-zone handling, and Stripe payments. (doodle.com)
  5. Microsoft Bookings — best if you already live in Microsoft 365/Teams. It ties into your calendar, supports customer booking pages, confirmations, and virtual meetings. (microsoft.com)

Quick recommendation

  • Most freelancers: Calendly
  • Most client-facing/brand-conscious consultants: SavvyCal
  • Most customizable/technical: Cal.com
  • Most group-heavy scheduling: Doodle
  • Microsoft 365 users: Microsoft Bookings

If you want, I can also give you the best free option, best paid option, or a side-by-side comparison.

Which video meeting apps are best for customer support calls? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Best video meeting apps for customer support calls:

  1. Zoom Meetings
    • Best overall for reliability, customer familiarity, and quick joining.
    • Good if you need screen sharing, remote control, and solid audio/video.
    • Also pairs well with Zoom Phone if support agents take calls too.
  2. Microsoft Teams
    • Best for businesses already using Microsoft 365.
    • Strong for internal support teams, secure sessions, and file sharing.
    • Works well if your support staff already live in Outlook/Teams.
  3. Google Meet
    • Best simple choice for lightweight support calls.
    • Easy for customers to join in-browser with low friction.
    • Good if your team uses Google Workspace.
  4. Cisco Webex
    • Best for enterprise-grade support and security.
    • Strong meeting controls, recording, and compliance options.
    • Good for larger support orgs.
  5. Whereby
    • Best for the smoothest customer experience.
    • Customers can join with minimal setup; very browser-friendly.
    • Nice for support teams that want a clean, branded call experience.

Best pick by use case

  • Most support teams: Zoom
  • Already on Microsoft 365: Teams
  • Fastest customer join experience: Whereby
  • Simplest free-ish option: Google Meet
  • Enterprise/security-heavy: Webex

If you want, I can also recommend the best app for support + screen sharing + co-browsing specifically.

retrieval Mentioned

For customer support calls, my top picks are:

  1. Zoom — best all-around for support teams. It has strong meeting controls like Waiting Room, breakout rooms, and live captions, and Zoom also offers Zoom Contact Center if you need true support routing/queuing plus video. (zoom.com)
  2. Microsoft Teams — best for Microsoft 365 shops. Teams Premium adds branded meetings, AI notes/recaps, and translated captions; Teams also supports queues and advanced calling features for support workflows. (support.microsoft.com)
  3. Webex — best for enterprise support. Webex Support is built for real-time customer service, with live chat + video conferencing, automatic routing, and remote support tools; Webex Contact Center adds omnichannel support. (webex.com)
  4. Google Meet — best if your team lives in Google Workspace. It has noise cancellation, live captions / translated captions, and longer group calls on eligible plans. (workspace.google.com)
  5. Whereby — best for the easiest customer join experience. Guests can join in the browser with no downloads or login, which is great for one-off support calls. (whereby.com)

Quick pick:

  • Most support teams: Zoom
  • Microsoft-heavy orgs: Teams
  • Enterprise/call-center style support: Webex
  • Simple guest video calls: Whereby
  • Google Workspace users: Google Meet (zoom.com)

If you want, I can narrow this down to small business, enterprise, or customer-facing support desk use cases.

What are the best video meeting tools for hiring interviews? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

For hiring interviews, the best tools usually depend on whether you want live interviews, recording/review, or async screening.

Best overall
  • Zoom — best all-around for live interviews. Very reliable, familiar to candidates, strong calendar integration, waiting rooms, breakout rooms, and good recording.
  • Google Meet — best if your team already uses Google Workspace. Simple, low-friction, and easy to join.
Best for structured hiring
  • HireVue — strong for enterprise hiring, especially if you want structured interviews, scorecards, and async video screening.
  • BrightHire — great for live interview note-taking, recording, collaboration, and reducing interviewer bias.
  • Talview — solid for end-to-end hiring workflows, including video interviewing and assessments.
Best for async video interviews
  • Spark Hire — one of the most popular for one-way video interviews.
  • HireVue — also excellent here, especially at larger companies.
Best for technical interviews
  • Zoom + CoderPad — common setup for live coding interviews.
  • Google Meet + CoderPad — simpler alternative if you prefer Google.
  • CodeSignal — better if you want built-in technical assessments plus live interview support.
My quick picks
  • Small team / general hiring: Zoom
  • Google-heavy team: Google Meet
  • High-volume hiring: HireVue or Spark Hire
  • Need interviewer notes + recording: BrightHire
  • Technical roles: Zoom + CoderPad

If you want, I can also give you the best tool by company size or a cheap vs enterprise shortlist.

retrieval Not mentioned

For hiring interviews, I’d split this into live interviews vs async one-way interviews:

  • Best overall for live interviews: Zoom — strong if you want a polished, reliable interview flow with waiting room, breakout rooms, and screen sharing. (zoom.com)
  • Best if your company already uses Google Workspace: Google Meet — it has waiting rooms, breakout rooms, and recording for eligible Workspace setups. (support.google.com)
  • Best if you’re a Microsoft shop: Microsoft Teams — it supports recording, live transcription, breakout rooms, and AI recaps through Copilot features. (support.microsoft.com)
  • Best for structured one-way interviews: HireVue — it’s built as a video interviewing platform for hiring teams. (hirevue.com)
  • Best SMB-friendly hiring platform: Spark Hire — it offers live and one-way video interviews and is geared specifically toward recruiting workflows. (support.sparkhire.com)

My short recommendation:

  • Live 1:1 interviews: Zoom or Teams
  • One-way screening: Spark Hire or HireVue
  • If you already pay for Google Workspace: Meet

If you want, I can also give you a “best tool by company size” shortlist.

What meeting apps are easiest for non-technical employees? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

The easiest meeting apps for non-technical employees are usually:

  • Zoom Meetings — very simple join links, strong one-click joining, familiar interface.
  • Google Meet — best if your team already uses Gmail/Google Calendar; no app needed in many cases.
  • Microsoft Teams — easiest for companies already on Microsoft 365, but a bit busier than Zoom/Meet.
  • Webex Meetings — solid and reliable, though not as intuitive as Zoom for most users.
  • GoTo Meeting — simple and business-friendly, especially for older workflows.

Best overall for ease: Zoom Best if you use Google Workspace: Google Meet Best if you use Microsoft 365: Microsoft Teams

If you want, I can also rank them for mobile use, security, or lowest training needed.

retrieval Mentioned

For most non-technical employees, the easiest options are usually:

  1. Google Meet — simplest if you already use Google Calendar/Gmail. It works in the browser with no software install needed. (workspace.google.com)
  2. Zoom — very familiar and easy for guests; people can join from an email link, browser, desktop app, or phone. (zoom.com)
  3. Microsoft Teams — best if your company already lives in Microsoft 365; people can join by link, as a guest, or without signing in. (support.microsoft.com)
  4. Webex — also browser-friendly, but it’s usually a bit less intuitive for casual users than Meet/Zoom. Guests can join from the browser without signing in. (help.webex.com)

My quick pick:

  • Google Workspace company: Google Meet
  • Microsoft 365 company: Teams
  • Mixed external meetings / broad familiarity: Zoom

If you want, I can give you a 1-minute recommendation by company size or a feature-by-feature comparison.

What are the best video meeting apps for one-on-one meetings? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

For one-on-one meetings, the best apps are usually the ones that are fast to join, reliable, and have good audio/video quality:

  • Zoom — best all-around choice; very reliable, easy to use, great call quality.
  • Google Meet — best if you already use Gmail/Calendar; super simple and works well in-browser.
  • Microsoft Teams — best for Microsoft 365 users; solid, especially for work accounts.
  • Whereby — best for very simple, no-download meetings; nice for client calls.
  • Slack Huddles — best for quick internal 1:1 chats if your team already lives in Slack.
  • FaceTime — best for Apple-to-Apple calls; excellent quality and easy for iPhone/Mac users.

If you want the simplest pick:

  • Personal/friendly calls: FaceTime or Google Meet
  • Work meetings: Zoom or Microsoft Teams
  • Low-friction client calls: Whereby

If you want, I can also rank them for audio quality, ease of use, or free plan.

retrieval Not mentioned

For one-on-one meetings, my short list is:

  1. Google Meet — best if you want simple, browser-based calls and already use Gmail/Calendar. Google says it works on mobile or in a browser, and supports scheduled or spontaneous calls. (workspace.google.com)
  2. Zoom — best if you want the most polished meeting experience and flexible scheduling; Zoom’s scheduler explicitly supports one-to-one meetings and Zoom Meetings are built for quick on-the-fly calls. (zoom.com)
  3. FaceTime — best for Apple-to-Apple one-on-ones; FaceTime supports one-on-one calls, FaceTime links, and SharePlay. (apps.apple.com)
  4. Microsoft Teams — best if you’re in Microsoft 365; Teams lets you start private one-on-one video calls directly from chat. (support.microsoft.com)
  5. Whereby — best for super-easy client calls because it’s browser-based and emphasizes quick, high-quality calls without friction. (whereby.com)

My pick by use case:

  • Easiest overall: Google Meet
  • Best full-featured: Zoom
  • Best for iPhone/Mac: FaceTime
  • Best for work already on Microsoft 365: Teams
  • Best for simple client calls: Whereby (workspace.google.com)

If you want, I can also give you a “best free option” list.

Which meeting platforms are best for webinars and small online events? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

For webinars and small online events, the best platforms are usually:

Best overall

Zoom Webinars / Zoom Events

  • Best for: reliable webinars, Q&A, polls, breakout rooms, familiar interface
  • Good when: you already use Zoom or want the easiest attendee experience
  • Note: Zoom Events is better for multi-session events; Zoom Webinars is simpler and cheaper
Best for polished marketing webinars

Livestorm

  • Best for: branded registration pages, email reminders, analytics, browser-based joining
  • Good when: you want a modern webinar tool without downloads
Best for classic webinar hosting

GoToWebinar

  • Best for: large webinar audiences, solid webinar controls, dependable delivery
  • Good when: your priority is webinar management over event networking
Best for small interactive events

Microsoft Teams Premium / Teams Webinars

  • Best for: internal company events, Microsoft 365 users, secure meetings
  • Good when: your audience already lives in Microsoft
Best for creator-style or audience-engagement events

Crowdcast

  • Best for: live Q&A, interactive sessions, simple audience participation
  • Good when: you want a lightweight, community-focused feel
Best budget-friendly option

Demio

  • Best for: small-to-mid webinars, clean UX, automated webinars
  • Good when: you want something easier than enterprise tools
Quick pick
  • Best all-around: Zoom Webinars
  • Best branding/marketing: Livestorm
  • Best enterprise webinar tool: GoToWebinar
  • Best for Microsoft shops: Teams Webinars

If you tell me your audience size, budget, and whether it’s internal or external, I can narrow it to 2–3 best options.

retrieval Mentioned

If you want webinars and small online events, these are the best picks:

  • Zoom Webinars — best all-around for scale and polish; supports live + pre-recorded/simulive webinars and can go very large. (zoom.com)
  • Microsoft Teams Webinars — best if your org already lives in Microsoft 365; offers registration, capacity limits, waitlists, branded themes, polls, reactions, and attendee reports. (support.microsoft.com)
  • Webex Webinars — strong for professional events and enterprise use; highlights include moderated Q&A, polling via Slido, breakout sessions, live interpreters, and browser-based attendance options. (webex.com)
  • GoTo Webinar — a classic “just run the webinar” option; good for browser joining, pre-recorded events, webcast mode, and attendee sizes up to 3,000 in webcast mode. (goto.com)
  • Livestorm — best for marketing-style webinars and small events if you want a browser-first, branded experience with registration and engagement features. (livestorm.co)

Quick pick:

If you want, I can also narrow this down by budget, audience size, or whether you need registration/CRM integrations.

What are the best video call apps for distributed teams? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For distributed teams, the best video call apps are usually:

  1. Zoom — best all-around
    • Great reliability, breakout rooms, webinars, and large meetings
    • Good for mixed internal/external collaboration
  2. Google Meet — best if you use Google Workspace
    • Fast to join, simple UI, solid calendar integration
    • Best for teams already on Gmail/Docs/Drive
  3. Microsoft Teams — best for Microsoft 365 organizations
    • Strong chat + meetings + file collaboration in one place
    • Best for companies living in Outlook, SharePoint, and Office
  4. Slack Huddles — best for quick team syncs
    • Lightweight, informal voice/video for spontaneous collaboration
    • Not ideal for big formal meetings
  5. Cisco Webex — best for enterprise security/compliance
    • Strong admin controls, security, and large-org features
    • Good for regulated industries
  6. Whereby — best for simple client-facing calls
    • Browser-based, no-download meetings
    • Easy for external guests

Quick picks:

  • Best overall: Zoom
  • Best for Google users: Google Meet
  • Best for Microsoft users: Teams
  • Best for easy casual calls: Slack Huddles
  • Best for secure enterprise use: Webex

If you want, I can also recommend the best one based on your team size, budget, and tools.

retrieval Mentioned

For distributed teams, the best picks are usually:

  • Zoom — best all-around for reliable meetings, breakout rooms, screen sharing, and AI meeting summaries via Zoom Workplace / AI Companion. (zoom.com)
  • Microsoft Teams — best if your team lives in Microsoft 365; it supports breakout rooms, live captions, live transcription, and Copilot/Facilitator meeting help. (support.microsoft.com)
  • Google Meet — best if you’re in Google Workspace; it offers live captions, breakout rooms, noise cancellation/adaptive audio, and Gemini note-taking. (workspace.google.com)
  • Cisco Webex — strong choice for enterprise/hybrid work, with AI summaries/action items, transcription, screen sharing, and room-device support. (help.webex.com)
  • Slack Huddles — best for fast, informal team calls inside Slack, but it’s not as full-featured as Zoom/Teams/Meet for larger meetings. (slack.com)

Quick recommendation:

  • Best overall: Zoom
  • Best for Microsoft shops: Teams
  • Best for Google shops: Google Meet
  • Best for enterprise/hybrid rooms: Webex
  • Best for quick spontaneous calls: Slack Huddles

If you want, I can also give you a best-by-use-case comparison (sales calls, engineering standups, all-hands, client meetings, etc.).

What are the best meeting apps for small law firms? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

For small law firms, the best meeting apps usually come down to security, reliability, easy client joining, and recordings.

Top picks
  1. Zoom
    • Best overall for most small firms
    • Easy for clients, strong video quality, good breakout rooms, webinar options
    • Add-ons for meeting transcription and cloud recording
    • Good if you need a polished client-facing experience
  2. Microsoft Teams
    • Best if your firm already uses Microsoft 365
    • Strong for internal meetings, chat, file sharing, and calendar integration
    • Better value if you want one platform for email, docs, and meetings
    • Best for firms already living in Outlook/Word/SharePoint
  3. Google Meet
    • Best for simple, low-friction meetings
    • Great if you use Google Workspace
    • Easy for clients to join, no heavy software experience
    • Good for smaller firms that want straightforward video calls
  4. RingCentral Video
    • Best if you want a phone + messaging + meetings bundle
    • Strong business features and admin controls
    • Good choice for firms that want a more “office system” platform
  5. GoTo Meeting
    • Solid, dependable, and popular in professional services
    • Very easy to use and good for client meetings
    • Less flashy than Zoom, but reliable
Best by use case
  • Best overall: Zoom
  • Best for Microsoft users: Teams
  • Best for Google users: Google Meet
  • Best for all-in-one communications: RingCentral
  • Best simple client meetings: GoTo Meeting
What law firms should look for
  • Waiting room / lobby
  • Meeting passwords
  • End-to-end or strong encryption
  • Recording controls
  • Transcription
  • Calendar integration
  • Easy guest access
  • Admin controls for staff
My short recommendation

If you want the safest default choice: Zoom. If your firm already pays for Microsoft 365: Microsoft Teams. If you want the easiest setup with minimal training: Google Meet.

If you want, I can also rank these specifically for client consultations, depositions, or internal staff meetings.

retrieval Not mentioned

For small law firms, I’d narrow it to these:

  • Zoom Workplace — best all-around for client meetings: strong host controls like Waiting Room, meeting passcodes, authenticated users only, and optional end-to-end encryption. Good fit if you meet lots of outside clients and want simple joining. (zoom.com)
  • Microsoft Teams — best if your firm already uses Microsoft 365. Teams has strong security/compliance tooling, and E2EE is available in Teams Premium, but it disables things like recording and transcription and is limited to 200 participants. (microsoft.com)
  • Google Meet — best if your office runs on Google Workspace. Meet offers encryption by default, plus access management, privacy/compliance controls, and anti-abuse protections. (workspace.google.com)
  • RingCentral Video — best if you want phone + messaging + video in one platform. It supports browser-based meetings, Outlook/Google Calendar scheduling, and optional end-to-end encryption. (ringcentral.com)
  • GoTo Meeting — best for a straightforward business meeting app with solid security and recording workflows; GoTo highlights risk-based authentication and cloud recording, and its compliance ecosystem includes archiving options via integrations. (goto.com)

My quick pick:

  • Best overall: Zoom
  • Best for Microsoft firms: Teams
  • Best for Google firms: Google Meet
  • Best unified comms: RingCentral
  • Best simple enterprise-style backup: GoTo

If you want, I can also give you a “best for attorney-client confidentiality” ranking or a budget-based shortlist.

What are the best meeting apps for real estate teams? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

For real estate teams, the best meeting apps are the ones that make it easy to book clients, run team calls, and share listings fast.

Best overall
  • Zoom — most reliable for client meetings, screen sharing, and virtual tours.
  • Microsoft Teams — best if your team already uses Microsoft 365 and wants chat + meetings in one place.
  • Google Meet — simplest if your team lives in Gmail/Google Calendar.
Best for scheduling with clients
  • Calendly — makes it easy for buyers, sellers, and agents to book time without back-and-forth.
  • Acuity Scheduling — good if you want more control over appointment types and intake forms.
Best for internal team communication
  • Slack — great for quick updates, deal coordination, and sharing files.
  • Asana or Monday.com — better if you want meetings tied to tasks and follow-ups.
Best for virtual property presentations
  • Zoom
  • Google Meet
  • Whereby — simple browser-based meetings with a clean client experience.
Best “all-in-one” option for many teams
  • Microsoft Teams if you want meetings, chat, file sharing, and calendaring together.
  • Zoom + Calendly if you want the most polished client-facing setup.
My quick picks
  • Small team: Google Meet + Calendly
  • Busy sales team: Zoom + Calendly + Slack
  • Enterprise brokerage: Microsoft Teams

If you want, I can also give you the best apps specifically for agent-client scheduling, team huddles, or virtual open houses.

retrieval Not mentioned

For real estate teams, the best meeting apps are usually:

  1. Calendly — best for showings, listing consults, and team/agent routing. It has round-robin scheduling, meeting polls, and routing that can send leads to the right agent based on availability or skillset. (calendly.com)
  2. Zoom — best for client meetings and webinars. Zoom Scheduler supports one-to-one, collective, round-robin, and recurring meetings, which is useful for team-based sales workflows. (zoom.com)
  3. Microsoft Teams — best if your brokerage already lives in Microsoft 365. Teams supports AI-powered meetings, calling, translations, and Teams Rooms for hybrid collaboration. (microsoft.com)
  4. Google Meet — best for teams using Google Workspace. Meet works directly from Google Calendar and Docs/Sheets/Slides, and you can set up meetings with agendas, attachments, and RSVPs in one place. (workspace.google.com)
  5. Fireflies.ai — best for meeting notes and follow-up. It records notes and action items in real time and can auto-fill CRMs with notes and call logs. (fireflies.ai)
  6. Otter — best for AI summaries and action items. Otter joins meetings, writes notes, captures action items, and generates summaries; it also connects to Google or Microsoft calendars. (otter.ai)

My quick pick:

  • Best overall: Zoom + Calendly
  • Best for Microsoft shops: Teams + Calendly
  • Best for Google shops: Google Meet + Calendly
  • Best add-on for follow-up: Fireflies or Otter. (zoom.com)

If you want, I can narrow this down to the best 3 for solo agents, small teams, or brokerages.

What video meeting apps work well on a budget? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Good budget-friendly video meeting apps:

  • Google Meet — easiest cheap option; works well with Gmail/Google Calendar. Free plan is solid.
  • Zoom — very reliable and familiar; free plan is good, paid plans start low.
  • Microsoft Teams — best if you already use Microsoft 365; strong value for businesses.
  • Jitsi Meet — fully free and open source; no account needed for basic use.
  • Cisco Webex — dependable for business meetings; free tier available.
  • Whereby — simple, browser-based, and lightweight; good for small teams.

If you want the best value:

  • Best overall budget pick: Google Meet
  • Best free/simple pick: Jitsi Meet
  • Best for larger meetings: Zoom

If you want, I can also recommend the best one based on group size, screen sharing, or lowest monthly cost.

retrieval Not mentioned

Yes—good budget picks right now are:

  • Jitsi Meet: best if you want fully free and open source, with no account needed. Great for simple meetings. (jitsi.org)
  • Microsoft Teams Free: solid all-around free option; supports up to 100 participants and 60-minute group meetings. (microsoft.com)
  • Zoom Basic: popular and easy to use; free tier allows up to 100 participants but only 40 minutes per meeting. (zoom.com)
  • Google Meet: good if you already use Google; for personal accounts, you can host up to 60 minutes for meetings with 3+ people, and Google Workspace Business Starter includes Meet with up to 100 participants and a 24-hour maximum meeting length. (support.google.com)
  • Slack Huddles: best only if you already live in Slack; the free plan has 30-minute audio/video calls and a 2-person max. (slack.com)

Quick pick:

  • Absolute cheapest: Jitsi
  • Best free general-purpose: Teams Free
  • Best if everyone already knows it: Zoom Free
  • Best if you already use Gmail/Google Calendar: Google Meet

If you want, I can narrow it down for personal use, small business, or classes.

Which meeting apps are good for quick daily standups? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Good options for quick daily standups:

  • Zoom — fastest if your team already uses it; reliable, easy screen share, breakout rooms.
  • Google Meet — simple, lightweight, great for fast recurring meetings.
  • Microsoft Teams — best if your team lives in Microsoft 365; easy calendar integration and chat.
  • Slack Huddles — excellent for super-short, casual standups; no formal meeting link feel.
  • Loom — great if you want async standups instead of live calls; record quick updates.
  • Whereby — very quick to join, browser-based, low-friction for small teams.

If you want the best “daily standup” combo:

  • Live: Slack Huddles or Google Meet
  • Async: Loom
  • Enterprise: Microsoft Teams

If you want, I can also suggest the best one based on team size, remote/hybrid, and whether you want live or async standups.

retrieval Not mentioned

Good options for quick daily standups:

  • Slack Huddles — fastest for informal, low-friction standups inside a channel or DM; good for teams already living in Slack. (slack.com)
  • Microsoft Teams — solid if your org is already on Microsoft 365; you can start an instant meeting from chat or a channel. (support.microsoft.com)
  • Google Meet — simple for ad hoc calls and easy if you’re already in Google Workspace; supports spontaneous meetings and quick join links. (workspace.google.com)
  • Zoom — good if you want a very familiar, reliable standup video call tool with easy instant meetings. (media.zoom.com)

If you want the best “standup” style, I’d pick:

  • Slack Huddles for the quickest casual check-in,
  • Teams for company-wide Microsoft shops,
  • Meet for Google Workspace teams,
  • Zoom for the most universal fallback. (slack.com)

If you want, I can also give you:

  1. best free options, or
  2. best app for remote async standups.
What are the best meeting apps with calendar scheduling? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Here are the best meeting apps with calendar scheduling:

  • Calendly — Best overall for simple booking links, team scheduling, and calendar sync. Works well with Google Calendar, Outlook, Zoom, and Teams.
  • Microsoft Teams + Outlook Calendar — Best for Microsoft 365 users. Strong for internal meetings, scheduling, and enterprise security.
  • Zoom Scheduler — Best if most of your meetings are on Zoom. Easy booking and solid calendar integration.
  • Google Calendar Appointment Schedules — Best free option for Google Workspace users. Good for basic booking pages.
  • Doodle — Best for finding a time with multiple people. Great for polls and group scheduling.
  • SavvyCal — Best premium alternative to Calendly. Nice for back-and-forth scheduling and a cleaner experience.
  • Acuity Scheduling — Best for service businesses, coaches, and client appointments. Strong reminders, intake forms, and payments.

My quick picks:

  • Best overall: Calendly
  • Best for teams: Microsoft Teams + Outlook
  • Best for Google users: Google Calendar Appointment Schedules
  • Best for group polling: Doodle

If you want, I can also rank them for small business, sales teams, or free plans.

retrieval Not mentioned

Best picks for meeting apps with calendar scheduling:

  • Calendly — best overall for easy external booking, team scheduling, buffers, reminders, and deep Google/Microsoft/Zoom integration. (calendly.com)
  • Google Calendar + Appointment schedules — best if you already live in Google Workspace; it gives you booking pages and booked appointments inside Calendar. (support.google.com)
  • Microsoft Bookings / Outlook — best for Microsoft 365 teams; it supports booking pages, staff calendars, and Outlook Scheduling Assistant. (support.microsoft.com)
  • Zoom Scheduler — best if your meetings are mostly in Zoom and you want booking pages, round-robin/group scheduling, and calendar sync. (zoom.com)
  • Doodle — best for group polling when you need everyone to vote on a time first. (zoom.com)
  • Clockwise — best for protecting focus time while still handling scheduling links and bookings. (zoom.com)

Quick recommendation:

  • Solo / sales / client bookings: Calendly
  • Google Workspace: Google Calendar appointment schedules
  • Microsoft 365: Microsoft Bookings
  • Zoom-first teams: Zoom Scheduler
  • Large groups deciding a time: Doodle

If you want, I can also rank these for free plans, best for teams, or best for one-on-one bookings.

What are the best video meeting apps with screen sharing? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Here are the best video meeting apps with screen sharing:

  1. Zoom — Best all-around
    • Easy screen sharing, breakout rooms, recording, virtual backgrounds
    • Great for work, classes, and large meetings
  2. Microsoft Teams — Best for Microsoft 365 users
    • Strong screen sharing, file collaboration, calendar integration
    • Best if your team already uses Outlook/Office
  3. Google Meet — Best simple browser-based option
    • Fast to join, easy screen sharing, works well in Chrome
    • Good for quick meetings and Google Workspace users
  4. Cisco Webex — Best for enterprise/security
    • Reliable screen sharing, solid admin controls, strong security tools
    • Good for larger organizations
  5. Slack Huddles — Best for lightweight team chats
    • Quick screen sharing for informal internal meetings
    • Not ideal for big presentations
  6. Whereby — Best for very easy guest access
    • No app download for guests, simple screen sharing
    • Good for client calls and small teams

Top picks:

  • Best overall: Zoom
  • Best for business teams: Microsoft Teams
  • Best easiest: Google Meet

If you want, I can also recommend the best one for work, teaching, or large webinars.

retrieval Mentioned

Here are the best video meeting apps with screen sharing right now:

  • Zoom — best all-around for polished screen sharing, remote control, whiteboards, sharing device audio, and breakout rooms. (support.zoom.com)
  • Microsoft Teams — best if you already use Microsoft 365; it can share a full screen, a single window, Whiteboard, and PowerPoint Live. (support.microsoft.com)
  • Google Meet — best for quick browser-based sharing, especially with Chrome; it supports sharing a tab, window, or full desktop, and tab sharing has the richest feature set. (support.google.com)
  • Cisco Webex — great for enterprise meetings; it supports screen, app, file, and camera sharing, plus annotation and optimization for video-heavy content. (help.webex.com)

My quick recommendation:

If you want, I can also rank them by free plan, ease of use, or best for presentations vs remote support.

Which meeting apps are best for collaborating on presentations? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Best options for collaborating on presentations:

  • Microsoft Teams + PowerPoint Live — best if you use PowerPoint/Office. Lets everyone follow along, see speaker notes, and navigate slides smoothly.
  • Zoom — best for easy live presenting + annotation. Good screen sharing, co-annotation, and breakout rooms.
  • Google Meet + Google Slides — best for real-time co-editing in Google Workspace. Simple, fast, and browser-based.
  • Webex — strong for enterprise meetings, with solid presentation controls, annotations, and moderator tools.
  • Miro — best if you want interactive presentation boards, brainstorming, and visual collaboration rather than traditional slides.

If you want the shortest recommendation:

  • PowerPoint users: Microsoft Teams
  • Google Workspace users: Google Meet
  • Most flexible general-purpose: Zoom

If you want, I can also rank them by ease of use, best for remote teams, or best free options.

retrieval Mentioned

Best picks for presentation collaboration:

  • Microsoft Teams — best if you live in Microsoft 365. PowerPoint Live lets presenters stay engaged while attendees can browse slides independently, use captions, and react live. (support.microsoft.com)
  • Google Meet — best for Google Workspace teams. You can meet directly from Docs, Sheets, and Slides, and Google emphasizes real-time collaboration around Slides. (workspace.google.com)
  • Zoom — best for interactive workshops. Zoom Whiteboard supports real-time collaboration, interactive presentations, polls, and moving between meeting and whiteboard without leaving the platform. (zoom.com)
  • Webex — best for whiteboard-heavy, hybrid sessions. Webex supports live shared whiteboards where multiple people can edit at once, plus switching between files and whiteboards during a presentation. (help.webex.com)

Quick recommendation:

  • Most polished for slide decks: Teams
  • Best for Google Slides workflows: Google Meet
  • Best for brainstorming + presenting: Zoom
  • Best enterprise whiteboarding: Webex (support.microsoft.com)

If you want, I can also rank these for small teams, enterprise, or free plans.

What are the best video meeting apps for small agencies? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

For small agencies, the best video meeting apps are usually:

  1. Zoom
    • Best overall for reliability and client meetings
    • Great screen sharing, breakout rooms, recording, and scheduling
    • Strong for polished external calls
  2. Google Meet
    • Best if you already use Google Workspace
    • Very easy to join, solid quality, simple admin
    • Best for quick internal/client meetings without extra setup
  3. Microsoft Teams
    • Best if your agency runs on Microsoft 365
    • Good for chat + meetings + file collaboration in one place
    • Strong choice if you want everything bundled
  4. Whereby
    • Best for lightweight client-facing meetings
    • Browser-based, very easy for guests
    • Nice for agencies that want a simple, branded meeting experience
  5. Slack Huddles
    • Best for fast internal check-ins
    • Great if your team already lives in Slack
    • Not ideal as your main client meeting tool
My quick recommendation
  • Best all-around: Zoom
  • Best budget/simple option: Google Meet
  • Best for Microsoft users: Teams
  • Best for very easy client calls: Whereby

If you want, I can also give you the best choice by agency type (creative, marketing, PR, dev, remote-first, etc.).

retrieval Not mentioned

For most small agencies, my shortlist is:

  • Zoom Workplace Pro — best overall if you want the most polished meeting experience and strong standalone video features. It includes 30-hour meetings, 100 participants, AI note-taking, unlimited docs/videos, and live support; Zoom lists Pro for 1–99 users at paid annual/monthly rates. (zoom.com)
  • Google Meet (Google Workspace Business Standard) — best if your agency already lives in Google Docs/Gmail/Drive. Google Workspace Business plans include Meet, with 150 participants on Standard, meeting recordings saved to Drive, and 2 TB per user; Starter is $7/user/month and Standard is $14/user/month with annual commitment in the current promo pricing shown. (workspace.google.com)
  • Microsoft Teams Essentials — best if you’re in the Microsoft ecosystem or want the cheapest “serious” business option. Microsoft says Teams Essentials is built for small businesses, includes video/audio calling, up to 30-hour meetings, up to 300 participants, and 10 GB cloud storage at $4/user/month billed yearly. (microsoft.com)
  • RingCentral Video — best if you want meetings bundled with business phone/UC features. RingCentral positions it as a customizable video experience, and its pricing page emphasizes video collaboration as part of a broader communications stack. (ringcentral.com)

Quick pick:

  • Best overall: Zoom
  • Best for Google-first teams: Google Meet
  • Best for Microsoft-first teams: Teams
  • Best all-in-one phone + video: RingCentral

If you want, I can also give you a “best for 5-person agency / 20-person agency / client-facing creative agency” version.

What meeting apps are best for board meetings at small companies? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

For small-company board meetings, the best apps are usually a mix of video meeting + board portal.

Best overall
  • Diligent Boards — best if you want a true board portal: agendas, secure documents, e-signatures, voting, and minutes.
  • OnBoard — very strong and usually easier to use than legacy board tools.
  • BoardEffect — good for smaller organizations that want board packets and document control without too much complexity.
Best video meeting apps
  • Zoom Meetings — easiest and most reliable for live board calls.
  • Microsoft Teams — best if your company already uses Microsoft 365.
  • Google Meet — fine if you run on Google Workspace, but less board-specific.
Best budget-friendly setup
  • Zoom + Dropbox DocSend or Google Drive
  • Teams + SharePoint

This works if you just need secure calls and shared materials, not full board governance.

My recommendation
  • If you want the best board-specific tool: OnBoard
  • If you want the most polished enterprise-grade option: Diligent Boards
  • If you want the cheapest practical setup: Zoom + Google Drive/Dropbox DocSend

If you want, I can also give you a top 5 by price or a best option for companies with 3–10 board members.

retrieval Not mentioned

For small-company board meetings, the best picks are usually board-portal apps, not just video apps. They bundle agendas, secure document sharing, minutes, voting, and follow-up tasks in one place. (boardable.com)

Best overall: Boardable Good if you want something easier to set up than enterprise board software. It includes meeting scheduling, agendas, minutes, document center, task tracking, and built-in video. (boardable.com)

Best for Microsoft 365 shops: Govenda Strong if your team lives in Microsoft tools; Govenda highlights Microsoft-enabled editing plus agenda, minutes, attendance, chat, and voting support. (govenda.com)

Best enterprise-grade option: Diligent Boards More robust than most small companies need, but excellent if governance and security matter a lot. Diligent offers agenda building, document collaboration, secure board books, and integrations with Teams and Zoom. (diligent.com)

If you only need the meeting video layer:

  • Zoom: strong meeting security controls, including lock meeting and suspend participant activities. (library.zoom.com)
  • Microsoft Teams: good if you already use Microsoft, with AI meeting recap and advanced protections in Premium. (support.microsoft.com)
  • Google Meet: good for Google Workspace users, with translated captions and AI note-taking in Gemini. (workspace.google.com)

My short recommendation:

  • Small company, simplest all-in-one: Boardable
  • Microsoft-heavy company: Govenda
  • Need top-tier governance: Diligent
  • Just video + secure meetings: Zoom or Teams

If you want, I can narrow this to budget, nonprofit vs for-profit, or in-person/hybrid board meetings.

What are the best online meeting tools for growing teams? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For growing teams, the best online meeting tools are usually:

  • Zoom — best overall for reliability, ease of use, and large meetings
  • Google Meet — best if your team already uses Google Workspace
  • Microsoft Teams — best for companies built around Microsoft 365
  • Slack Huddles — best for quick informal team calls
  • RingCentral Video — solid all-in-one option for business phone + meetings
  • Webex — strong for larger enterprises and security needs
Best picks by use case
  • Best overall: Zoom Pro
  • Best for Google users: Google Meet with Google Workspace Business Standard
  • Best for Microsoft users: Microsoft Teams Essentials or included with Microsoft 365 Business
  • Best budget-friendly team option: Zoom Pro or Google Workspace Business Starter
  • Best for internal collaboration: Slack + Huddles
What to look for
  • Easy calendar integration
  • Good recording/transcription
  • Breakout rooms
  • Waiting rooms and security controls
  • Reliable screen sharing
  • Scales well as your team grows

If you want, I can also give you a “best meeting tool by team size” shortlist, like for 5–20, 20–100, or 100+ people.

retrieval Mentioned

For growing teams, the best picks are usually:

  • Zoom Workplace — best overall if you want a polished meetings-first tool with strong AI, docs, chat, and easy scaling. Zoom says its paid plans include AI Companion, Zoom Docs, and meetings up to 30 hours with 100 participants on Pro; Business is for 10–250 users. (zoom.com)
  • Microsoft Teams — best if your team already lives in Microsoft 365. Microsoft’s Teams + Copilot setup adds recaps, insights, and meeting/chat analysis, and Teams Premium adds more protected, engaging, and intelligent meetings. (techcommunity.microsoft.com)
  • Google Meet — best for Google Workspace teams. Workspace Starter includes 100-person Meet meetings, and higher plans add recording, noise cancellation, and 150 participants, plus Gemini note-taking in Meet. (workspace.google.com)
  • Slack Huddles — best for quick, informal team collaboration inside Slack. Huddles support audio/video, screen sharing, a notes thread/canvas, and up to 50 participants on paid plans. (slack.com)
  • RingCentral Video — best if you want meetings plus phone/messaging in one platform. RingCentral emphasizes AI recaps, live transcripts, translations in 15+ languages, and Smart Invites. (ringcentral.com)
  • Cisco Webex — best for larger or enterprise-heavy teams that want strong AI and translation. Webex Assistant offers real-time translation into 100+ languages and transcriptions/captions. (webex.com)

My quick recommendation:

  • Most teams: Zoom
  • Microsoft shop: Teams
  • Google shop: Meet
  • Fast internal collaboration: Slack Huddles

If you want, I can also rank these by price, ease of use, or best for remote vs hybrid teams.

What are the best alternatives to the leading enterprise video meeting platforms for small businesses? comparison
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

For small businesses, the best alternatives to the big enterprise platforms are usually the ones that are simpler, cheaper, and easier to manage:

  • Google Meet — best if you already use Gmail/Google Workspace. Very easy to join, solid video quality, and low admin overhead.
  • RingCentral Video — best all-around business option. Good calling + meetings in one, with stronger business features than most SMB tools.
  • GoTo Meeting — best for reliable, straightforward meetings. A long-time favorite for small teams that want stability over flashy extras.
  • Zoho Meeting — best budget-friendly choice for startups and small businesses. Works well if you’re already in the Zoho ecosystem.
  • Whereby — best for client-facing meetings. No-download joining is very smooth, which is great for external calls.
  • Dialpad Meetings — best if you want meetings plus AI transcription and voice tools.
  • Jitsi Meet — best free/open-source option. Good for basic meetings, though less polished for business use.
My quick picks
  • Best overall: RingCentral Video
  • Best simple/easy: Google Meet
  • Best budget: Zoho Meeting
  • Best for external clients: Whereby
  • Best free option: Jitsi Meet

If you want, I can also give you a top 5 ranked list by price, ease of use, and features.

retrieval Mentioned

If you want simpler/cheaper alternatives to Zoom/Teams/Webex for a small business, these are the strongest picks right now:

  • Zoho Meeting — best budget pick. It has a free plan, paid meeting plans, and the Standard edition starts at $1/host/month billed annually; the paid tier adds things like recordings, co-hosts, and co-branding. (zoho.com)
  • Whereby — best for browser-based simplicity. It offers a free plan, a Pro plan at $10.99/month, and a Business plan at $13.99 per host/month with a 3-host minimum. (whereby.com)
  • Jitsi Meet — best free/open-source option. It’s 100% open source, encrypted, and available without an account; you can also self-host it. (jitsi.org)
  • Dialpad Connect — best if you want meetings plus business calling/messaging in one tool. Its Standard plan is $15/user/month and includes AI-powered meetings, transcripts, and summaries. (dialpad.com)
  • GoTo Meeting — best for a polished, classic business-meeting experience. GoTo’s current plans include Professional (150 participants) and Business (250 participants), with unlimited meetings and unlimited meeting length; pricing is per organizer, billed annually. (goto.com)
  • RingCentral Video — best if you want meetings plus team messaging and a path to a broader communications suite. RingCentral offers a free plan with unlimited video calls up to 50 minutes; paid “RingVideo” pricing is more custom/quote-based for businesses. (ringcentral.com)

My quick ranking for small businesses:

  1. Zoho Meeting for value
  2. Whereby for ease of use
  3. Dialpad for all-in-one comms
  4. GoTo Meeting for traditional business reliability
  5. Jitsi for free/open-source
  6. RingCentral for scaling into a bigger communications stack (zoho.com)

If you want, I can narrow this to best free, best under $15/user, or best for client meetings.

What are the best alternatives to expensive video conferencing software for small teams? comparison
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For small teams, the best cheaper alternatives to expensive video conferencing software are usually:

  • Google Meet — simple, reliable, works well if you already use Gmail/Google Workspace.
  • Zoom — still the easiest for most people; free plan is good for short meetings.
  • Microsoft Teams — best if your team uses Microsoft 365.
  • Cisco Webex — solid for security and larger teams, though a bit more enterprise-focused.
  • Jitsi Meet — free, open-source, no account needed for basic use.
  • Whereby — very easy to use, browser-based, good for small teams and client calls.
  • Slack Huddles — great for quick internal audio/video chats if your team already lives in Slack.
  • Discord — surprisingly good for always-on team rooms and informal collaboration.
Best picks by use case
  • Best overall value: Google Meet
  • Best free option: Jitsi Meet
  • Best for ease of use: Zoom or Whereby
  • Best if you use Microsoft: Teams
  • Best for casual/team chat: Slack Huddles or Discord
Cost-saving tip

If you only need basic meetings, try:

  • Zoom Basic
  • Google Meet (free or Workspace tiers)
  • Jitsi Meet

If you want, I can also give you a top 5 ranked list with pricing for 2026.

retrieval Not mentioned

For small teams, the best low-cost alternatives are usually:

  • Zoho Meeting — best budget pick. Free plan supports 100 participants for up to 60 minutes, and paid plans start very low. (zoho.com)
  • Google Meet (via Google Workspace) — best if you already use Gmail/Docs. Business Starter is $7/user/month and includes Meet with 100 participants. (workspace.google.com)
  • Microsoft Teams Essentials — best for teams already in Microsoft 365. It’s $4/user/month and includes 30-hour meetings for up to 300 participants. (microsoft.com)
  • Jitsi Meet — best free/open-source option. It’s free, open source, and no account is needed for basic use. (jitsi.org)
  • Whereby — best for super simple “click a link and join” meetings. Free includes 4 attendees and 30-minute meetings; Pro is $10.99/month. (whereby.com)

Quick pick:

  • Cheapest: Jitsi
  • Best value: Zoho Meeting
  • Best if you’re in Google: Google Meet
  • Best if you’re in Microsoft: Teams Essentials
  • Simplest UX: Whereby

If you want, I can turn this into a “best for 2–10 people / 10–25 people / internal vs client meetings” recommendation.

Which are better for small businesses: lightweight meeting apps or full collaboration suites? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

For most small businesses, lightweight meeting apps are better to start.

Why
  • Lower cost
  • Faster to set up
  • Less training needed
  • Good enough if you mainly need calls, screen sharing, and chat
Best when:
  • You’re a small team
  • You already use email/file storage elsewhere
  • You don’t need heavy project management or document workflows
Examples of lightweight meeting apps
  • Zoom Workplace (best all-around)
  • Google Meet (best if you already use Google Workspace)
  • Microsoft Teams (good if you’re in Microsoft 365)
  • Slack Huddles (good for quick internal chats)

---

Full collaboration suites are better if:
  • You need chat + meetings + file sharing + tasks + docs in one place
  • Your team is growing
  • You want fewer disconnected tools
Examples of collaboration suites
  • Microsoft 365 + Teams
  • Google Workspace
  • Zoho Workplace
  • ClickUp (more project-focused)

---

Simple rule
  • Under ~10–20 people: lightweight meeting app usually wins
  • Need all-in-one workflows: full suite is worth it

If you want, I can recommend the best option by budget or by whether you use Google or Microsoft already.

retrieval Not mentioned

For most small businesses: lightweight meeting apps are better to start.

Why:

  • cheaper
  • easier to adopt
  • less setup/admin
  • faster for teams that mainly need calls and screen sharing

Full collaboration suites are better if you need:

  • chat + meetings + files + docs + task tracking in one place
  • stronger internal coordination
  • scaling beyond just video calls
  • tighter workflow integration

Rule of thumb:

  • 5–20 people, simple needs → lightweight meeting app
  • growing team, lots of collaboration → full suite

Examples

  • Lightweight: Zoom, Google Meet, Microsoft Teams basic
  • Full suites: Microsoft 365 + Teams, Google Workspace, Slack + integrated tools

Best practical choice: Start with a lightweight app unless your business already needs shared docs, chat, and project coordination every day. If you want, I can recommend the best option based on your team size, budget, and workflow.

What are the best alternatives to feature-heavy meeting platforms for simple team calls? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

If you just want simple team calls and not all the bells and whistles, these are the best lighter alternatives:

  • Google Meet — easiest if your team already uses Gmail/Google Workspace. Fast join links, low friction, solid quality.
  • Microsoft Teams (Meet now) — good for companies already on Microsoft 365, but can be more cluttered than Meet.
  • Whereby — very simple browser-based rooms, no app needed for guests. Great for small teams.
  • Jitsi Meet — free, open-source, and lightweight. Best if you want no account setup and maximum simplicity.
  • Slack Huddles — best for quick internal voice/video chats if your team already lives in Slack.
  • Zoom Basic — still a good simple option if you want reliability, but it’s more feature-heavy than the others.

My top picks for “just call the team”:

  1. Google Meet
  2. Whereby
  3. Jitsi Meet

If you want, I can also narrow this down by team size, budget, or whether you need no-login guest access.

retrieval Not mentioned

If you want simple team calls instead of a feature-heavy platform, my top picks are:

  • Whereby — best “just click a link” option. It’s browser-based, has a free plan, and its paid plans stay pretty lightweight compared with big-suite tools. (whereby.com)
  • Jitsi Meet — best free/open-source option. It works with no account needed, supports encrypted meetings, and is very easy to start from a shareable URL. (jitsi.org)
  • Google Meet — good if your team already lives in Google Workspace. It’s browser-friendly and easy to join, but it’s a bit more ecosystem-tied than Whereby/Jitsi. (workspace.google.com)
  • Microsoft Teams Free — simple enough for guest joins in a browser, but it still tends to feel more “platform-y” than the two above. (support.microsoft.com)

My short recommendation:

  • Simplest overall: Whereby
  • Best free/simple: Jitsi Meet
  • Best if you already use Google: Google Meet

If you want, I can also narrow it down by free vs paid, privacy, or team size.

What are the best alternatives to paid meeting software for tiny teams? comparison
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For tiny teams, the best alternatives to paid meeting software are usually:

  • Google Meet — easiest if you already use Gmail/Google Workspace; solid free tier.
  • Zoom Basic — very familiar, reliable, and free for short meetings.
  • Microsoft Teams (free) — good if you live in Microsoft 365; includes chat + meetings.
  • Jitsi Meet — free, open-source, and no account required; great for quick calls.
  • Whereby — simple “click the link and join” experience; good lightweight free plan.
  • Cisco Webex Free — dependable, especially for a more “business” feel.
  • Discord — surprisingly good for small, informal teams that want voice/video + chat together.

If you want the best simple picks:

  • Best overall free: Google Meet
  • Best no-signup option: Jitsi Meet
  • Best all-in-one team chat + meetings: Microsoft Teams
  • Best for casual tiny teams: Discord

If you want, I can also give you the best option by use case (client calls, internal standups, screen sharing, recording, etc.).

retrieval Mentioned

For a tiny team, the best free alternatives are usually:

  • Google Meet — best if you already use Gmail/Calendar. Free meetings support up to 100 participants and 60 minutes for group calls; 1:1 calls have no time limit. (workspace.google.com)
  • Microsoft Teams Free — best all-in-one option if you want chat + files + meetings. Free meetings support up to 100 participants and 60 minutes, plus 5 GB storage/user. (microsoft.com)
  • Cisco Webex Free — best if you want a more “business” feel. Free plan supports up to 100 participants, 40–50 minute meetings depending on the plan page, unlimited meetings, screen sharing, and local recording. (webex.com)
  • Jitsi Meet — best if you want the simplest zero-cost option. It’s open source, can be used without an account, and can be self-hosted. (jitsi-org.com)
  • Whereby Free — best for very small, client-facing calls. The free plan is limited to 1 room, 4 participants, and 30 minutes. (whereby.com)

My quick pick:

If you want, I can narrow this to the best 3 for your exact use case (internal meetings, client calls, webinars, or screen-sharing-heavy meetings).

What are the best alternatives to webinar-focused platforms for everyday meetings? comparison
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

For everyday meetings, you’ll usually be better off with a general-purpose meeting tool than a webinar-first platform.

Best alternatives:

  • Zoom Meetings — best all-around choice; easy scheduling, reliable video/audio, breakout rooms, and screen sharing.
  • Google Meet — best if you already use Google Workspace; simple, fast, and no extra software for most users.
  • Microsoft Teams — best for companies on Microsoft 365; strong chat, files, and calendar integration.
  • Slack Huddles — best for quick internal check-ins; lightweight and great for team communication.
  • Whereby — best for simple client meetings; browser-based, clean, and very easy to join.
  • Jitsi Meet — best free/open-source option; solid for basic meetings with no account setup.

Quick picks:

  • Best overall: Zoom Meetings
  • Best for Google users: Google Meet
  • Best for Office/enterprise: Microsoft Teams
  • Best lightweight option: Whereby

If you want, I can also recommend the best one based on your team size, budget, and whether you need recording, chat, or screen sharing.

retrieval Mentioned

If you want everyday meetings instead of webinar-first tools, the best bets are:

  • Zoom Meetings — strongest all-purpose option for quick team calls, ad hoc huddles, and recurring meetings. Zoom explicitly positions Meetings for everyday collaboration, while Webinars are for one-to-many broadcasts. (zoom.com)
  • Google Meet — best if you live in Google Workspace; it’s built for scheduled or spontaneous video calls and works nicely with Calendar/Gmail. (workspace.google.com)
  • Microsoft Teams — best for organizations already using Microsoft 365; it combines chat, calendar, and meetings, and is aimed at collaboration rather than just events. (microsoft.com)
  • Cisco Webex Meetings — good for more formal business meetings, especially if you need stronger meeting controls, breakout sessions, and room-device support. (help.webex.com)

Quick pick:

  • Best overall: Zoom Meetings
  • Best for Google users: Google Meet
  • Best for Microsoft shops: Teams
  • Best for enterprise meeting rooms/security: Webex

If you want, I can also rank these by ease of use, price, or best free plan.

What are the best alternatives to desktop-only meeting tools for remote teams? comparison
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Best alternatives to desktop-only meeting tools for remote teams:

  • Zoom — strongest all-around option; solid on desktop, web, and mobile.
  • Google Meet — easiest if your team already uses Google Workspace; no heavy app dependency.
  • Microsoft Teams — best for companies in Microsoft 365; meetings, chat, files, and calendars in one place.
  • Slack Huddles — lightweight for quick voice/video check-ins, especially for async-heavy teams.
  • Whereby — very simple browser-based meetings; great for client calls and low-friction access.
  • Cisco Webex — reliable for larger orgs and security-focused teams.
  • Jitsi Meet — good open-source, browser-first option if you want minimal setup.
  • Loom — not a live-meeting replacement, but excellent for async video updates instead of recurring meetings.

If you want the best fit by use case:

  • Best overall: Zoom
  • Best for Google teams: Google Meet
  • Best for Microsoft teams: Teams
  • Best for quick internal chats: Slack Huddles
  • Best for async communication: Loom

If you want, I can also narrow this down by team size, budget, or whether you need mobile-first support.

retrieval Not mentioned

For remote teams, the best non-desktop-only meeting tools are usually:

  • Google Meet — best for “click a link and join” simplicity. It runs entirely in the browser on desktop and has mobile apps for phones/tablets. (workspace.google.com)
  • Microsoft Teams — best if your team already uses Microsoft 365. Teams works on the web, but mobile users need the Teams mobile app. (support.microsoft.com)
  • Zoom — best for a familiar all-rounder with browser joining and mobile apps, so guests can join without a desktop install. (zoom.com)
  • Slack Huddles — best for lightweight, spontaneous team calls inside Slack, with audio/video, screen sharing, and threads. (slack.com)
  • RingCentral Video — best if you want meetings plus a broader business communications stack; it supports browser joining and mobile access. (jitsi.org)
  • Jitsi Meet — best for open-source, no-account meetings; Jitsi says it’s fully encrypted and available free, with browser and mobile support. (jitsi.org)

My quick pick:

  • Most frictionless: Google Meet
  • Best workplace suite: Teams
  • Best universal fallback: Zoom
  • Best lightweight internal chat calls: Slack Huddles
  • Best open-source option: Jitsi

If you want, I can narrow this to best free options, best for large teams, or best for startups.

What are the best alternatives to corporate meeting platforms for startups? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

For startups, the best alternatives to big corporate meeting platforms are usually:

  • Huddles — best for quick, lightweight internal calls
  • Slack huddles — best if your team already lives in Slack
  • Whereby — best simple browser-based meetings
  • Around — best for small, collaborative team calls
  • Zoom — still the safest all-around fallback, but less “startup-native”
  • Google Meet — best if you’re already on Google Workspace
  • Loom — best for async updates instead of live meetings
  • Discord — best for very small, developer-heavy teams
Best picks by use case
  • Fast internal syncs: Slack Huddles, Around
  • Client calls: Whereby, Zoom
  • Async team communication: Loom
  • Zero-friction browser meetings: Whereby
  • Technical/startup communities: Discord
My top 3 for startups
  1. Slack Huddles — cheapest switch if you already use Slack
  2. Whereby — cleanest no-login experience for guests
  3. Loom — can replace many meetings entirely

If you want, I can also give you the best alternatives by budget, or a stack for a 5–20 person startup.

retrieval Not mentioned

If you want less corporate, more startup-friendly meeting tools, I’d shortlist these:

  • Whereby — best for simple, browser-based client calls and internal meetings; the Free plan is limited, while Pro starts at $10.99/mo and Business at $13.99/mo per host. (whereby.com)
  • Jitsi Meet — best if you want free + open source; it’s encrypted, no account is needed, and you can self-host if you want control. (jitsi.org)
  • Slack Huddles — best for teams already living in Slack; Huddles are built into Slack, with 2-person max on Free and unlimited group huddles on paid plans. (slack.com)
  • Gather — best for a “virtual office” vibe; Gather 2.0 is built for remote teams, and current pricing is $15/user/mo monthly or $12/user/mo annual. (support.gather.town)
  • Discord — best for community-heavy startups, gaming, creator, or dev teams; Discord supports video calls and screen sharing, with up to 50 people sharing video/screen in a voice chat. (support.discord.com)
  • Google Meet — best if you already use Google Workspace; Starter includes Meet for 100 participants, and Standard adds recording/noise cancellation and 150 participants. (workspace.google.com)

My quick pick:

  • Most startups: Slack Huddles or Whereby.
  • Bootstrapped / privacy-minded: Jitsi.
  • Remote-first culture: Gather.
  • Community-led product teams: Discord.
  • Already on Google Workspace: Google Meet. (slack.com)

If you want, I can turn this into a “best by use case” table with pricing and tradeoffs.

What are the best alternatives to complicated video conferencing systems? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

If you want something simpler than traditional enterprise video conferencing, the best alternatives are usually:

  • Google Meet — easiest if your team already uses Gmail/Google Workspace.
  • Zoom — still very simple for most users, especially for external meetings.
  • Microsoft Teams — best if you live in Microsoft 365, though it can feel busy.
  • Whereby — very lightweight, browser-based, no app hassle.
  • Jitsi Meet — free, open-source, good for quick no-frills calls.
  • Slack Huddles — great for casual team conversations instead of formal meetings.
  • Loom — best if you can replace meetings with async video messages.
  • Dropbox Capture — another good async screen/video recording option.

Best picks by use case:

  • Easiest overall: Google Meet
  • Most lightweight: Whereby
  • Best async replacement: Loom
  • Best for internal quick chats: Slack Huddles

If you tell me your team size and whether you need screen sharing, recording, or webinar features, I can narrow it down.

retrieval Not mentioned

The best simpler alternatives are usually:

  • BYOD (“bring your own device”) USB video bars — plug into a laptop and join from Zoom/Teams/Meet. Good for small rooms and the least complicated option. Examples: Poly Studio R30, Poly Studio V12, Logitech MeetUp 2 / Rally Bar Huddle. (hp.com)
  • All-in-one video bars — camera, mics, and speakers in one unit, with built-in app support. Good if you want a room system without lots of boxes. Examples: Poly Studio X52/X70, Logitech Rally Bar / Rally Bar Mini, Jabra PanaCast 50 Room System 2. (hp.com)
  • Appliance-mode room systems — preconfigured for Microsoft Teams Rooms, Zoom Rooms, or Google Meet so setup and management are simpler than traditional modular systems. Logitech specifically highlights this for small/huddle spaces. (logitech.com)

Best pick by simplicity:

  1. Small huddle room: Logitech Rally Bar Huddle or Poly Studio R30. (news.logitech.com)
  2. Standard small/medium room: Poly Studio X52 or Jabra PanaCast 50 Room System 2. (hp.com)
  3. Large room: Logitech Rally Bar or Poly Studio X70. (logitech.com)

If you want, I can narrow this to the cheapest, easiest to install, or best for Zoom/Teams/Google Meet.

What are the best alternatives to all-in-one communication suites for small businesses? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

The best alternatives to an all-in-one communication suite are usually a modular stack: one best-in-class tool for chat, one for meetings, one for phone/SMS, and one for email/help desk.

Best options by category
  • Team chat: Slack or Microsoft Teams
  • Video meetings: Zoom or Google Meet
  • Business phone + SMS: OpenPhone or RingCentral
  • Email + calendar: Google Workspace or Microsoft 365
  • Customer messaging/inbox: Front or Zendesk
  • Project/task coordination: Asana or ClickUp
Best small-business stacks

1) Simple and affordable

  • Google Workspace
  • Slack
  • Zoom
  • OpenPhone

2) Microsoft-centered

  • Microsoft 365
  • Teams
  • Microsoft Teams Phone / RingCentral
  • Outlook

3) Customer-facing business

  • Google Workspace
  • Front
  • OpenPhone
  • Zoom
When this is better than an all-in-one suite
  • You want better quality tools
  • You don’t need every feature bundled
  • You want to switch one app without replacing everything
  • Your team is small and needs simplicity + lower cost
Main downside
  • More tools to manage and integrate

If you want, I can recommend the best stack based on your budget, team size, and whether you’re remote or local.

retrieval Not mentioned

For small businesses, the best alternatives are usually best-of-breed tools instead of one giant suite.

Top picks:

  • Slack + Zoom — best for internal chat + meetings. Slack is strong for channels, DMs, huddles, and external collaboration; Zoom’s Team Chat ties into meetings and phone. (slack.com)
  • Zoho Cliq + Zoho Voice — best budget-friendly all-in-one-ish option without going full enterprise. Cliq covers chat, calls, meetings, file sharing, tasks, and calendar, and it can integrate business phone service via Zoho Voice. (zoho.com)
  • RingCentral — best if phone/SMS is the core need. It combines team messaging, video collaboration, cloud phone, and business texting. (ringcentral.com)
  • Mattermost — best for security-sensitive or self-hosted setups. It’s built for private collaboration, messaging, file sharing, and workflow automation, with on-prem/private-cloud control. (mattermost.com)

Simple rule:

  • Need chat-firstSlack
  • Need meetings-firstZoom
  • Need phone-firstRingCentral
  • Need low-cost, broad collaborationZoho Cliq
  • Need self-hosted / high controlMattermost

If you want, I can also give you a best stack by budget (under $50/user, under $100/user, etc.).

How do I host professional video calls for clients with a small team? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

For a small team, the easiest way to look polished is to standardize one platform, one room setup, and one prep process.

1) Pick a reliable meeting platform

Best options:

  • Zoom Pro — best all-around for client calls, screen sharing, waiting rooms, and polished scheduling.
  • Google Meet — simplest if you already use Google Workspace.
  • Microsoft Teams — best if your clients are in Microsoft 365.

If you want the safest default: Zoom Pro.

2) Use proper camera/mic gear

For each person who may host:

  • Webcam: Logitech Brio 4K or Logitech MX Brio
  • Mic/headset: Jabra Evolve2 40 or Poly Blackwire 5220
  • Best audio upgrade: Rode NT-USB Mini or Shure MV7 if they sit at a desk

Audio matters more than video—clients forgive average video, not bad sound.

3) Create one “client-call” setup

Have a dedicated space with:

  • Clean background
  • Soft front lighting
  • Camera at eye level
  • No echo (rug, curtains, or acoustic panels)

Good lighting picks:

  • Elgato Key Light Air
  • Lume Cube Edge Light Pro
4) Standardize call flow

Use a simple structure:

  1. Greet and confirm agenda
  2. Share updates or demo
  3. Pause for client questions
  4. Summarize decisions
  5. Send follow-up within 1 hour
5) Use shared scheduling and reminders
  • Calendly for booking
  • Google Calendar or Microsoft Outlook for internal coordination
  • Add automatic reminders and Zoom links
6) Assign roles in every call

Even with a small team:

  • Host: runs the meeting
  • Presenter: shares screen / leads content
  • Note-taker: captures action items
7) Make follow-up look professional

Send a short recap with:

  • Key decisions
  • Open questions
  • Next steps
  • Deadline

Tools that help:

  • Otter.ai for transcription
  • Fireflies.ai for notes and summaries
Quick recommended stack

If you want a simple, professional setup:

  • Zoom Pro
  • Logitech Brio
  • Jabra Evolve2 40
  • Calendly
  • Otter.ai

If you want, I can also give you a budget setup, premium setup, or a small-team SOP checklist for running client calls.

retrieval Not mentioned

Use a simple, repeatable setup:

  • One main host: opens the call, sets agenda, keeps time.
  • One backup host/co-host: handles chat, links, notes, and technical issues.
  • Standardize tools: use one platform, one calendar flow, one note template.
  • Test before every client call: camera, mic, screen share, links, lighting.
  • Create a call structure:
    1. Welcome + agenda
    2. Client goals
    3. Discussion/demo
    4. Decisions + next steps
    5. Close with recap
  • Make it look polished:
    • good webcam
    • external mic
    • clean background
    • soft lighting
    • stable internet
  • Prep materials in advance: deck, demo links, pricing, follow-up doc.
  • Assign roles for small-team calls:
    • Host
    • Presenter
    • Chat support
    • Note-taker
  • Have a contingency plan: dial-in number, backup laptop, backup presenter.
  • Send a follow-up within 24 hours with notes, decisions, and action items.

Good tools to consider:

  • Zoom for polished client meetings
  • Microsoft Teams if your team lives in Microsoft 365
  • Google Meet for simple, low-friction calls

If you want, I can also give you a small-team client call checklist or a recommended equipment setup under $500.

How can I set up recurring team meetings without hassle? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Use a calendar tool with recurring events + meeting links + automatic reminders.

Easy setup options:

  • Google Calendar + Google Meet: create one recurring event, add Meet link, invite team, set reminders.
  • Microsoft Outlook + Teams: best if your org uses Microsoft 365.
  • Calendly Teams: good if you want scheduling links and less back-and-forth.
  • Zoom Scheduler: nice if your team already uses Zoom.

Simple workflow:

  1. Pick a fixed time (e.g., every Tuesday at 10 AM).
  2. Create a recurring calendar event.
  3. Add the same video link each time.
  4. Set 2 reminders: 1 day before, 10 minutes before.
  5. Add a short agenda in the event description.
  6. Use a shared doc like Notion, Google Docs, or Confluence for notes.

Best low-hassle combo: Google Calendar + Google Meet + Notion

If you want, I can suggest the best setup based on whether your team uses Google, Microsoft, or Slack.

retrieval Not mentioned

Use a calendar template + one rule:

  1. Pick a fixed cadence

Example: every Tuesday at 10:00 AM.

  1. Create a recurring calendar event

Add:

  • title
  • attendees
  • video link
  • agenda in the description
  • meeting length
  • timezone
  1. Make the agenda reusable

Keep a standard format:

  • wins
  • blockers
  • priorities
  • decisions needed
  • action items
  1. Add a reminder buffer

Send the invite once, then let calendar auto-manage the rest.

  1. Use one owner

Assign a single person to update/cancel/shift the series.

  1. Review monthly

Ask: should this meeting still exist, shrink, or become async?

If you want, I can give you:

  • a Google Calendar setup
  • an Outlook setup
  • or a copy-paste recurring meeting template.
How do I share my screen during a business meeting? problem
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

To share your screen in a business meeting:

  1. Join the meeting on Zoom, Microsoft Teams, Google Meet, or Webex.
  2. Look for “Share Screen”, “Present”, or a screen icon in the toolbar.
  3. Choose what to share:
    • Entire screen
    • One window/app
    • Browser tab (best for videos or web demos)
  4. Click Share or Present.
  5. To stop, click Stop Sharing.

Quick tips:

  • Close private tabs/notifications first.
  • Test audio if you’re showing a video.
  • Use a second monitor if possible.

If you want, I can give you the exact steps for Zoom, Teams, or Google Meet.

retrieval Mentioned

Usually:

  1. Join the meeting
  2. Look for “Share screen,” “Present,” or a screen icon
  3. Choose:
    • Entire screen
    • A single window
    • A browser tab (often best for privacy)
  4. Click Share
  5. When done, click Stop sharing

Quick tips:

  • Close private notifications first.
  • Use Do Not Disturb.
  • If you only need to show one app, share just that window.

If you want, I can give step-by-step instructions for Zoom, Microsoft Teams, Google Meet, or Webex.

How can I schedule video meetings with clients easily? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Use a scheduling tool that lets clients book a time directly and auto-generates the video link.

Good options:

  • Calendly + Zoom / Google Meet — easiest for most people
  • Microsoft Bookings — best if you use Microsoft 365
  • Acuity Scheduling — great if you need more control over services and reminders

Simple setup:

  1. Connect your calendar (Google Calendar or Outlook).
  2. Set your availability.
  3. Connect your video app (Zoom, Google Meet, or Microsoft Teams).
  4. Share your booking link with clients.
  5. Turn on reminders and buffer time between meetings.

Best combo for most clients:

  • Calendly + Zoom
  • Calendly + Google Meet if you already use Gmail/Google Workspace

If you want, I can recommend the best setup based on whether you use Google, Outlook, or iPhone.

retrieval Not mentioned

Easiest options:

  • Calendly if you want a simple booking link. You set your availability, share one link, and it can auto-add Zoom, Google Meet, or Microsoft Teams details. (calendly.com)
  • Google Calendar appointment schedules if you already use Google. You can create a booking page, and if you choose video call, Google Meet is added automatically. (support.google.com)
  • Microsoft Teams / Outlook / Bookings if you live in Microsoft 365. Teams and Outlook can create online meetings and send invite links to external clients; Bookings can handle virtual appointments too. (support.microsoft.com)

My quick recommendation:

  • Solo consultant/freelancer: Calendly
  • Google Workspace user: Google Calendar appointment schedules
  • Microsoft 365 user: Teams + Outlook/Bookings

Simplest workflow:

  1. Connect your calendar.
  2. Set working hours and buffers.
  3. Pick your video tool.
  4. Share your booking link in email, on your website, or in a signature. (calendly.com)

If you want, I can suggest the best setup for your exact stack (Google, Outlook, Zoom, etc.).

How do I run online meetings with remote employees? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Use a simple, consistent setup:

1) Pick one meeting tool

  • Zoom: best all-around for external/internal meetings
  • Microsoft Teams: best if you already use Microsoft 365
  • Google Meet: easiest if your team lives in Google Workspace

2) Use a reliable meeting kit

  • Webcam: Logitech C920s or Logitech Brio 4K
  • Headset: Jabra Evolve2 65 or Poly Voyager Focus 2
  • Mic/speaker: Anker PowerConf S3 for small rooms

3) Set clear meeting rules

  • Send an agenda before the call
  • Start on time, end on time
  • Keep cameras on when possible
  • Mute when not speaking
  • Assign one note-taker

4) Make remote meetings inclusive

  • Use screen sharing and live captions
  • Let people raise hands in chat
  • Call on quieter team members
  • Record important meetings for absent staff

5) Keep meetings short

  • Use 15-minute daily standups
  • 30-minute project check-ins
  • Reserve 60 minutes only for workshops or problem-solving

6) Follow up

  • Share notes, action items, and owners right after the meeting
  • Track tasks in Asana, Trello, or Monday.com

If you want, I can also give you a remote meeting checklist or a sample agenda template.

retrieval Not mentioned

Run them like a structured, repeatable work session:

  1. Set a clear goal
    • “Decide X,” “review Y,” or “align on Z.”
    • If there’s no decision or collaboration needed, make it async.
  2. Send an agenda in advance
    • Include:
      • purpose
      • topics
      • owner for each topic
      • time limits
      • any pre-reading
  3. Use good meeting hygiene
    • Start on time, end on time.
    • Keep cameras optional if your culture supports it.
    • Encourage everyone to join from a quiet place.
    • Have one person lead, one person take notes.
  4. Make remote participation intentional
    • Call on quieter people.
    • Use chat, polls, or shared docs for input.
    • Don’t let one or two voices dominate.
  5. Use the right tools
    • Video: Zoom, Google Meet, or Microsoft Teams
    • Collaboration: Google Docs, Notion, or Miro
    • Task tracking: Asana, Trello, or Jira
  6. Document decisions and next steps
    • End every meeting with:
      • what was decided
      • who owns what
      • deadlines
    • Send a short recap afterward.
  7. Protect time zones
    • Rotate meeting times if you have global staff.
    • Record meetings when appropriate.
    • Share notes for anyone who can’t attend live.
  8. Keep meetings small
    • Only invite people who need to be there.
    • For larger updates, send a memo or recording instead.

If you want, I can also give you:

  • a sample remote meeting agenda
  • a manager checklist
  • or a best-practices template for weekly team meetings.
How do I make video calls look more professional for sales demos? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

To make sales demo video calls look more professional, focus on 5 things:

  1. Lighting
    • Best upgrade: Elgato Key Light Air or Lume Cube Video Conferencing Light
    • Put the light in front of you, slightly above eye level
    • Avoid a bright window behind you
  2. Camera
    • Best webcams: Logitech Brio 4K or Elgato Facecam Pro
    • Position camera at eye level
    • Use a clean, steady framing: head and shoulders, centered
  3. Audio
    • Best easy mics: Shure MV7 or Rode NT-USB+
    • If you want wireless/portable: DJI Mic 2
    • Good audio matters more than video for trust
  4. Background
    • Keep it simple: plain wall, bookshelf, or tasteful branding
    • If your room is messy, use a blurred background only if it looks natural
    • Avoid busy art, bright colors, or clutter
  5. Presentation
    • Use a monitor at eye level and a second screen for notes
    • Turn on Do Not Disturb
    • Wear solid colors, avoid thin stripes or tiny patterns
    • Make sure your call software is set to HD video

Quick best-value setup:

  • Logitech Brio 4K
  • Elgato Key Light Air
  • Shure MV7
  • Clean background + eye-level camera

If you want, I can give you a $200, $500, or $1,000 setup for sales demos.

retrieval Not mentioned

To make sales demo video calls look more professional:

  • Use good lighting: face a window or use a soft light in front of you.
  • Use a clean background: plain wall, tidy room, or subtle branded backdrop.
  • Improve your camera angle: camera at eye level, not below.
  • Use a decent mic: a USB mic or good headset helps a lot more than a fancy camera.
  • Stabilize the shot: laptop on books or a stand; avoid shaky webcams.
  • Dress one step above casual: aligned with your customer’s culture.
  • Reduce distractions: silence notifications, close extra tabs, mute room noise.
  • Check framing: head and shoulders centered, with a little space above your head.
  • Use screen sharing well: clear tabs, large font, full-screen when possible.
  • Practice your setup: do a 2-minute test call before important demos.

If you want, I can give you a cheap setup under $100, a mid-range setup, or a “best possible on a laptop” checklist.

How can I avoid technical issues in small business video meetings? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

To avoid technical issues in small business video meetings:

  • Use reliable hardware:
    • Webcam: Logitech C920s or Logitech Brio 505
    • Headset: Jabra Evolve2 65 or Poly Blackwire 3225
    • Mic/speaker for rooms: Jabra Speak 510 or Poly Sync 20
  • Standardize your platform: Pick one main tool like Zoom, Microsoft Teams, or Google Meet and train everyone on it.
  • Test before important calls: Do a 5-minute test for audio, video, screen sharing, and links.
  • Improve internet stability: Use wired Ethernet when possible; otherwise a strong router like ASUS RT-AX55 or TP-Link Archer AX55 helps.
  • Keep software updated: Zoom/Teams, browser, camera, and audio drivers.
  • Have a backup plan:
    • Backup internet: Verizon 5G Hotspot or T-Mobile 5G Hotspot
    • Backup device: a laptop or phone with the app installed
  • Use a simple meeting setup: Good lighting, quiet room, and avoid too many open apps.
  • Create a checklist: camera on, mic tested, charger plugged in, meeting link confirmed.

If you want, I can give you a small-business meeting setup checklist with budget and premium gear options.

retrieval Not mentioned

A simple checklist helps most:

  • Test 10 minutes early: camera, mic, speakers, screen share.
  • Use wired internet if possible or sit near the router.
  • Close extra apps/tabs to free bandwidth and CPU.
  • Update Zoom/Teams/Meet before the meeting.
  • Keep a backup: phone hotspot, second device, or dial-in number.
  • Use a headset to reduce echo and bad audio.
  • Mute when not speaking and turn off HD video if connection is weak.
  • Have a meeting host checklist: link, password, lobby settings, recording, screen-share permissions.
  • Use a plain setup: simple background, one main camera, one mic.
  • Send an agenda and file links ahead of time so you’re not scrambling during the call.

If you want, I can give you a small-business video meeting setup checklist or recommend budget gear.

How do I keep meeting links and invitations organized? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Use one “source of truth” for every meeting, then automate the rest.

A simple setup that works:

  • Calendar: Google Calendar, Outlook Calendar, or Apple Calendar
  • Inbox filtering: Gmail filters or Outlook Rules
  • Meeting notes/tasks: Notion, Todoist, or Microsoft To Do
  • Scheduling links: Calendly or Microsoft Bookings

Best habits:

  1. Put every invite into your calendar immediately
    • Accept/decline right away.
    • Add a color label like Work / Personal / Interviews.
  2. Create a “Meeting” email folder/label
    • Filter invite emails, reminders, and reschedules into it.
    • In Gmail: use labels + filters.
    • In Outlook: create a rule for emails with calendar invites.
  3. Use one link hub
    • Save common meeting links in a note app like Notion or Apple Notes.
    • Better: store the link inside the calendar event title/description.
  4. Turn invitations into tasks
    • Example: “Prepare slides,” “Review agenda,” “Send follow-up.”
    • Todoist is great for this.
  5. Use scheduling tools
    • Calendly for external bookings.
    • Microsoft Bookings if you’re in Microsoft 365.

My best combo picks:

  • Gmail + Google Calendar + Todoist
  • Outlook + Microsoft Calendar + Microsoft To Do
  • Apple Calendar + Notes + Calendly

If you want, I can give you a 5-minute setup plan for your exact email/calendar app.

retrieval Not mentioned

Use one system of record and one rule:

  • One calendar only: put every invite there.
  • One inbox for links: a notes app, task app, or email label like “Meeting Links.”
  • Standard naming: Project — Person — Date.
  • Save the link in the event title/notes and pin the calendar invite if possible.
  • Use folders/labels:
    • Upcoming
    • Waiting to accept
    • Reschedule
    • Recurring
  • Copy the meeting link into the calendar event even if it came by email.
  • Set reminders: 10 min, 1 hour, and 1 day before important meetings.
  • Review weekly: archive old invites and clear duplicates.

Simple setup that works well:

  • Google Calendar or Outlook Calendar for events
  • Notion / Apple Notes / OneNote for storing backup links and agenda
  • Email filters to auto-label meeting invites

If you want, I can give you a super simple personal workflow or a team/office workflow.

How can I invite outside guests to a team meeting? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

If you mean Microsoft Teams:

  1. Open the meeting in Teams or Outlook.
  2. Add the guest’s email address to the invite.
  3. Send the invite.
  4. If they’re truly external, they can join as a guest or anonymous attendee (depending on your org’s settings).

If they can’t join:

  • Ask your Teams admin to enable external access/guest access.
  • Make sure the meeting policy allows anonymous join if needed.

If you want, I can give you the exact steps for Teams desktop, mobile, or Outlook.

retrieval Not mentioned

Usually you can invite outside guests by:

  1. Open the meeting invitation.
  2. Add their email addresses in the Guests / Attendees / Invitees field.
  3. Send the invite.

A few tips:

  • Make sure the meeting is marked public or guest access allowed if your platform has that setting.
  • If it’s a video meeting, include the meeting link in the invite.
  • If your organization blocks external guests, you may need admin approval or use a guest-sharing setting.

If you tell me what app you’re using (Teams, Zoom, Google Calendar, Outlook, etc.), I can give exact steps.

How do I choose a video meeting app that works for low-bandwidth connections? problem
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Pick an app that’s built to degrade gracefully on bad connections.

What to look for
  • Audio-first reliability: clear audio even when video drops
  • Adaptive bitrate: automatically lowers video quality
  • Turn off HD by default
  • Disable incoming video / gallery view
  • Low data mode / bandwidth saver
  • Dial-in by phone as a fallback
  • Good mobile app: often works better than desktop on weak networks
  • Meeting controls: host can mute video or limit participants’ cameras
Good options for low bandwidth
  • Zoom — strong adaptive quality, easy to disable video, reliable audio-only fallback
  • Google Meet — lightweight in-browser, usually works well on weak connections
  • Microsoft Teams — decent adaptive behavior, good if you already use Microsoft 365
  • Cisco Webex — built for reliability; good on constrained networks
  • Jitsi Meet — simple, free, browser-based; can be good for small meetings
Best practical choice
  • For general use: Zoom
  • For browser-only simplicity: Google Meet
  • For enterprise/network control: Webex or Teams
Quick test before committing

Run a 15-minute call on:

  1. Wi‑Fi and mobile hotspot
  2. Video on, then video off
  3. Screen share enabled
  4. Weak signal or throttled hotspot

If the app stays usable with audio only, it’s a good fit.

If you want, I can give you a top 3 recommendation based on your internet speed, device, and number of participants.

retrieval Not mentioned

Look for apps that optimize for audio-first, adaptive video, and low data use.

Key things to check:

  • Adaptive bitrate: lowers video quality automatically when bandwidth drops.
  • Audio-only mode: should work well even when video is off.
  • Dial-in / phone fallback: useful if internet gets unstable.
  • Low-resolution video option: 360p or similar.
  • Screen sharing efficiency: some apps handle it better than others.
  • Bandwidth controls: ability to turn off incoming video by default.
  • Mobile performance: important if people may join on cellular.

Good signs in a product:

  • “Works on poor connections”
  • “Optimized for variable network conditions”
  • “Join by phone”
  • “Disable HD video”
  • “Bandwidth-saving mode”

Practical picks that are often decent for weak connections:

  • Zoom: strong adaptive behavior, easy to turn video off.
  • Google Meet: simple, browser-based, good fallback to audio.
  • Microsoft Teams: solid if your organization already uses Microsoft.
  • Jitsi Meet: lightweight and browser-based, good for simple calls.

Rule of thumb:

  • If bandwidth is very limited: prioritize audio + screen share, not video.
  • If you need video: choose an app with automatic quality adjustment and phone dial-in.

If you want, I can give you a short comparison table based on your exact situation: home internet, mobile hotspot, rural connection, or international calls.

What is the cheapest video meeting app for small businesses? transactional
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

If you want the cheapest option for a small business, start with Google Meet or Jitsi Meet:

  • Jitsi Meetfree, no account needed, unlimited meetings. Best if you want the lowest cost possible.
  • Google Meet — included with Google Workspace, which starts at $6/user/month. Best if you already use Gmail/Docs.
  • Zoom Basicfree, but group calls are limited to 40 minutes.
  • Microsoft Teams Essentials — about $4/user/month. Good value if you use Microsoft 365.

Best cheap pick overall: Google Meet with Google Workspace Starter or Microsoft Teams Essentials. Absolute cheapest: Jitsi Meet.

If you want, I can also rank them by price, ease of use, and features.

retrieval Not mentioned

If you want the cheapest paid video meeting app for a small business, Microsoft Teams Essentials is the lowest I found at $4/user/month, paid yearly. It includes unlimited meetings, up to 300 participants, and 10 GB storage per user. (microsoft.com)

If free is acceptable, Zoom Basic and RingCentral Video both have free meeting plans, but they come with limits like Zoom’s 40-minute cap and RingCentral’s 50-minute free calls. (zoom.com)

Bottom line:

  • Cheapest paid: Microsoft Teams Essentials (microsoft.com)
  • Cheapest overall: a free tier like Zoom Basic or RingCentral Video (zoom.com)

If you want, I can also rank the best options by cheapest, easiest to use, or best for client meetings.

Are there free video meeting apps for small teams? transactional
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Yes — a few good free options for small teams:

  • Google Meet — easy to use, works well if you already use Gmail/Google Calendar.
  • Zoom Basic — very popular, simple scheduling, but free meetings are usually limited to 40 minutes.
  • Microsoft Teams Free — good for chat + meetings in one app, especially if your team uses Microsoft 365.
  • Cisco Webex Free — solid for business use, with meeting and screen-sharing features.
  • Jitsi Meet — fully free and open-source, no account needed for basic use.

If you want the easiest pick: Google Meet or Zoom Basic. If you want chat + meetings together: Microsoft Teams Free.

If you want, I can also suggest the best one based on your team size and whether you need screen sharing, recording, or no time limits.

retrieval Mentioned

Yes — a few solid free options for small teams are:

  • Google Meet: free with a Google account; up to 100 participants and 60 minutes per meeting. (workspace.google.com)
  • Zoom Basic: free plan with up to 100 participants and a 40-minute limit per meeting. (zoom.com)
  • Microsoft Teams Free: free meetings up to 100 participants and 60 minutes. (microsoft.com)
  • Cisco Webex Free: up to 100 participants with a 50-minute limit. (webex.com)

Quick pick:

  • Easiest for casual team calls: Google Meet
  • Best if you already use Microsoft: Teams Free
  • Best if you want the most recognizable meeting app: Zoom Basic
  • Best if you want a slightly longer free meeting cap: Webex

If you want, I can also rank them for small business use, ease of joining, or no account required for guests.

What video meeting apps have free plans for businesses? transactional
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Here are popular video meeting apps that offer free plans businesses can use:

  • Zoom Basic — free, up to 40 minutes per meeting with 3+ participants
  • Google Meet (free with a Google account) — good for small teams, usually up to 60 minutes per meeting for group calls
  • Microsoft Teams Free — chat + meetings, good for small businesses
  • Cisco Webex Free Plan — solid for business use, includes meeting limits and basic collaboration
  • Skype — free meetings/calls, though less common for business now
  • Jitsi Meet — fully free/open source, no account required
  • Whereby Free — easy browser-based meetings, limited to one room and a small participant cap
  • Zoho Meeting Free — useful for small teams, limited meeting length/participants

If you want, I can also rank them by best for small businesses, best for no time limits, or best for security.

retrieval Not mentioned

A few solid options with free plans for business use:

  • Zoom Workplace Basic — free, up to 100 participants and 40 minutes per meeting. (zoom.com)
  • Microsoft Teams Free — supports instant and scheduled meetings, plus screen sharing; Microsoft notes that business use is handled under Teams for business licenses, but the free app exists. (support.microsoft.com)
  • Slack Huddles — built into Slack; on the free plan it’s limited to 2 people and a 30-minute limit. (slack.com)

Worth noting: Google Meet is bundled with Google Workspace for business, while Google’s free consumer apps are not the same as a business meeting plan. (workspace.google.com)

If you want, I can also give you the best free option for small teams, client calls, or internal meetings only.

How much do small business video meeting apps cost? transactional
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Small business video meeting apps usually cost $0–$30/user/month, depending on features.

Common options
  • Zoom Workplace
    • Free: $0
    • Pro: about $15.99/user/month
    • Business: about $21.99/user/month
  • Google Meet
    • Included with Google Workspace plans
    • Starts around $6/user/month for Business Starter
  • Microsoft Teams
    • Included with Microsoft 365 Business Basic
    • Starts around $6/user/month
  • Cisco Webex
    • Free: $0
    • Meet plan: about $14.50/user/month
  • RingCentral Video
    • Free and paid plans available
    • Paid starts around $10/user/month
Typical small business spend
  • Very small team/basic use: $0–$10/user/month
  • Most businesses: $6–$16/user/month
  • Need webinars/admin/security: $20+/user/month

If you want, I can compare Zoom vs Google Meet vs Teams for a small business.

retrieval Not mentioned

Typical small-business video meeting apps run about $0 to $15 per user/month for basic plans, and $20+ per user/month if you want bundled phone/collaboration features. For example: Microsoft Teams Essentials is $4/user/month paid yearly, Google Workspace Business Starter is $7/user/month paid yearly (with Meet included), and Zoom Workplace Pro is commonly about $13–$15/user/month depending on annual vs monthly billing. (microsoft.com)

A few other common options: Microsoft 365 Business Basic is $6/user/month, Business Standard is $12.50/user/month, and RingCentral Standard starts at $24.99/user/month with video included. (microsoft.com)

If you want, I can make you a quick best-value comparison for 1–10 employees.

What are the best low-cost video conferencing tools? transactional
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Here are some of the best low-cost video conferencing tools:

  1. Zoom
    • Best for: reliability, ease of use
    • Cost: free plan available; paid plans start low per host/month
    • Why it’s good: very polished, widely used, good for meetings and webinars
  2. Google Meet
    • Best for: Google Workspace users
    • Cost: free for personal use; included with Workspace plans
    • Why it’s good: simple, browser-based, easy scheduling with Google Calendar
  3. Microsoft Teams
    • Best for: businesses using Microsoft 365
    • Cost: free version available; low-cost Microsoft 365 plans include it
    • Why it’s good: strong chat, file sharing, and meeting features
  4. Jitsi Meet
    • Best for: truly free conferencing
    • Cost: free/open-source
    • Why it’s good: no account needed, good for quick meetings, privacy-friendly
  5. Cisco Webex
    • Best for: business-grade meetings
    • Cost: free plan + affordable paid tiers
    • Why it’s good: solid audio/video quality and useful meeting controls
  6. Zoho Meeting
    • Best for: small businesses on a budget
    • Cost: low-priced plans
    • Why it’s good: inexpensive, simple, good for webinars too

Best overall low-cost pick: Zoom Best free pick: Jitsi Meet Best for Google users: Google Meet Best for Microsoft users: Microsoft Teams

If you want, I can also narrow this down by team size, free vs paid, or best for webinars.

retrieval Mentioned

Here are the best low-cost video conferencing options right now:

  • Jitsi Meet — best pure free option: open source, encrypted, no account needed, free all day. (jitsi.org)
  • Zoom Workplace Basic — best-known free tier: free, up to 40 minutes per meeting, up to 100 participants. Paid Pro removes the 40-minute cap. (zoom.com)
  • Microsoft Teams Essentials — best budget paid plan for small businesses: $4/user/month paid yearly, with meetings up to 30 hours and up to 300 participants. (microsoft.com)
  • Google Workspace Business Starter (Google Meet) — good if you already use Gmail/Docs: $7/user/month paid yearly in the U.S., includes Google Meet video meetings for 100 participants. (workspace.google.com)
  • Webex Free / Meet Plan — solid for meetings and security: free plan available; paid Meet plan is $14.50/license/month and includes meetings up to 24 hours and up to 200 attendees. (webex.com)

Quick picks

  • Absolute cheapest: Jitsi Meet. (jitsi.org)
  • Best free mainstream app: Zoom Basic. (zoom.com)
  • Best cheap business plan: Microsoft Teams Essentials. (microsoft.com)
  • Best if you live in Google Workspace: Google Meet / Business Starter. (workspace.google.com)

If you want, I can rank these for personal use, small business, or large meetings.

Which meeting apps are worth paying for on a small budget? transactional
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

If you’re on a small budget, these are usually the best paid meeting apps by value:

  • Zoom Pro — best overall for most small teams. Reliable, easy to use, strong screen sharing, breakout rooms, and meeting controls.
  • Google Workspace Business Starter — best if you already use Gmail/Google Docs. Google Meet is simple, solid, and bundled with email/storage.
  • Microsoft Teams Essentials — best for Office/Microsoft users. Good value if you want meetings plus chat and file collaboration.
  • Cisco Webex Starter — worth it if you care about meeting quality/security and want a more “enterprise” feel.
  • RingCentral Video Pro — decent all-in-one if you want calling + meetings, but usually not the cheapest.

Best pick by scenario:

  • Cheapest good paid option: Zoom Pro
  • Best bundle value: Google Workspace Business Starter
  • Best for Microsoft users: Teams Essentials

If you want, I can also rank them by price, ease of use, or best for client calls.

retrieval Not mentioned

Yes — on a small budget, these are the paid meeting apps I’d actually consider:

  • Microsoft Teams Essentials: best pure budget pick at $4/user/month billed yearly. It gives unlimited meetings up to 30 hours, 300 participants, transcripts/recordings, chat, and calendar integration. (microsoft.com)
  • Google Workspace Business Starter: best if your team already lives in Gmail/Docs. It’s $7/user/month billed yearly and includes Google Meet with 100 participants, plus business email and 30 GB storage. (workspace.google.com)
  • Zoom Workplace Pro: best if you want the most polished meeting experience and can spend more. It removes Zoom’s 40-minute limit, supports 100 participants, and Zoom’s current annual pricing is shown around $149.90/year/user on pricing references. (zoom.com)
  • Whereby Pro: best for simple, browser-based calls. It’s $10.99/month, with no time limit, 100 attendees, and custom branding. (whereby.com)

My short take:

  • Tightest budget: Teams Essentials.
  • Best value if you need Google tools too: Google Workspace Starter.
  • Best “just works” meeting app: Zoom Pro.
  • Best simplest link-in-a-browser option: Whereby Pro. (microsoft.com)

If you want, I can narrow this to solo, 2–10 people, or client-facing meetings.

What video meeting apps include scheduling and screen sharing in the free tier? transactional
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Several popular video meeting apps include both scheduling and screen sharing in the free tier:

  • Zoom Basic — scheduling via the app/calendar integration; screen sharing included.
  • Google Meet — schedule through Google Calendar; screen sharing included.
  • Microsoft Teams (free) — meeting scheduling and screen sharing are included.
  • Cisco Webex Free — scheduling and screen sharing are included.
  • Jitsi Meet — free, no account required; screen sharing is available, and you can set up meetings in advance via a calendar link or external scheduler.

If you want the best free all-around option, I’d usually point to Google Meet or Zoom Basic. If you want, I can also compare them by time limits, participant caps, and recording.

retrieval Mentioned

Yes — these free tiers include both scheduling and screen sharing:

  • Zoom Basic — free screen sharing, and you can schedule meetings/booking via Zoom’s scheduler and calendar integrations. (zoom.com)
  • Microsoft Teams Free — supports screen sharing, and the free plan lets you schedule meetings or share meeting invites. (support.microsoft.com)
  • Google Meet (free Google account) — you can schedule meetings in Google Calendar and present/share your screen in Meet. (support.google.com)
  • Cisco Webex Free — includes screen sharing, and Webex lets you start or schedule meetings from your Webex site/app. (webex.com)

If you want, I can narrow this to the best one for 1:1 calls, small teams, or no-account guest joins.

Which affordable meeting platforms are best for growing teams? transactional
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For growing teams, the best affordable meeting platforms are usually:

  • Google Meet — best if you already use Google Workspace; simple, reliable, low admin overhead.
  • Zoom Workplace — best all-around option; great audio/video, easy external calls, and familiar to most people.
  • Microsoft Teams — best if you’re on Microsoft 365; strong for chat + meetings in one place.
  • Whereby — best for very simple client-facing meetings; easy to join, lightweight.
  • Cisco Webex — solid for security/compliance-heavy teams, but often less loved for everyday use.
Best picks by need
  • Lowest friction: Google Meet
  • Best overall value: Zoom Workplace
  • Best bundled with productivity tools: Microsoft Teams
  • Best for external meetings: Whereby
Quick recommendation

If you’re a growing team and want the safest buy, start with Zoom Workplace or Google Meet. If you already pay for Google Workspace or Microsoft 365, use the built-in option first.

If you want, I can give you a best choice by team size and budget.

retrieval Mentioned

For growing teams, the best affordable meeting platforms are usually:

  • Microsoft Teams Essentials$4/user/month billed yearly; good if you want chat + meetings + file sharing in one place, and it supports up to 300 participants with 10 GB storage per user. (microsoft.com)
  • Google Workspace Business Starter — currently $7/user/month after promo; best if your team already lives in Gmail/Drive/Calendar and wants simple meetings plus business email. (workspace.google.com)
  • Zoom Workplace Pro$127.92/user/year on the current promo page; strong for pure video meetings, with 100 participants and 30-hour meetings. (zoom.com)
  • Zoom Workplace Business$175.92/user/year on the current promo page; better once you need 300 participants and more admin controls. (zoom.com)
  • Webex free / basic — free plan includes meetings up to 40 minutes with 100 attendees; worth it if budget is tight and your meetings are short. (help.webex.com)

My quick pick:

If you want, I can narrow this to your team size and whether you need recording, webinars, or phone integration.

What are the best value video meeting apps for small businesses? transactional
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Best value video meeting apps for small businesses:

  1. Google Meet
    • Best for: Simple, low-cost, Google Workspace users
    • Why it’s good value: Easy to use, reliable, and included with many Google Workspace plans
    • Standout: Great if your team already uses Gmail, Docs, and Calendar
  2. Zoom Workplace
    • Best for: The most polished all-around meeting experience
    • Why it’s good value: Strong video quality, breakout rooms, recording, and broad adoption
    • Standout: Best mix of ease, features, and familiarity for clients
  3. Microsoft Teams
    • Best for: Businesses using Microsoft 365
    • Why it’s good value: Meetings are bundled into Microsoft 365 plans, so it can be cheaper overall
    • Standout: Best if you already live in Outlook, Word, and Excel
  4. Cisco Webex
    • Best for: Security-focused teams
    • Why it’s good value: Solid meetings, strong admin controls, and dependable enterprise-grade features
    • Standout: Good for businesses that want robust compliance and security
  5. RingCentral Video
    • Best for: Teams wanting meetings + phone in one place
    • Why it’s good value: Combines video meetings, messaging, and VoIP
    • Standout: Useful if you want an all-in-one communications platform

Best overall value picks:

  • Most affordable/simple: Google Meet
  • Best overall: Zoom Workplace
  • Best if you use Microsoft: Microsoft Teams

If you want, I can also give you a top 3 by budget or a recommendation based on team size.

retrieval Mentioned

For best value, I’d shortlist these:

  • Microsoft Teams Essentials — best pure-meeting value if you want a standalone meeting app: $4/user/month billed yearly, with 30-hour meetings, 300 participants, and 10 GB storage. (microsoft.com)
  • Google Workspace Business Starter — best if you also need business email/docs: $7/user/month annual (or $8.40 monthly), includes Google Meet for 100 participants and 30 GB pooled storage. (workspace.google.com)
  • Zoho Meeting — cheapest simple option: the Free plan supports 60-minute meetings with 100 participants, and the paid Standard plan starts at $1 per host/month billed annually. (zoho.com)
  • Zoom Workplace Pro — best “balanced” premium pick: $13.33/user/month billed annually, with 30-hour meetings, 100 participants, and 10 GB storage. (aidocs.zoom.com)
  • Webex — good if you want a more enterprise/security-leaning option; Webex offers unlimited meetings up to 40 minutes per meeting on its base plan and higher tiers for longer meetings. (pricing.webex.com)

My quick ranking for small businesses:

  1. Teams Essentials — best value overall
  2. Google Workspace Starter — best if you need email + meetings
  3. Zoho Meeting — best budget option
  4. Zoom Workplace Pro — best polished all-rounder
  5. Webex — best for security/compliance-heavy teams

If you want, I can turn this into a “best for 1–5 users / 5–20 users / 20+ users” recommendation.

Do any video meeting apps offer monthly pricing for small teams? transactional
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Yes — several do.

Good monthly options for small teams:

  • Zoom Pro — monthly per user; good for basic team meetings.
  • Microsoft Teams Essentials — monthly per user; simpler, cheaper Teams plan.
  • Google Workspace Business Starter — monthly per user; includes Google Meet.
  • RingCentral Video Pro+ — monthly; more business-focused.
  • GoTo Meeting Professional — monthly; straightforward for small teams.

If you want, I can compare the cheapest plans side-by-side for 2–10 people.

retrieval Mentioned

Yes — a few do.

  • Zoom Workplace Pro has a monthly-billed plan for 1–99 users. (zoom.com)
  • Webex Meet is $14.50 per license/month and is explicitly offered at a monthly cost. (webex.com)
  • Google Workspace (which includes Google Meet) says “All plans billed monthly” and lists Business Starter at $7/user/month and Business Standard at $14/user/month. (workspace.google.com)

If you want, I can narrow this down to the cheapest monthly option for 2–10 people.

TOM — Top of Mind (15 prompts)

What are the best small business video meeting apps?
4/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best small-business video meeting apps:

  1. Zoom Meetings

Best overall for ease of use, reliability, and features. Great for client calls, webinars, breakout rooms, and screen sharing.

  1. Google Meet

Best if your team already uses Google Workspace. Simple, solid, and works well in-browser with little setup.

  1. Microsoft Teams

Best for businesses on Microsoft 365. Strong for meetings plus chat, file sharing, and internal collaboration.

  1. Cisco Webex Meetings

Best for security and larger organizations. Good audio/video quality and strong admin controls.

  1. RingCentral Video

Best for phone-centric small businesses. Nice if you already use RingCentral for business calling.

  1. GoTo Meeting

Best for straightforward professional meetings. Reliable and easy for external clients to join.

Quick pick:

  • Best overall: Zoom
  • Best for Google users: Google Meet
  • Best for Microsoft users: Teams

If you want, I can also rank them by price, ease of use, or security.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best small-business video meeting apps right now:

  1. Zoom Meetings
    • Best overall for ease of use, reliability, and features
    • Great for client calls, webinars, breakout rooms, recording
    • Best if you want the most familiar option
  2. Google Meet
    • Best if your team already uses Google Workspace
    • Simple, lightweight, strong calendar/Gmail integration
    • Best for fast internal meetings
  3. Microsoft Teams
    • Best for businesses using Microsoft 365
    • Excellent for chat + meetings + file sharing in one place
    • Best for companies that want an all-in-one platform
  4. Cisco Webex
    • Best for security, compliance, and larger teams
    • Strong meeting controls and enterprise-grade reliability
    • Good if privacy and admin features matter
  5. GoTo Meeting
    • Best for straightforward professional meetings
    • Solid screen sharing, recording, and scheduling tools
    • Good for client-facing service businesses
  6. RingCentral Video
    • Best if you want phone + video in one system
    • Works well for small teams that need unified communications

My quick picks:

  • Best overall: Zoom
  • Best for Google users: Google Meet
  • Best for Microsoft users: Teams
  • Best simple alternative: GoTo Meeting

If you want, I can also give you the best free options or the best app for 1–10 person teams.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best video meeting apps for small businesses:

  1. Zoom Meetings

Best overall for ease of use, reliability, and features. Great for client calls, webinars, and team meetings.

  1. Google Meet

Best if you already use Google Workspace. Simple, affordable, and works well in-browser.

  1. Microsoft Teams

Best for businesses using Microsoft 365. Strong for chat, file sharing, and internal collaboration.

  1. RingCentral Video

Best for phone + video in one platform. Good if you want a full business communications suite.

  1. Cisco Webex

Best for security and more formal business use. Solid meeting controls and good call quality.

  1. GoTo Meeting

Best for straightforward business meetings. Reliable and easy to manage.

  1. Whereby

Best for simple client-facing meetings. Very easy to join with no app download required.

Quick pick:

  • Best overall: Zoom
  • Best for Google users: Google Meet
  • Best for Microsoft users: Teams
  • Best simple option: Whereby

If you want, I can also give you the best free options or the best paid options under $20/user/month.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best small-business video meeting apps:

  • Zoom Workplace — Best overall for ease of use, reliability, and features.
  • Google Meet — Best if your team already uses Google Workspace.
  • Microsoft Teams — Best for companies on Microsoft 365 and team collaboration.
  • RingCentral Video — Best all-in-one phone + video option for small businesses.
  • Cisco Webex — Best for stronger security and enterprise-style controls.
  • GoTo Meeting — Good simple option for scheduled client meetings.
  • Whereby — Best for very easy, no-download browser meetings.

Quick pick:

  • Best overall: Zoom Workplace
  • Best budget-friendly: Google Meet
  • Best for Microsoft users: Microsoft Teams

If you want, I can also give you the best one for a 5-person team, client calls, or internal team meetings.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

For most small businesses, the best video meeting apps are:

  1. Zoom Workplace
    • Best overall for ease of use, reliability, and external client meetings.
    • Good screen sharing, breakout rooms, recordings, and scheduling.
    • Best if you meet with people outside your company a lot.
  2. Google Meet
    • Best if your team already uses Google Workspace (Gmail, Calendar, Docs).
    • Simple, browser-based, low friction.
    • Great for small teams that want “just works” video calls.
  3. Microsoft Teams
    • Best for businesses using Microsoft 365.
    • Strong chat, file sharing, and internal collaboration beyond meetings.
    • Better as an all-in-one work hub than a pure meeting app.
  4. RingCentral Video
    • Best for businesses that want meetings plus business phone/communications in one system.
    • Good for customer-facing teams and offices replacing desk phones.
  5. GoTo Meeting
    • Solid for straightforward business meetings.
    • Reliable and simple, though less popular than Zoom/Teams/Meet.
  6. Whereby
    • Best for very small teams, freelancers, and client calls.
    • Super simple browser meetings, no heavy app setup.

Best pick by scenario

  • Most small businesses: Zoom Workplace
  • Google-first teams: Google Meet
  • Microsoft-first teams: Microsoft Teams
  • Simple client meetings: Whereby
  • Unified phone + video: RingCentral Video

If you want, I can also give you the best free options or a comparison by price, attendee limits, and features.

What are the top video meeting apps for small businesses?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Top video meeting apps for small businesses:

  1. Zoom Workplace

Best overall for ease of use, reliability, and features like breakout rooms, webinars, and good meeting controls.

  1. Google Meet

Best if you already use Google Workspace. Simple, lightweight, and works well in-browser.

  1. Microsoft Teams

Best for businesses using Microsoft 365. Great for chat, meetings, and internal collaboration in one app.

  1. GoTo Meeting

Strong choice for professional, no-fuss meetings. Reliable and easy for client calls.

  1. RingCentral Video

Good for small businesses that want meetings plus phone and messaging in one platform.

  1. Cisco Webex Meetings

Best for security, meeting quality, and larger team needs.

  1. Whereby

Best for very small teams or client-facing meetings—super simple, no app required for guests.

Quick pick:

  • Best overall: Zoom Workplace
  • Best free/simple option: Google Meet
  • Best for Microsoft users: Microsoft Teams
  • Best for easy guest calls: Whereby

If you want, I can also rank them by price, ease of use, or best free plan.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Top video meeting apps for small businesses:

  1. Zoom Meetings

Best overall for ease of use, reliability, and familiar features like breakout rooms and screen sharing.

  1. Google Meet

Great if you already use Google Workspace; simple, browser-based, and easy to join.

  1. Microsoft Teams

Best for businesses using Microsoft 365; strong chat, file sharing, and meeting tools in one place.

  1. RingCentral Video

Good for small teams that want meetings plus phone and messaging in one business platform.

  1. Cisco Webex Meetings

Strong for security, enterprise-style controls, and polished meeting features.

  1. GoTo Meeting

Solid, dependable choice for professional meetings, especially for client calls and webinars.

Quick pick:

  • Best overall: Zoom
  • Best for Google users: Google Meet
  • Best for Microsoft users: Microsoft Teams

If you want, I can also rank them by price, ease of use, or best for client meetings.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Top video meeting apps for small businesses:

  1. Zoom Workplace

Best all-around choice. Easy to use, reliable, strong webinar and screen-sharing tools.

  1. Google Meet

Best if you already use Google Workspace. Simple, solid quality, and easy calendar integration.

  1. Microsoft Teams

Best for businesses using Microsoft 365. Great for meetings, chat, file sharing, and internal collaboration.

  1. GoTo Meeting

Good for professional client calls. Reliable and straightforward, with strong meeting controls.

  1. RingCentral Video

Best for small teams wanting video plus phone and messaging in one app.

  1. Cisco Webex Meetings

Strong security and good for more formal business use. Less intuitive than Zoom, but very capable.

Quick pick:

  • Best overall: Zoom Workplace
  • Best for Google users: Google Meet
  • Best for Microsoft users: Microsoft Teams

If you want, I can also rank them by price, ease of use, or security.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Top video meeting apps for small businesses:

  1. Zoom Meetings

Best all-around choice. Easy to use, reliable, strong screen sharing, breakout rooms, and lots of integrations.

  1. Google Meet

Best if you already use Gmail/Google Workspace. Simple, fast, and included in many business plans.

  1. Microsoft Teams

Best for companies using Microsoft 365. Great for meetings, chat, file sharing, and team collaboration.

  1. RingCentral Video

Good business-focused option with solid calling + meeting tools, especially if you want one platform for phone and video.

  1. GoTo Meeting

Reliable and straightforward, popular for professional meetings and webinars.

  1. Cisco Webex Meetings

Strong security and enterprise features, but still suitable for growing small businesses.

  1. Zoho Meeting

Budget-friendly and a good pick if you already use Zoho for email, CRM, or projects.

Best picks by need:

  • Simplest overall: Zoom
  • Best free/easy option: Google Meet
  • Best for Microsoft users: Teams
  • Best value for all-in-one communications: RingCentral Video

If you want, I can also rank them for price, ease of use, or security.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Top video meeting apps for small businesses:

  1. Zoom Workplace — best all-around for reliability, ease of use, and features like breakout rooms, webinars, and recordings.
  2. Microsoft Teams — best if you already use Microsoft 365; great for chat, meetings, and file sharing in one place.
  3. Google Meet — best for simple, no-fuss meetings, especially if your team uses Gmail/Google Workspace.
  4. RingCentral Video — good for businesses that want meetings plus phone/system integrations.
  5. Cisco Webex — strong for security, larger meetings, and professional-grade controls.
  6. GoTo Meeting — solid, straightforward option for client calls and internal meetings.
  7. Slack Huddles — best for quick team check-ins if your team already lives in Slack.

Best pick by need:

  • Best overall: Zoom Workplace
  • Best for Microsoft users: Microsoft Teams
  • Best simplest option: Google Meet

If you want, I can also give you the best choice by budget, team size, or industry.

Which video meeting apps are most popular for small teams?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

For small teams, the most popular video meeting apps are:

  • Zoom — most widely used, easy to join, reliable for calls and screen sharing.
  • Google Meet — great if your team already uses Google Workspace and Gmail/Calendar.
  • Microsoft Teams — best for teams using Microsoft 365 and shared files/chat.
  • Slack Huddles — good for quick, informal voice/video calls inside Slack.
  • Cisco Webex — solid for business use, secure and stable.
  • Whereby — simple browser-based meetings, no app install for guests.

Best pick by use case:

  • Simplest overall: Zoom
  • Best for Google users: Google Meet
  • Best for Microsoft users: Teams
  • Best for lightweight internal chat + calls: Slack Huddles

If you want, I can also give you the best choice for free plans, customer calls, or remote internal team meetings.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

For small teams, the most popular video meeting apps are:

  • Zoom — easiest all-around choice; very common for small businesses.
  • Google Meet — best if your team already uses Google Workspace.
  • Microsoft Teams — strong for teams on Microsoft 365.
  • Slack Huddles — great for quick internal chats if you already use Slack.
  • Cisco Webex — solid, more enterprise-leaning but still used by smaller teams.
  • RingCentral Video — good for small businesses wanting meetings + phone in one app.

Best pick by use case:

  • Simplest overall: Zoom
  • Google users: Google Meet
  • Microsoft users: Teams
  • Fast informal calls: Slack Huddles

If you want, I can also rank them by price, ease of use, or best free plan.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

For small teams, the most popular video meeting apps are usually:

  • Zoom — still the default for many small businesses; easy joining and reliable.
  • Google Meet — very popular if your team already uses Google Workspace.
  • Microsoft Teams — common for teams using Microsoft 365.
  • Slack Huddles — great for quick, informal team calls inside Slack.
  • Cisco Webex — used more in businesses, but still solid for small teams.
  • Whereby — simple, browser-based, popular with tiny teams and client calls.

Best picks by use case:

  • Best overall: Zoom
  • Best for Google users: Google Meet
  • Best for Microsoft users: Microsoft Teams
  • Best for quick internal chats: Slack Huddles
  • Best for super simple guest meetings: Whereby

If you want, I can also rank them by ease of use, price, or audio/video quality.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

For small teams, the most popular video meeting apps are usually:

  • Zoom — most widely used overall; very easy for quick meetings and screen sharing.
  • Google Meet — great if your team already uses Gmail/Google Workspace.
  • Microsoft Teams — best for teams already on Microsoft 365.
  • Slack Huddles — good for fast, informal team calls inside Slack.
  • Whereby — simple, browser-based meetings with no app install.
  • Cisco Webex — popular in more enterprise-leaning teams, still solid for small groups.

Best picks by use case:

  • Simplest all-around: Zoom
  • Best with Google tools: Google Meet
  • Best with Microsoft tools: Microsoft Teams
  • Best for casual internal chats: Slack Huddles

If you want, I can also rank them by price, ease of use, or best free plan.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

For small teams, the most popular video meeting apps are:

  • Zoom Meetings — very common, easy to join, reliable, great for external calls.
  • Google Meet — best if you already use Google Workspace; simple and lightweight.
  • Microsoft Teams — strongest if your team lives in Microsoft 365.
  • Slack Huddles — good for quick internal chats if your team uses Slack.
  • Whereby — simple browser-based meetings, nice for small teams and clients.
  • Cisco Webex — solid for more security-focused teams.

Best overall picks for small teams:

  • Zoom for flexibility and familiarity
  • Google Meet for simplicity
  • Microsoft Teams for all-in-one collaboration

If you want, I can also rank them by ease of use, price, or features.

What are the most recommended video meeting apps for businesses?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Top business video meeting apps most often recommended:

  1. Zoom Workplace — best all-around for reliability, large meetings, webinars, and ease of use.
  2. Microsoft Teams — best if your business already uses Microsoft 365; strong chat, file sharing, and collaboration.
  3. Google Meet — best simple option for Google Workspace users; easy, clean, browser-based.
  4. Cisco Webex — best for larger enterprises needing strong security, meeting controls, and compliance.
  5. RingCentral Video — good for businesses that want meetings plus phone and messaging in one platform.
  6. GoTo Meeting — solid for professional meetings and client calls, especially smaller teams.

Quick pick:

  • Best overall: Zoom Workplace
  • Best for Microsoft users: Microsoft Teams
  • Best for Google users: Google Meet
  • Best for enterprise security: Cisco Webex

If you want, I can also give you the best option by company size or a feature-by-feature comparison.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

The most recommended video meeting apps for businesses are:

  • Zoom Workplace — best all-around choice for ease of use, reliability, and large meetings/webinars.
  • Microsoft Teams — best if your company already uses Microsoft 365; strong for chat, files, and internal collaboration.
  • Google Meet — best for teams using Google Workspace; simple, fast, and browser-based.
  • Cisco Webex Meetings — best for enterprise security, compliance, and large organizations.
  • Slack Huddles — best for quick informal team calls inside Slack, not full-featured meetings.
My quick recommendations
  • Small to midsize businesses: Zoom Workplace
  • Microsoft-heavy companies: Microsoft Teams
  • Google Workspace users: Google Meet
  • Security-focused enterprises: Cisco Webex Meetings

If you want, I can also give you a best-for-small-business shortlist or a feature-by-feature comparison.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

The most recommended video meeting apps for businesses are:

  • Zoom Workplace — best overall for reliability, ease of use, webinars, and external meetings.
  • Microsoft Teams — best for companies already using Microsoft 365; great for chat, docs, and meetings in one place.
  • Google Meet — best for Google Workspace users; simple, fast, and easy for browser-based meetings.
  • Cisco Webex — strong for enterprise security, large organizations, and advanced controls.
  • RingCentral Video — good for businesses wanting meetings plus phone and messaging in one platform.
  • GoTo Meeting — solid for straightforward business meetings and dependable performance.

Quick picks:

  • Best overall: Zoom Workplace
  • Best for Microsoft users: Microsoft Teams
  • Best for Google users: Google Meet
  • Best enterprise/security: Cisco Webex

If you want, I can also rank them by price, ease of use, or best for small businesses.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

The most recommended video meeting apps for businesses are:

  • Zoom Workplace — best all-around for ease of use, reliability, and large meetings/webinars.
  • Microsoft Teams — best if your business already uses Microsoft 365 and wants chat + files + meetings in one place.
  • Google Meet — best for companies built around Google Workspace; simple and low-friction.
  • Cisco Webex — strong for enterprise security, compliance, and large organizations.
  • RingCentral Video — good for businesses wanting meetings plus phone system integration.
  • GoTo Meeting — solid for straightforward, no-fuss business meetings.
  • Slack Huddles — useful for quick internal team calls, not a full meeting platform.

If you want the safest “default” choice, I’d recommend:

  1. Zoom Workplace
  2. Microsoft Teams
  3. Google Meet

If you tell me your business size and whether you use Microsoft or Google, I can recommend the best one.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

The most recommended business video meeting apps are:

  1. Zoom Workplace

Best overall for reliability, ease of use, breakout rooms, webinars, and large meetings.

  1. Microsoft Teams

Best for companies already using Microsoft 365; great for chat, files, and internal collaboration.

  1. Google Meet

Best for businesses using Google Workspace; simple, fast, and easy to join from Gmail/Calendar.

  1. Cisco Webex Meetings

Best for enterprise security, compliance, and strong meeting controls.

  1. GoTo Meeting

Solid choice for small to mid-sized businesses that want straightforward, dependable meetings.

  1. RingCentral Video

Good all-in-one option if you also want business phone and messaging.

Quick pick:

  • Best overall: Zoom Workplace
  • Best for Microsoft users: Microsoft Teams
  • Best for Google users: Google Meet
  • Best for security/compliance: Cisco Webex

If you want, I can also rank them for small businesses, enterprise, or lowest cost.

What are the best video conferencing tools for small businesses?
4/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

AI would shortlist the following:

  • Zoom Workplace — best all-around for ease of use and reliable video quality
  • Microsoft Teams — best if your business already uses Microsoft 365
  • Google Meet — best for simple, browser-based meetings and Google Workspace users
  • RingCentral Video — best for small businesses that want calling + video in one system
  • Cisco Webex — best for stronger security and larger, more formal meetings
  • Slack Huddles — best for quick internal team check-ins

Best pick for most small businesses: Zoom Workplace or Google Meet. If you want an all-in-one office suite, go with Microsoft Teams.

If you want the best option for your budget or team size, I can suggest a specific one with pricing.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best video conferencing tools for small businesses:

  1. Zoom Workplace
    • Best overall for ease of use and reliability
    • Great for client meetings, webinars, and team calls
    • Strong features: breakout rooms, screen sharing, meeting recording, integrations
  2. Microsoft Teams
    • Best if you already use Microsoft 365
    • Good for chat + video + file collaboration in one place
    • Best for internal team communication
  3. Google Meet
    • Best for simple, browser-based meetings
    • Excellent if your business runs on Google Workspace
    • Easy to join, no app needed for most users
  4. RingCentral Video
    • Best for businesses that want calling + messaging + video in one system
    • Good for customer-facing teams and remote staff
    • Strong phone system integration
  5. Cisco Webex
    • Best for security and larger meetings
    • Solid enterprise-grade features, but still works for small teams
    • Good for professional services and regulated industries
  6. GoTo Meeting
    • Best for straightforward professional meetings
    • Reliable, simple interface, good scheduling tools
    • Often favored by consulting and sales teams
Quick picks
  • Best overall: Zoom Workplace
  • Best for Microsoft users: Microsoft Teams
  • Best simple option: Google Meet
  • Best all-in-one communications: RingCentral Video

If you want, I can also give you the best free options or a top 3 based on budget.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

For most small businesses, the best video conferencing tools are:

  1. Zoom Pro
    • Best overall for ease of use, reliability, and features
    • Great for client meetings, webinars, and team calls
    • Easy screen sharing, breakout rooms, and recording
  2. Microsoft Teams Essentials
    • Best if you already use Microsoft 365
    • Strong for internal collaboration, chat, file sharing, and meetings
    • Good value for businesses using Outlook, Word, and Excel
  3. Google Workspace Meet
    • Best for businesses using Gmail and Google Calendar
    • Simple, lightweight, and easy to join from a browser
    • Good for quick meetings and smaller teams
  4. RingCentral Video Pro
    • Best for businesses that want video, phone, and messaging in one platform
    • Strong for customer-facing teams and growing businesses
  5. Cisco Webex Meetings
    • Best for security and professional-grade meeting controls
    • Good for companies that need advanced admin features

My quick pick:

  • Best overall: Zoom Pro
  • Best for Microsoft users: Teams Essentials
  • Best for Google users: Google Workspace Meet

If you want, I can also give you a cheap vs best-value comparison for small businesses.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

For most small businesses, the best picks are:

  1. Zoom Meetings – best all-around
    • Easy to use, very reliable, great video/audio quality
    • Strong features: screen sharing, breakout rooms, recording, webinar add-ons
    • Best if you want the safest “works for everyone” choice
  2. Microsoft Teams – best for Microsoft 365 users
    • Ideal if you already use Outlook, Word, Excel, SharePoint
    • Good for chat, meetings, file sharing, and internal collaboration
    • Best if your team lives in Microsoft apps
  3. Google Meet – best for Google Workspace users
    • Simple, clean, and works directly in the browser
    • Great if you use Gmail, Google Calendar, Docs
    • Best for low-friction scheduling and quick meetings
  4. RingCentral Video – best for phone + meetings in one
    • Good if you want unified communications with business calling
    • Strong for teams that need VoIP + conferencing together
    • Best for sales/support-heavy small businesses
  5. GoTo Meeting – best for straightforward business meetings
    • Solid, dependable, and easy to manage
    • Good admin controls and meeting features
    • Best for teams that want a simple professional tool
My quick recommendation
  • Best overall: Zoom
  • Best for Microsoft shops: Teams
  • Best for Google shops: Google Meet

If you tell me your team size, budget, and whether you use Microsoft or Google, I can recommend the best exact plan.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

For most small businesses, the best video conferencing tools are:

  1. Zoom
    • Best all-around choice
    • Easy to use, very reliable, great screen sharing and meeting controls
    • Good for client calls, team meetings, and webinars
  2. Microsoft Teams
    • Best if you already use Microsoft 365
    • Strong chat, file sharing, and calendar integration
    • Great for internal team collaboration
  3. Google Meet
    • Best for businesses using Google Workspace
    • Simple, browser-based, no app needed for guests
    • Good for quick meetings and lightweight setup
  4. Cisco Webex
    • Best for stronger security and enterprise-style features
    • Good audio/video quality and solid admin controls
    • Often used by more compliance-focused teams
  5. RingCentral Video
    • Best if you want phone, video, and team messaging in one system
    • Good for small businesses that want an all-in-one communications platform

My quick picks:

  • Best overall: Zoom
  • Best for Microsoft users: Microsoft Teams
  • Best for Google users: Google Meet

If you want, I can also give you the best free options, or a comparison by price and features.

Which online meeting apps are best for small businesses?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

For most small businesses, the best online meeting apps are:

  • Zoom — Best all-around choice. Easy to use, reliable, great video quality, strong breakout rooms, webinars, and good third-party integrations.
  • Google Meet — Best if you already use Google Workspace. Simple, fast, and works well in the browser with minimal setup.
  • Microsoft Teams — Best for businesses on Microsoft 365. Strong for chat, file sharing, and meetings in one place.
  • RingCentral Video — Good for small teams that want meetings plus business phone features in one platform.
  • GoTo Meeting — Solid for professional meetings and screen sharing, especially if you want a straightforward, business-focused tool.

My quick picks:

  • Best overall: Zoom
  • Best for Google users: Google Meet
  • Best for Microsoft users: Microsoft Teams
  • Best for phone + meetings: RingCentral

If you want, I can also rank them by price, ease of use, or best free plan.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

For most small businesses, the best online meeting apps are:

  1. Zoom Workplace — best overall
    • Easy to use, reliable, great video/audio
    • Strong features: breakout rooms, recording, webinars, AI notes
    • Best if you want the simplest all-around option
  2. Google Meet — best for Google Workspace users
    • Works seamlessly with Gmail, Calendar, Docs, and Drive
    • Simple, low-friction, no extra software feel
    • Best if your team already lives in Google apps
  3. Microsoft Teams — best for Microsoft 365 users
    • Strong for chat, file sharing, and internal collaboration
    • Good for businesses already using Outlook, Word, Excel, SharePoint
    • Best for companies that want meetings + team hub in one place
  4. RingCentral Video — best for business communications
    • Good meeting tools plus phone and messaging options
    • Useful if you want one platform for calls and meetings
    • Best for small businesses with customer-facing teams
  5. GoTo Meeting — best for straightforward professional meetings
    • Solid, dependable, less cluttered
    • Good audio/video and easy scheduling
    • Best if you want a simple business-first tool

Quick pick:

  • Best overall: Zoom Workplace
  • Best free/easy choice: Google Meet
  • Best for Microsoft users: Teams
  • Best for an all-in-one phone + meeting setup: RingCentral

If you want, I can also give you the best free options or the best apps by budget.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

For most small businesses, the best online meeting apps are:

  1. Zoom Workplace
    • Best overall for ease of use, reliability, and client meetings
    • Strong video quality, breakout rooms, webinars, and scheduling tools
  2. Google Meet
    • Best if you already use Google Workspace
    • Simple, browser-based, and great for quick internal/external calls
  3. Microsoft Teams
    • Best for businesses using Microsoft 365
    • Good for chat + meetings + file sharing in one place
  4. RingCentral Video
    • Best for teams that want meetings plus phone system integration
    • Useful if you need calling, messaging, and video together
  5. GoTo Meeting
    • Best for more traditional business meetings and screen sharing
    • Reliable and easy, especially for client-facing teams

Quick pick:

  • Best overall: Zoom Workplace
  • Best for Google users: Google Meet
  • Best for Microsoft users: Microsoft Teams
  • Best all-in-one communications: RingCentral Video

If you want, I can also give you the best free options or a top pick based on your business type.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

For small businesses, the best online meeting apps are usually:

  1. Zoom Meetings
    • Best all-around choice
    • Easy to use, reliable video/audio, great for client meetings
    • Good free plan, strong paid tiers
  2. Google Meet
    • Best if you already use Google Workspace
    • Simple, browser-based, no extra software hassle
    • Great for internal team meetings
  3. Microsoft Teams
    • Best for businesses using Microsoft 365
    • Strong for chat, file sharing, and meetings in one app
    • Better for collaboration than just video calls
  4. RingCentral Video
    • Good for small businesses wanting meetings plus phone/text tools
    • Nice business-focused features and admin controls
  5. GoTo Meeting
    • Solid, dependable option for professional meetings
    • Good for customer calls and webinars

Quick pick:

  • Best overall: Zoom
  • Best simple/free option: Google Meet
  • Best for Office 365 users: Microsoft Teams

If you want, I can also give you the best choice based on your budget, team size, and whether you need phone calling too.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

For most small businesses, these are the best picks:

  • Zoom Workplace — best all-around for reliability, ease of use, breakout rooms, webinars, and external client calls.
  • Google Meet — best if you already use Google Workspace; simple, lightweight, and easy to join.
  • Microsoft Teams — best if you use Microsoft 365; great for chat, file sharing, and internal collaboration.
  • RingCentral Video — best if you want meetings plus business phone and messaging in one app.
  • Whereby — best for very simple, browser-based meetings with clients.

Quick recommendation:

  • Want the safest default? Zoom Workplace
  • Already on Google? Google Meet
  • Already on Microsoft? Microsoft Teams
  • Need phone + video? RingCentral
  • Want the easiest no-download option? Whereby

If you want, I can also rank them by price, ease of use, or best for client meetings.

What are the best affordable video meeting apps for teams?
4/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best affordable video meeting apps for teams:

  1. Google Meet
    • Best for: simple, reliable meetings
    • Why: low cost, easy to use, works well with Gmail/Google Calendar/Docs
    • Good if your team already uses Google Workspace
  2. Zoom Meetings
    • Best for: polished video meetings and outside client calls
    • Why: very familiar, strong video quality, good scheduling and webinar options
    • Affordable paid plans for small teams
  3. Microsoft Teams
    • Best for: teams using Microsoft 365
    • Why: meetings + chat + file sharing in one app
    • Great value if you already pay for Microsoft 365
  4. Cisco Webex
    • Best for: business teams that want strong security and meeting controls
    • Why: solid free/low-cost plans, reliable quality
    • Often a good choice for more formal companies
  5. Jitsi Meet
    • Best for: very budget-conscious teams
    • Why: open-source, free, no account required
    • Best for smaller teams, but fewer features than Zoom/Teams

Best overall value:

  • Google Meet for simplicity
  • Microsoft Teams if you already use Microsoft 365
  • Zoom if you want the most polished meeting experience

If you want, I can also give you a top 3 for small teams, startup teams, or the cheapest paid options.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best affordable video meeting apps for teams:

  1. Zoom Meetings
    • Best all-around choice
    • Easy to use, reliable, great video quality
    • Good free tier; paid plans are usually the best value for growing teams
  2. Google Meet
    • Best for teams already using Google Workspace
    • Simple, browser-based, no extra software hassle
    • Very affordable if you already pay for Google Workspace
  3. Microsoft Teams
    • Best for companies using Microsoft 365
    • Includes chat, files, calendar, and meetings in one app
    • Strong value if your team already has Microsoft licenses
  4. Cisco Webex
    • Best for secure, enterprise-style meetings
    • Solid meeting quality and admin controls
    • Often a good budget option for larger orgs on some plans
  5. Jitsi Meet
    • Best free/open-source option
    • No account required for basic use
    • Great for smaller teams, though less polished than Zoom/Meet
  6. Zoho Meeting
    • Best low-cost alternative for small businesses
    • Simple interface, decent features, usually cheaper than big-name tools
    • Strong option if you want meetings without paying for a full suite

Quick pick:

  • Best overall: Zoom
  • Best for Google users: Google Meet
  • Best for Microsoft users: Microsoft Teams
  • Best cheap/simple option: Zoho Meeting
  • Best free option: Jitsi Meet

If you want, I can also give you the cheapest paid plans by team size or a feature comparison table.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best affordable video meeting apps for teams:

  1. Google Meet
    • Best for: teams already using Google Workspace
    • Why: simple, reliable, good video quality, easy scheduling with Gmail/Calendar
    • Cost: often included in Google Workspace plans
  2. Zoom Workplace
    • Best for: teams that want the most familiar, easy-to-use option
    • Why: very stable, breakout rooms, webinars, strong meeting controls
    • Cost: paid plans are reasonably priced for small teams
  3. Microsoft Teams
    • Best for: teams using Microsoft 365
    • Why: chat + meetings + file sharing in one app
    • Cost: very affordable if bundled with Microsoft 365 Business Basic/Standard
  4. RingCentral Video
    • Best for: small businesses wanting phone + video together
    • Why: combines calling, messaging, and meetings
    • Cost: competitive for teams that need more than just meetings
  5. Cisco Webex
    • Best for: more security/compliance-focused teams
    • Why: strong meeting features, good admin controls
    • Cost: good entry-level pricing
  6. Whereby
    • Best for: very small teams and client calls
    • Why: super simple, no heavy setup
    • Cost: affordable for lighter usage
Best picks by use case
  • Cheapest/easiest: Google Meet
  • Best overall value: Zoom Workplace
  • Best if you already use Office apps: Microsoft Teams
  • Best for simple client meetings: Whereby

If you want, I can also compare free plans, or give you the best option for teams of 5, 10, or 50 people.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are the best affordable video meeting apps for teams:

  1. Google Meet
    • Best for: simple, low-cost team meetings
    • Why: easy to use, works well in the browser, great if your team already uses Google Workspace
    • Good value: included with many Google Workspace plans
  2. Zoom
    • Best for: polished meetings and external calls
    • Why: very reliable, familiar, strong video/audio quality, lots of integrations
    • Good value: Zoom Pro is a solid budget upgrade over the free plan
  3. Microsoft Teams
    • Best for: teams already using Microsoft 365
    • Why: meetings + chat + file sharing in one place
    • Good value: often bundled with Microsoft 365 Business Basic/Standard
  4. Slack Huddles
    • Best for: quick team check-ins
    • Why: lightweight and fast for internal communication
    • Good value: included with paid Slack plans
  5. Jitsi Meet
    • Best for: truly low-cost or free use
    • Why: open-source, no account required for basic meetings
    • Tradeoff: fewer business features than Zoom/Teams/Meet

Best overall affordable pick: Google Meet or Zoom Pro

  • Choose Google Meet if you want simplicity and low cost.
  • Choose Zoom if you want the most reliable all-around meeting experience.

If you want, I can also rank these by best for small teams, startups, or remote companies.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best affordable video meeting apps for teams:

  1. Zoom Workplace
    • Best for: Reliable, familiar, easy to use
    • Why: Strong video quality, breakout rooms, recordings, and broad integrations
    • Cost: Free plan; paid plans start around $15/user/month
  2. Google Meet
    • Best for: Teams already using Google Workspace
    • Why: Simple, browser-based, solid quality, easy calendar integration
    • Cost: Included with many Google Workspace plans; business plans start around $7–$14/user/month
  3. Microsoft Teams
    • Best for: Companies using Microsoft 365
    • Why: Meetings plus chat, files, and collaboration in one app
    • Cost: Free version available; business plans start around $4/user/month for basic use, more with Microsoft 365 bundles
  4. Cisco Webex
    • Best for: Security-focused or more formal business teams
    • Why: Good meeting controls, noise removal, and enterprise features
    • Cost: Free plan; paid plans start around $12/user/month
  5. Whereby
    • Best for: Small teams and client-facing meetings
    • Why: Very simple, no app downloads for guests, clean interface
    • Cost: Free plan; paid plans start around $8–$10/month

Best pick by budget/use:

  • Cheapest simple option: Google Meet
  • Best all-around value: Zoom Workplace
  • Best for Microsoft users: Microsoft Teams
  • Best for easy guest meetings: Whereby

If you want, I can also rank these for small teams, remote teams, or non-technical teams.

What video meeting apps are easiest for small business teams to use?
2/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

For small business teams, the easiest video meeting apps are usually:

  1. Zoom Meetings
    • Very simple to join and host
    • Best for quick setup, screen sharing, and external client calls
    • Widely familiar, so less training needed
  2. Google Meet
    • Easiest if your team already uses Gmail or Google Workspace
    • Joins directly from a browser—no heavy setup
    • Clean, lightweight, and good for small teams
  3. Microsoft Teams
    • Best if you already use Microsoft 365
    • Good for chat, file sharing, and meetings in one place
    • Slightly more complex than Zoom or Meet, but very useful
  4. Whereby
    • Very easy for simple client-facing meetings
    • Browser-based and no downloads for guests
    • Great if you want the least friction possible

Quick pick:

  • Simplest overall: Zoom
  • Best with Google tools: Google Meet
  • Best with Microsoft tools: Teams
  • Best for no-download guest meetings: Whereby

If you want, I can also recommend the best one based on your team size, budget, and whether you use Google or Microsoft.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

For small business teams, the easiest video meeting apps are usually:

  1. Zoom
    • Easiest all-around for most teams
    • Simple join links, familiar interface, strong reliability
    • Best for: everyday meetings, clients, external calls
  2. Google Meet
    • Very easy if your team already uses Gmail/Google Workspace
    • No extra software hassle for many users
    • Best for: teams already in Google tools
  3. Microsoft Teams
    • Best if you use Microsoft 365/Outlook
    • Good for meetings plus chat, files, and internal collaboration
    • Best for: office-heavy teams and internal coordination
  4. RingCentral Video
    • Good for small businesses that want meetings + phone system integration
    • Straightforward and business-focused
    • Best for: companies that want one communications platform
  5. Cisco Webex
    • Solid and secure, but a bit less intuitive than Zoom/Meet
    • Best for: businesses that care more about enterprise features and security
Best pick by situation
  • Easiest overall: Zoom
  • Simplest with Google tools: Google Meet
  • Best with Microsoft 365: Microsoft Teams

If you want, I can also give you the best free option, best for 5–20 people, or best for client-facing meetings.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

For small business teams, the easiest video meeting apps are usually:

  1. Zoom
    • Best all-around for simplicity and reliability
    • Easy joining with links, strong screen sharing, breakout rooms
    • Good if you meet with clients often
  2. Google Meet
    • Easiest if your team already uses Gmail / Google Workspace
    • Runs in the browser, very little setup
    • Great for quick meetings and simple internal use
  3. Microsoft Teams
    • Best if you already use Microsoft 365
    • Good chat + meetings in one place
    • Slightly more complex than Zoom or Meet, but powerful
  4. Whereby
    • Very easy and lightweight
    • No app download needed for many users
    • Good for small teams and client calls
  5. GoTo Meeting
    • Simple and business-focused
    • Solid for regular meetings, easy admin
    • Not as popular as Zoom, but dependable

My quick recommendation:

  • Simplest overall: Zoom
  • Best with Google Workspace: Google Meet
  • Best with Microsoft 365: Microsoft Teams
  • Best lightweight option: Whereby

If you want, I can also give you the best choice by team size, budget, or whether you need webinars/live events.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

For small business teams, the easiest video meeting apps are usually:

  1. Zoom Workplace
    • Easiest overall for most teams
    • Simple join links, strong reliability, familiar UI
    • Best if you want “just works” meetings with minimal setup
  2. Google Meet
    • Best if your team already uses Gmail/Google Workspace
    • Very easy in-browser, no app needed for guests
    • Great for quick internal and client calls
  3. Microsoft Teams
    • Best if you use Microsoft 365
    • Good for chat, meetings, and file sharing in one place
    • Slightly more complex than Zoom, but powerful
  4. Cisco Webex Meetings
    • Solid for secure, professional meetings
    • Good reliability, but not as simple as Zoom/Meet for beginners
  5. RingCentral Video
    • Nice for small businesses that want calling + video + messaging together
    • Easy enough, especially if you already use RingCentral phone service
My quick recommendation
  • Simplest overall: Zoom Workplace
  • Easiest if you use Google: Google Meet
  • Best all-in-one for Microsoft users: Microsoft Teams

If you want, I can also give you the best choice based on team size, budget, and whether you use Google or Microsoft tools.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

For small business teams, the easiest video meeting apps are usually:

  1. Zoom Meetings
    • Very simple to join with a link
    • Works well on desktop and mobile
    • Good for non-technical users
    • Best if you want the most familiar option
  2. Google Meet
    • Great if your team already uses Google Workspace
    • No complicated setup
    • Easy in-browser joining
    • Best for Gmail/Google Calendar users
  3. Microsoft Teams
    • Best if you already use Microsoft 365
    • Good for chat + meetings in one place
    • Slightly more complex than Zoom/Meet, but powerful
  4. RingCentral Video
    • Business-friendly and easy to manage
    • Good for teams that want calling + meetings in one system
  5. Slack Huddles
    • Very easy for quick, informal team calls
    • Best for teams already living in Slack
    • Not ideal as a full Zoom replacement

My quick pick:

  • Simplest overall: Zoom Meetings
  • Best if you use Gmail/Google Calendar: Google Meet
  • Best if you use Microsoft 365: Microsoft Teams

If you want, I can also give you the best free options or the best app for 5–20 person teams.

What are the best video meeting platforms for startups?
2/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

For most startups, the best video meeting platforms are:

  1. Google Meet
    • Best if you already use Google Workspace
    • Simple, reliable, low-friction for external meetings
    • Good choice for small teams and client calls
  2. Zoom Workplace
    • Best overall for feature depth and broad compatibility
    • Strong for webinars, breakout rooms, recordings, and large meetings
    • Still the safest “default” choice for many startups
  3. Microsoft Teams
    • Best if your team lives in Microsoft 365
    • Great for chat + meetings + file collaboration in one place
    • Strong for larger or more process-heavy teams
  4. Slack Huddles
    • Best for quick internal discussions
    • Not ideal as your main meeting platform, but great for fast voice/video check-ins
  5. Whereby
    • Best for very simple client-facing meetings
    • No-fuss browser-based joining, good for startups wanting a clean experience
My quick recommendation
  • Early-stage startup: Google Meet or Zoom Workplace
  • Bigger team / operations-heavy: Microsoft Teams
  • Customer-facing product team: Zoom Workplace
  • Minimalist, easy client calls: Whereby
If you want one best pick:

Zoom Workplace is usually the best all-around startup option.

If you want, I can also give you a best-by-budget list or a best for remote teams vs client meetings list.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

For startups, the “best” video meeting platform usually depends on your team size, budget, and whether you care more about internal collaboration or polished client calls.

Top picks
  • Zoom Meetings — Best overall

Reliable, widely adopted, easy for guests, strong audio/video, breakout rooms, recording. Good default choice for most startups.

  • Google Meet — Best if you already use Google Workspace

Simple, lightweight, works well from the browser, great for teams living in Gmail/Calendar/Docs.

  • Microsoft Teams — Best for larger or enterprise-leaning startups

Strong if you use Microsoft 365. Good chat, files, channels, and meetings in one place.

  • Slack Huddles — Best for quick internal calls

Great for spontaneous teamwork, but not ideal as your main customer-facing meeting tool.

  • Whereby — Best for very easy client meetings

Browser-based, no app download for guests, clean and simple.

Best by use case
  • Best overall: Zoom
  • Best budget-friendly: Google Meet
  • Best internal collaboration: Microsoft Teams
  • Best lightweight/async-friendly: Slack Huddles
  • Best for external sales calls: Zoom or Whereby
My startup recommendation

If you want one platform to start with: Zoom. If your company already uses Google Workspace: Google Meet is the easiest choice.

If you want, I can also give you a startup-focused comparison table with pricing, pros/cons, and which one fits sales, product, or remote teams best.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

For startups, the best video meeting platforms are usually:

  1. Zoom Workplace
    • Best overall for reliability, ease of use, and external calls
    • Great for sales demos, customer meetings, and all-hands
    • Strong breakout rooms, recording, webinars
  2. Google Meet
    • Best if you already use Google Workspace
    • Simple, fast, low-friction for invitees
    • Good for lightweight team meetings and client calls
  3. Microsoft Teams
    • Best for startups already on Microsoft 365
    • Strong for internal collaboration, chat, files, and meetings in one place
    • Better for larger teams and structured workflows
  4. Slack Huddles
    • Best for quick, informal team conversations
    • Great for remote startups that live in Slack
    • Not ideal for polished external meetings
  5. Whereby
    • Best for simple client-facing meetings and startups that want no-download links
    • Very easy for guests
    • Good if you want a clean, lightweight experience
  6. Riverside
    • Best for high-quality recorded meetings, podcasts, and interviews
    • Better than most meeting tools for video/audio quality
    • Not the best as a daily internal meeting app
Quick recommendation
  • Best default choice: Zoom
  • Best for Google-first startups: Google Meet
  • Best for Microsoft-first startups: Teams
  • Best for super simple guest calls: Whereby

If you want, I can also give you the best platform by startup stage (seed, Series A, remote team, sales-heavy, product team).

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

For startups, the best video meeting platforms are usually:

  1. Zoom Meetings
    • Best all-around choice
    • Very reliable, easy to use, great screen sharing, breakout rooms, webinar add-ons
    • Good for: client calls, team meetings, sales demos
  2. Google Meet
    • Best if you already use Google Workspace
    • Simple, lightweight, strong calendar/docs integration
    • Good for: fast internal meetings and teams living in Gmail/Calendar
  3. Microsoft Teams
    • Best for startups in the Microsoft 365 ecosystem
    • Strong chat, file sharing, and meeting tools in one app
    • Good for: ops-heavy teams and companies using Outlook/OneDrive/SharePoint
  4. Whereby
    • Best for very simple, browser-based meetings
    • No downloads for guests, clean UI
    • Good for: client-facing teams and early-stage startups
  5. Cisco Webex
    • Best for security and enterprise-grade controls
    • Strong compliance features
    • Good for: regulated startups or companies working with larger enterprise clients
My quick recommendation
  • Best overall: Zoom
  • Best budget/easiest: Google Meet
  • Best collaboration suite: Microsoft Teams
  • Best for guest-friendly calls: Whereby

If you want, I can also rank them by price, ease of use, or best for remote startups.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

For startups, the best video meeting platforms usually come down to ease of use, reliability, pricing, and integrations.

Best overall
  • Zoom Meetings — best all-around choice for most startups. Very reliable, easy for clients, strong screen sharing, breakout rooms, and lots of integrations.
  • Google Meet — best if your startup already uses Google Workspace. Simple, lightweight, and great for fast internal meetings.
  • Microsoft Teams — best if you’re on Microsoft 365 and want chat, docs, and meetings in one place.
Best for sales/demo-heavy startups
  • Zoom
  • RingCentral Video
  • Webex by Cisco — solid for larger or more compliance-focused teams.
Best for product/async-friendly teams
  • Loom — not a full meeting platform, but excellent for recorded updates, demos, and reducing live meetings.
  • Slack Huddles — great for quick internal calls if your team lives in Slack.
Best budget-friendly picks
  • Google Meet
  • Zoom Basic/Pro
  • Jitsi Meet — free/open-source, but less polished and less enterprise-friendly.
My quick recommendation
  • Early-stage startup: Google Meet or Zoom
  • Growing startup with lots of external calls: Zoom
  • Already on Microsoft 365: Teams
  • Remote team wanting fewer meetings: Loom + Slack

If you want, I can also give you a top 5 ranked list by price, features, and startup size.

What are the top online meeting platforms for small teams?
4/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the top online meeting platforms for small teams:

  1. Zoom

Best all-around choice for reliable video calls, screen sharing, and easy scheduling. Very widely used and simple for guests.

  1. Google Meet

Great if your team already uses Google Workspace. Fast to join, solid quality, and easy integration with Gmail and Calendar.

  1. Microsoft Teams

Best for teams using Microsoft 365. Strong for meetings, chat, file sharing, and internal collaboration.

  1. Cisco Webex

Good for teams that want strong security, stable calls, and meeting controls.

  1. Slack Huddles

Ideal for quick, informal team check-ins if your team lives in Slack. Lightweight and convenient.

  1. Whereby

Simple, browser-based meetings with no app download needed. Nice for small teams and client calls.

Best pick by need:

  • Most versatile: Zoom
  • Best for Google users: Google Meet
  • Best for Microsoft users: Microsoft Teams
  • Best for quick casual chat: Slack Huddles
  • Simplest guest experience: Whereby

If you want, I can also give you the best free options or a comparison table by price and features.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

For small teams, the best online meeting platforms are usually:

  1. Zoom Meetings
    • Best all-around choice
    • Easy to use, very reliable, good video/audio quality
    • Great for 1:1s, team meetings, webinars
  2. Google Meet
    • Best if your team already uses Google Workspace
    • Simple, browser-based, quick to join
    • Good for lightweight internal meetings
  3. Microsoft Teams
    • Best for teams on Microsoft 365
    • Strong chat + file sharing + meetings in one app
    • Good if you want meetings tied to projects and documents
  4. Cisco Webex Meetings
    • Best for security and enterprise-style controls
    • Solid meeting quality and scheduling tools
    • Often used by more formal organizations
  5. Whereby
    • Best for very small teams and client calls
    • Super simple, no app required for guests
    • Clean, minimal interface

Quick pick:

  • Best overall: Zoom Meetings
  • Best for Google users: Google Meet
  • Best for Microsoft users: Microsoft Teams
  • Best for simple client meetings: Whereby

If you want, I can also give you the best free options or a top 3 based on budget.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

For small teams, the best online meeting platforms are:

  1. Zoom Meetings

Best all-around for reliability, ease of use, and breakout rooms.

  1. Google Meet

Best if your team already uses Google Workspace and wants simple browser-based meetings.

  1. Microsoft Teams

Best for teams using Microsoft 365, especially if you want chat, files, and meetings in one place.

  1. Cisco Webex Meetings

Strong choice for security, large meetings, and solid admin controls.

  1. Slack Huddles

Best for quick, lightweight team check-ins if you already live in Slack.

  1. Whereby

Great for very small teams and client-facing meetings—no app required.

Best picks by use case:

  • Most popular / versatile: Zoom
  • Simplest: Google Meet
  • Best collaboration suite: Microsoft Teams
  • Best quick internal calls: Slack Huddles
  • Best easy client meetings: Whereby

If you want, I can also rank these by price, video quality, or features for 5–20 person teams.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

For small teams, the best online meeting platforms are usually:

  1. Zoom Meetings
    • Best overall for reliability and ease of use
    • Great audio/video quality, breakout rooms, recordings
    • Good if you meet with clients or external partners a lot
  2. Google Meet
    • Best if your team already uses Google Workspace
    • Simple, browser-based, easy scheduling from Gmail/Calendar
    • Solid for quick internal meetings
  3. Microsoft Teams
    • Best for teams using Microsoft 365
    • Strong chat + meetings + file sharing in one place
    • Good for ongoing collaboration, not just calls
  4. Cisco Webex Meetings
    • Best for security-focused teams
    • Reliable for professional meetings, strong admin controls
    • A bit less friendly than Zoom/Meet, but very capable
  5. Whereby
    • Best for very small teams that want the simplest setup
    • No app required for guests, clean interface
    • Great for lightweight recurring meetings

Quick pick:

  • Best overall: Zoom
  • Best for Google users: Google Meet
  • Best for Microsoft users: Teams
  • Best for simple guest meetings: Whereby

If you want, I can also rank them by price, ease of use, or features for remote teams.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

Top picks for small teams:

  1. Zoom Meetings

Best all-around choice. Very reliable, easy to use, strong screen sharing, breakout rooms, and good video quality. Good for: most small teams.

  1. Google Meet

Best if your team already uses Google Workspace. Super simple, browser-based, and integrates tightly with Gmail/Calendar/Docs. Good for: teams that live in Google apps.

  1. Microsoft Teams

Best for teams using Microsoft 365. Great for chat, meetings, file sharing, and internal collaboration in one place. Good for: Microsoft-heavy workplaces.

  1. Whereby

Very lightweight and easy. No app needed for guests, and the interface is clean. Good for: client calls and small, simple meetings.

  1. Slack Huddles

Best for quick informal voice/video check-ins if your team already uses Slack. Good for: fast daily collaboration, not formal meetings.

Quick recommendation:

  • Best overall: Zoom
  • Best for Google users: Google Meet
  • Best for Microsoft users: Microsoft Teams
  • Best simple alternative: Whereby

If you want, I can also rank them by price, ease of use, or best for client meetings.

What are the best Zoom alternatives for small businesses?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best Zoom alternatives for small businesses:

  1. Google Meet
    • Best if you already use Google Workspace
    • Easy scheduling, solid video quality, simple for clients
    • Good for teams that want low-friction meetings
  2. Microsoft Teams
    • Best if you use Microsoft 365
    • Great for chat, file sharing, and internal collaboration
    • Strong choice for businesses that want meetings + team workspace in one app
  3. GoTo Meeting
    • Best for reliable, professional meetings
    • Very stable, easy to use, good admin controls
    • Popular with sales, consulting, and client-facing teams
  4. RingCentral Video
    • Best all-in-one option for calls, video, and business phone
    • Good if you want unified communications
    • Strong for small businesses with remote staff
  5. Webex Meetings
    • Best for security and enterprise-style features
    • Good audio/video quality, strong meeting controls
    • A solid pick if compliance matters
  6. Jitsi Meet
    • Best free/open-source alternative
    • No account required for basic use
    • Good for simple meetings, but fewer business features

Best overall picks for small businesses:

  • Google Meet if you want simplicity
  • Microsoft Teams if you already use Microsoft 365
  • GoTo Meeting if you want a dedicated Zoom-style replacement

If you want, I can also rank these by price, ease of use, or best for client meetings.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best Zoom alternatives for small businesses:

  • Google Meet — Best if you already use Google Workspace. Simple, reliable, and easy for clients to join.
  • Microsoft Teams — Best for businesses using Microsoft 365. Strong chat, file sharing, and internal collaboration.
  • RingCentral Video — Good all-in-one option for phone + video + team messaging.
  • GoTo Meeting — Solid for straightforward, professional meetings with easy scheduling.
  • Cisco Webex — Strong security and good for teams that need more advanced meeting controls.
  • Whereby — Very simple browser-based meetings; great for client calls and agencies.
  • Jitsi Meet — Best free/open-source option if you want something lightweight and self-hostable.

Top picks by need:

  • Simplest: Google Meet
  • Best for Microsoft users: Teams
  • Best all-in-one communications: RingCentral Video
  • Best for easy client calls: Whereby

If you want, I can also give you the best Zoom alternative by price, by features, or by industry.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best Zoom alternatives for small businesses:

  • Google Meet — Best if you already use Google Workspace. Simple, reliable, good for quick client calls.
  • Microsoft Teams — Best for businesses using Microsoft 365. Strong chat, file sharing, and internal collaboration.
  • RingCentral Video — Great for small teams that want video meetings plus business phone and messaging in one platform.
  • Cisco Webex Meetings — Solid for more professional, secure meetings; good audio/video quality and admin controls.
  • GoTo Meeting — Easy to use and dependable for customer calls, webinars, and recurring meetings.
  • Whereby — Best for very small teams or client-facing businesses. No app install needed for guests.
  • Zoho Meeting — Budget-friendly option if you use other Zoho tools like CRM or Projects.

Best overall for most small businesses:

  • Google Meet if you want simplicity
  • Microsoft Teams if you want an all-in-one workspace
  • RingCentral Video if you want phone + meetings together

If you want, I can also give you the best option based on your budget, team size, and whether you use Google or Microsoft already.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best Zoom alternatives for small businesses:

  • Google Meet — Best if you already use Google Workspace. Simple, reliable, and easy for clients to join.
  • Microsoft Teams — Best for businesses using Microsoft 365. Strong chat, file sharing, and internal collaboration.
  • RingCentral Video — Great for small teams that want video meetings plus business phone features.
  • Cisco Webex — Good for more security-focused teams and polished meeting controls.
  • GoTo Meeting — Solid choice for straightforward, professional meetings with good admin tools.
  • Whereby — Best for very simple, browser-based meetings with no downloads.
  • Dialpad Meetings — Nice if you want AI note-taking and voice features.

Best overall for most small businesses: Google Meet or Microsoft Teams Best easy-to-use option: Whereby Best phone + video bundle: RingCentral Video

If you want, I can also narrow this down by budget, team size, or whether you need webinar features.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Best Zoom alternatives for small businesses:

  • Microsoft Teams — best if you already use Microsoft 365; strong meetings, chat, file sharing.
  • Google Meet — simplest for Google Workspace users; very easy to join, solid video quality.
  • RingCentral Video — good all-in-one business phone + video option; reliable for teams.
  • GoTo Meeting — longtime business meeting tool; straightforward and stable.
  • Cisco Webex Meetings — strong security and admin controls; good for larger or regulated teams.
  • Zoho Meeting — budget-friendly and works well if you use Zoho apps.
  • Whereby — very easy for client calls; no-download, browser-based meetings.
  • Dialpad Meetings — good for sales/support teams, especially if you want calling + meetings.

Best picks by need:

  • Cheapest/simple: Google Meet or Whereby
  • Best for Microsoft users: Microsoft Teams
  • Best all-in-one business communications: RingCentral Video
  • Best for security/compliance: Cisco Webex
  • Best budget business suite: Zoho Meeting

If you want, I can also give you the best Zoom alternative for remote teams, client meetings, or webinars.

What are the best team video call apps for small companies?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

For small companies, the best team video call apps are usually:

  1. Zoom Meetingsbest overall
    • Very easy to use, reliable, great video/audio
    • Good for client calls and team meetings
    • Strong free tier, solid paid plans
  2. Google Meetbest if you already use Google Workspace
    • Simple, fast, works well in-browser
    • Great for Gmail/Calendar users
    • Low friction for external guests
  3. Microsoft Teamsbest for Microsoft 365 shops
    • Best if you use Outlook, Word, Excel, SharePoint
    • Video calls + chat + file sharing in one place
    • Can feel heavier than Zoom
  4. Slack Huddlesbest for quick internal calls
    • Great for spontaneous team check-ins
    • Best inside a Slack-heavy workflow
    • Not ideal as your main formal meeting tool
  5. Wherebybest for simple guest-friendly calls
    • No app download for participants
    • Very easy for client-facing teams
    • Lightweight, clean interface
  6. RingCentral Videobest if you want calling + business phone
    • Good for companies that want video meetings plus phone system
    • Strong for small businesses with mixed communication needs

My quick pick:

  • Best overall: Zoom
  • Best low-cost/easiest: Google Meet
  • Best all-in-one productivity suite: Microsoft Teams

If you want, I can also rank them by price, ease of use, or best for remote teams.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

For small companies, the best team video call apps are usually:

  1. Zoom Workplace
    • Best all-around pick
    • Very reliable, easy for clients/external guests
    • Strong screen sharing, breakout rooms, recording
  2. Google Meet
    • Best if you already use Google Workspace
    • Simple, fast, browser-based
    • Great for low-friction internal meetings
  3. Microsoft Teams
    • Best for companies using Microsoft 365
    • Video calls plus chat, files, calendars, and channels in one place
    • Strong for internal collaboration
  4. Slack Huddles
    • Best for quick, informal team calls
    • Great if your team already lives in Slack
    • Not as strong as Zoom/Teams for larger meetings
  5. RingCentral Video
    • Good business-focused option
    • Useful if you want calling + meetings in one platform
    • Solid admin controls for small businesses

My quick recommendation:

  • Best overall: Zoom Workplace
  • Best budget/simple choice: Google Meet
  • Best for Microsoft users: Microsoft Teams
  • Best for fast internal chats: Slack Huddles

If you want, I can also give you the best option by team size, budget, and whether you use Google or Microsoft.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

Recommended by right: At friendly benefits like code: nice.

Peculiar or generic still:” Exactly maybe the rare enough cover is needed after?

Here's a one you want:

  • Zoom — best overall for reliability, ease, and everyone already knowing it.
  • Google Meet — best if your company already lives in Google Workspace.
  • Microsoft Teams — best if you use Microsoft 365 and want chat + files + meetings together.
  • Slack Huddles — best for quick internal calls, not formal meetings.
  • Whereby — best for simple, no-download client calls.

Key recommendation:

  • If you want the safest default for a small company, pick Zoom.
  • If you use Gmail/Docs, pick Google Meet.
  • If you’re all-in on Office, pick Microsoft Teams.

If you want, I can also do a nightstand-like: photo)

  • up to 10f born.

Ask no extra to make cool.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

For small companies, the best team video call apps are usually:

  1. Zoom Meetings
    • Best overall for reliability, ease of use, and external meetings
    • Great audio/video, screen sharing, breakout rooms, recordings
    • Best if you want the safest default choice
  2. Google Meet
    • Best if your team already uses Google Workspace
    • Super easy to join from Gmail/Calendar, no heavy setup
    • Good for quick internal calls and client meetings
  3. Microsoft Teams
    • Best for companies using Microsoft 365
    • Strong for chat + meetings + file collaboration in one place
    • Better if you want a full team hub, not just video calls
  4. Slack Huddles
    • Best for informal, fast conversations inside Slack
    • Lightweight and great for small teams that live in Slack
    • Not ideal for formal client meetings
  5. RingCentral Video
    • Best if you want calling + video + business phone in one system
    • Good for small businesses that need an all-in-one communications setup

My quick picks:

  • Best overall: Zoom Meetings
  • Best for Google users: Google Meet
  • Best for Microsoft users: Microsoft Teams
  • Best lightweight internal use: Slack Huddles

If you want, I can also rank them by price, ease of use, or best for remote teams.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are the best team video call apps for small companies:

  1. Zoom Meetings
    • Best overall for reliability and ease of use
    • Great audio/video, breakout rooms, recording, screen share
    • Good fit if you want the least friction for clients too
  2. Google Meet
    • Best if your team already uses Google Workspace
    • Simple, fast, no-install for guests, works well in Chrome
    • Strong for small teams that live in Gmail/Calendar/Docs
  3. Microsoft Teams
    • Best for companies using Microsoft 365
    • Video calls plus chat, files, and channels in one place
    • Better if you need an all-in-one collaboration hub
  4. Slack Huddles
    • Best for quick informal calls inside Slack
    • Lightweight and easy for ad hoc team chats
    • Not ideal as your main meeting platform
  5. RingCentral Video
    • Best if you want calling + meetings + business phone in one system
    • Solid for small businesses that need more than just video
  6. Whereby
    • Best for simple, browser-based meetings
    • Very easy for clients and external guests
    • Nice for small teams that want zero setup

My quick picks:

  • Best overall: Zoom Meetings
  • Best for Google users: Google Meet
  • Best for Microsoft users: Microsoft Teams
  • Best for simple client calls: Whereby

If you want, I can also give you the best free options or a top 3 based on your budget and tools.

What are the best business meeting apps with screen sharing?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best business meeting apps with screen sharing:

  1. Zoom Workplace

Best overall for reliable meetings, easy screen sharing, breakout rooms, and broad compatibility.

  1. Microsoft Teams

Best for companies already using Microsoft 365; strong screen sharing, chat, file sharing, and calendar integration.

  1. Google Meet

Best simple option for Google Workspace users; fast joining, solid screen sharing, and low friction.

  1. Cisco Webex Meetings

Best for larger enterprises and security-focused organizations; strong screen sharing and admin controls.

  1. GoTo Meeting

Best for straightforward business calls; dependable screen sharing and easy setup.

  1. RingCentral Video

Good all-in-one business option with meetings, messaging, and screen sharing.

  1. Slack huddles + screen share

Best for quick internal team discussions, though less full-featured than dedicated meeting platforms.

Top picks:

  • Best overall: Zoom Workplace
  • Best for Microsoft users: Microsoft Teams
  • Best for Google users: Google Meet
  • Best for enterprise security: Cisco Webex Meetings

If you want, I can also rank them by price, security, or ease of use.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best business meeting apps with screen sharing:

  1. Zoom — Best overall for most teams
    • Reliable screen sharing, breakout rooms, recording, and good video quality
    • Great for client meetings and larger group calls
  2. Microsoft Teams — Best for Microsoft 365 users
    • Strong screen sharing, live collaboration, chat, and tight Outlook/Office integration
    • Ideal for companies already using Microsoft tools
  3. Google Meet — Best for simple browser-based meetings
    • Easy to use, quick screen sharing, works well with Google Workspace
    • Good for fast internal meetings and sales calls
  4. Cisco Webex — Best for enterprise security
    • Secure meetings, robust screen sharing, whiteboarding, and admin controls
    • Strong choice for large organizations
  5. GoTo Meeting — Best for straightforward professional meetings
    • Clean interface, dependable screen sharing, meeting recording
    • Good for small to mid-sized businesses
  6. Slack Huddles — Best for quick team collaboration
    • Easy screen sharing for lightweight meetings inside Slack
    • Best for informal check-ins, not full formal meetings

Best pick by use case:

  • Overall: Zoom
  • Office suite integration: Microsoft Teams
  • Fast and easy: Google Meet
  • Enterprise security: Webex

If you want, I can also give you the best app for Windows/Mac, best free option, or best for large webinars.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best business meeting apps with screen sharing:

  1. Zoom Workplace

Best all-around for business meetings. Reliable screen sharing, breakout rooms, recording, and strong admin controls.

  1. Microsoft Teams

Best for companies using Microsoft 365. Great screen sharing, collaboration, chat, and calendar integration.

  1. Google Meet

Best for simple, browser-based meetings. Easy screen sharing, works well with Google Workspace.

  1. Cisco Webex

Best for enterprise security and large organizations. Strong screen sharing, meeting controls, and compliance features.

  1. GoTo Meeting

Best for straightforward professional meetings. Clean interface and dependable screen sharing.

  1. Slack Huddles

Best for quick internal team discussions. Lightweight, though less full-featured than the others.

Top picks by use case:

  • Best overall: Zoom Workplace
  • Best for Microsoft users: Microsoft Teams
  • Best simplest option: Google Meet
  • Best enterprise security: Cisco Webex

If you want, I can also rank them for small teams, large companies, or remote sales calls.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best business meeting apps with reliable screen sharing:

  1. Zoom Workplace — Best overall
    • Strong screen sharing, breakout rooms, recording, webinar tools
    • Great for external client meetings and larger teams
  2. Microsoft Teams — Best for Microsoft 365 users
    • Excellent screen sharing, file collaboration, live captions
    • Best if your company already uses Outlook, SharePoint, and Office apps
  3. Google Meet — Best for simplicity
    • Easy screen sharing, works well in-browser, integrates with Google Workspace
    • Good for fast internal and client meetings
  4. Cisco Webex Meetings — Best for enterprise security
    • Solid screen sharing, strong admin controls, meeting intelligence
    • Good for regulated industries
  5. GoTo Meeting — Best for straightforward business calls
    • Reliable screen sharing and easy setup
    • Good for small to mid-sized businesses
  6. RingCentral Video — Best unified communications option
    • Screen sharing plus team messaging, calling, and video in one app
    • Good if you want one platform for all business communication

Quick pick:

  • Best overall: Zoom
  • Best for Microsoft users: Teams
  • Best easiest: Google Meet
  • Best for security: Webex

If you want, I can also rank them by price, ease of use, or best for client presentations.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best business meeting apps with screen sharing:

  1. Zoom
    • Best overall for reliable screen sharing, breakout rooms, and large meetings
    • Great for presentations and webinars
  2. Microsoft Teams
    • Best if your company uses Microsoft 365
    • Strong screen sharing, chat, file sharing, and calendar integration
  3. Google Meet
    • Best for simple, browser-based meetings
    • Easy screen sharing and great for Google Workspace users
  4. Cisco Webex
    • Best for enterprise/security-focused teams
    • Solid screen sharing, annotation tools, and meeting controls
  5. GoTo Meeting
    • Good for business calls and straightforward screen sharing
    • Stable and easy to use
  6. Slack huddles
    • Best for quick team check-ins
    • Lightweight screen sharing, though not ideal for formal meetings

My top picks:

  • Best overall: Zoom
  • Best for Microsoft users: Microsoft Teams
  • Best simple option: Google Meet

If you want, I can also give you the best apps for small teams, large companies, or free use.

What are the best video chat apps for work meetings?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best video chat apps for work meetings:

  1. Zoom

Best overall for reliability, ease of use, breakout rooms, and large meetings. Great for external client calls too.

  1. Microsoft Teams

Best if your company uses Microsoft 365. Strong for chat, file sharing, calendar integration, and internal collaboration.

  1. Google Meet

Best simple option for Google Workspace users. Fast to join, easy in-browser, solid quality.

  1. Cisco Webex

Best for enterprise/security-heavy organizations. Good noise removal and strong admin controls.

  1. Slack Huddles

Best for quick ad hoc team check-ins, not full formal meetings.

  1. Whereby

Best lightweight browser-based option for small teams and client meetings.

Quick pick:

  • Best overall: Zoom
  • Best for Office users: Microsoft Teams
  • Best for Google users: Google Meet

If you want, I can also rank them by security, video quality, or free plan value.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Best overall picks for work meetings:

  • Zoom Meetings — best all-around for reliability, ease of use, breakout rooms, webinars, and large meetings.
  • Microsoft Teams — best if your company uses Microsoft 365; great for chat, calendar, file sharing, and internal collaboration.
  • Google Meet — best for simple, fast meetings inside Google Workspace; easy join links and solid performance.
  • Cisco Webex — best for enterprise security, compliance, and big organizations.
  • RingCentral Video — good for phone-system + video integration, especially for sales/support teams.
  • Slack Huddles — best for quick internal check-ins, not full formal meetings.

Quick recommendations:

  • Small teams / easy setup: Google Meet or Zoom
  • Corporate office work: Microsoft Teams
  • Security/compliance-heavy orgs: Cisco Webex
  • Fast informal collaboration: Slack Huddles

If you want, I can also rank them by video quality, pricing, or ease of use.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Top picks for work meetings:

  1. Zoom Workplace

Best overall for reliability, ease of use, and breakout rooms. Great video/audio and the most familiar for most teams.

  1. Microsoft Teams

Best if your company uses Microsoft 365. Strong calendar, chat, file sharing, and deep Outlook/SharePoint integration.

  1. Google Meet

Best for teams in Google Workspace. Simple, fast, and works well straight from Gmail and Calendar.

  1. Cisco Webex

Best for larger enterprises and security-focused organizations. Strong admin controls and meeting features.

  1. Slack Huddles

Best for quick informal calls inside Slack, not full-featured meetings.

If you want the shortest recommendation:

  • Best overall: Zoom Workplace
  • Best for Microsoft users: Microsoft Teams
  • Best for Google users: Google Meet

If you want, I can also rank them for audio/video quality, ease of use, or security.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Best video chat apps for work meetings:

  1. Zoom Workplace — best overall for reliable meetings, breakout rooms, webinars, and easy guest joining.
  2. Microsoft Teams — best if your company uses Microsoft 365; great for chat, meetings, files, and calendar integration.
  3. Google Meet — best for simple, fast meetings, especially if you use Gmail/Google Workspace.
  4. Cisco Webex — best for larger enterprises and strong security/admin controls.
  5. Slack Huddles — best for quick internal team calls, not full formal meetings.

My quick pick:

  • Best overall: Zoom Workplace
  • Best for Microsoft users: Microsoft Teams
  • Best for Google users: Google Meet

If you want, I can also rank them for small teams, large companies, or security/privacy.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

The best video chat apps for work meetings are:

  1. Zoom
    • Best overall for reliability, ease of use, and large meetings
    • Great features: breakout rooms, recording, webinars, good screen sharing
  2. Microsoft Teams
    • Best for companies already using Microsoft 365
    • Strong chat + meeting integration, file sharing, calendar, and collaboration
  3. Google Meet
    • Best simple option for Google Workspace users
    • Easy to join, works well in-browser, solid for quick team meetings
  4. Cisco Webex
    • Best for enterprise/security-heavy environments
    • Strong admin controls, noise reduction, and meeting management tools
  5. Slack huddles
    • Best for quick informal meetings inside Slack
    • Not as full-featured as Zoom/Teams, but very convenient

My quick pick:

  • Best overall: Zoom
  • Best for Microsoft users: Teams
  • Best for Google users: Google Meet

If you want, I can also rank them by audio/video quality, price, or privacy.

What are the best meeting apps for remote small businesses?
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

For most remote small businesses, the best meeting apps are:

  1. Zoom — best overall
    • Very reliable, easy for clients to join, great video/audio
    • Strong features: breakout rooms, waiting room, recordings, webinars
    • Best if you run lots of client calls or team meetings
  2. Google Meet — best if you use Google Workspace
    • Simple, fast, no-fuss
    • Works great with Gmail, Calendar, Docs
    • Best for businesses that want easy scheduling and low setup
  3. Microsoft Teams — best if you use Microsoft 365
    • Strong for internal collaboration
    • Built-in chat, files, meetings, and calendar
    • Best for teams already living in Outlook/Office
  4. Slack Huddles — best for quick informal meetings
    • Great for spontaneous check-ins
    • Works well if your team already uses Slack
    • Not ideal as your main client-facing meeting tool
  5. Whereby — best simple browser-based option
    • No downloads for guests
    • Clean, lightweight, easy for small teams
    • Good for businesses that want the least friction
  6. RingCentral MVP — best all-in-one phone + video
    • Combines meetings, calling, and team messaging
    • Good for customer-facing small businesses
    • Better if you want a full communications platform
Quick pick
  • Best overall: Zoom
  • Best for Google users: Google Meet
  • Best for Microsoft users: Teams
  • Best for quick internal chats: Slack Huddles
  • Best simple guest experience: Whereby

If you want, I can also give you the best free options or a recommendation based on your budget and team size.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

For remote small businesses, the best meeting apps are usually:

  • Zoom Workplace — best overall for ease, reliability, breakout rooms, webinar-style meetings.
  • Google Meet — best if you already use Google Workspace; simple, fast, low-friction.
  • Microsoft Teams — best for businesses on Microsoft 365; great for chat + meetings + file sharing in one place.
  • RingCentral Video — solid all-in-one option for meetings, phone, and business communications.
  • Whereby — best for very simple client-facing meetings; no app install for guests.
  • Loom — best for async video updates, so you can reduce live meetings.
  • Calendly — not a meeting app itself, but one of the best tools for scheduling meetings automatically.
My quick picks
  • Best overall: Zoom Workplace
  • Best for Google users: Google Meet
  • Best for Microsoft users: Microsoft Teams
  • Best for client calls: Whereby
  • Best for scheduling: Calendly

If you want, I can also give you the best free options or the best stack for a 5–20 person remote team.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are the best meeting apps for remote small businesses:

  • Zoom Workplace — best overall

Reliable video, easy scheduling, breakout rooms, great for clients and teams. Good free tier, paid plans add cloud recording and AI notes.

  • Google Meet — best if you already use Google Workspace

Simple, fast, and built into Gmail/Calendar. Great for small teams that want low-friction meetings.

  • Microsoft Teams — best for Microsoft 365 users

Strong for chat + meetings + files in one place. Best if your business lives in Outlook, OneDrive, and SharePoint.

  • Whereby — best for simplicity and client calls

No app download for guests, very lightweight, good for small teams that want easy branded meeting rooms.

  • RingCentral Video — best for phone + meetings in one system

Useful if you want meetings plus business calling, messaging, and admin controls.

  • Dialpad Meetings — best for AI notes and call intelligence

Good automatic transcriptions, summaries, and sales/support-friendly features.

My quick pick:

  • Best overall: Zoom Workplace
  • Best cheap/simple: Google Meet
  • Best all-in-one: Microsoft Teams
  • Best for client-facing meetings: Whereby

If you want, I can also give you the best meeting app by budget, team size, or industry.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

For most remote small businesses, the best meeting apps are:

  1. Zoom — best all-around
    • Easy for clients and teammates
    • Reliable video/audio
    • Great screen sharing and recording
    • Good free tier for small teams
  2. Google Meet — best if you already use Google Workspace
    • Simple, lightweight, browser-based
    • Great calendar integration
    • Low friction for quick meetings
  3. Microsoft Teams — best for businesses on Microsoft 365
    • Strong chat + meetings + file sharing
    • Good for internal collaboration
    • Useful if you live in Outlook/SharePoint
  4. Slack Huddles — best for fast internal check-ins
    • Quick audio/video drop-ins
    • Great for informal team communication
    • Not ideal for client meetings or larger calls
  5. Whereby — best for simple client calls
    • No download required
    • Clean, easy interface
    • Good for small teams that want minimal setup
  6. Loom — best for async meetings
    • Record quick updates instead of always meeting live
    • Great for distributed teams across time zones
    • Strong for walkthroughs and status updates
Best picks by use case
  • Best overall: Zoom
  • Best budget/easiest: Google Meet
  • Best for internal teamwork: Microsoft Teams
  • Best for async updates: Loom

If you want, I can also give you the best meeting app stack for a 5–20 person remote business.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are the best meeting apps for remote small businesses:

  • Zoom — best overall for reliability, screen sharing, breakout rooms, and ease of use.
  • Google Meet — best if your team already uses Google Workspace; simple, solid, and no extra setup.
  • Microsoft Teams — best for businesses using Microsoft 365; strong chat, meetings, and file collaboration in one place.
  • Whereby — best for the simplest client-facing meetings; no app download needed for guests.
  • Slack Huddles — best for quick internal conversations if your team lives in Slack.
  • RingCentral Video — good all-in-one option if you want meetings plus business phone features.

My quick picks:

  • Best overall: Zoom
  • Best for Google users: Google Meet
  • Best for Microsoft users: Teams
  • Best for easy guest calls: Whereby

If you want, I can also give you the best free options or the best meeting app for a team of under 10 people.

All 72 prompts run for Webex

LBA — Latent Brand Association (6)

  • 1 What is Webex known for?
  • 2 What are Webex's main strengths and weaknesses?
  • 3 Who should use Webex? Who should avoid it?
  • 4 How does Webex compare to its main competitors?
  • 5 What do people typically complain about with Webex?
  • 6 What is a typical small business video meeting app known for? control

Authority — LLM Authority (50)

  • 1 What are the best video meeting apps for client calls in a small business? discovery
  • 2 Which meeting apps work best for internal team check-ins? discovery
  • 3 What video conferencing apps are good for remote sales teams? discovery
  • 4 What are the best meeting apps for freelancers and consultants? discovery
  • 5 Which video meeting apps are best for customer support calls? discovery
  • 6 What are the best video meeting tools for hiring interviews? discovery
  • 7 What meeting apps are easiest for non-technical employees? discovery
  • 8 What are the best video meeting apps for one-on-one meetings? discovery
  • 9 Which meeting platforms are best for webinars and small online events? discovery
  • 10 What are the best video call apps for distributed teams? discovery
  • 11 What are the best meeting apps for small law firms? discovery
  • 12 What are the best meeting apps for real estate teams? discovery
  • 13 What video meeting apps work well on a budget? discovery
  • 14 Which meeting apps are good for quick daily standups? discovery
  • 15 What are the best meeting apps with calendar scheduling? discovery
  • 16 What are the best video meeting apps with screen sharing? discovery
  • 17 Which meeting apps are best for collaborating on presentations? discovery
  • 18 What are the best video meeting apps for small agencies? discovery
  • 19 What meeting apps are best for board meetings at small companies? discovery
  • 20 What are the best online meeting tools for growing teams? discovery
  • 21 What are the best alternatives to the leading enterprise video meeting platforms for small businesses? comparison
  • 22 What are the best alternatives to expensive video conferencing software for small teams? comparison
  • 23 Which are better for small businesses: lightweight meeting apps or full collaboration suites? comparison
  • 24 What are the best alternatives to feature-heavy meeting platforms for simple team calls? comparison
  • 25 What are the best alternatives to paid meeting software for tiny teams? comparison
  • 26 What are the best alternatives to webinar-focused platforms for everyday meetings? comparison
  • 27 What are the best alternatives to desktop-only meeting tools for remote teams? comparison
  • 28 What are the best alternatives to corporate meeting platforms for startups? comparison
  • 29 What are the best alternatives to complicated video conferencing systems? comparison
  • 30 What are the best alternatives to all-in-one communication suites for small businesses? comparison
  • 31 How do I host professional video calls for clients with a small team? problem
  • 32 How can I set up recurring team meetings without hassle? problem
  • 33 How do I share my screen during a business meeting? problem
  • 34 How can I schedule video meetings with clients easily? problem
  • 35 How do I run online meetings with remote employees? problem
  • 36 How do I make video calls look more professional for sales demos? problem
  • 37 How can I avoid technical issues in small business video meetings? problem
  • 38 How do I keep meeting links and invitations organized? problem
  • 39 How can I invite outside guests to a team meeting? problem
  • 40 How do I choose a video meeting app that works for low-bandwidth connections? problem
  • 41 What is the cheapest video meeting app for small businesses? transactional
  • 42 Are there free video meeting apps for small teams? transactional
  • 43 What video meeting apps have free plans for businesses? transactional
  • 44 How much do small business video meeting apps cost? transactional
  • 45 What are the best low-cost video conferencing tools? transactional
  • 46 Which meeting apps are worth paying for on a small budget? transactional
  • 47 What video meeting apps include scheduling and screen sharing in the free tier? transactional
  • 48 Which affordable meeting platforms are best for growing teams? transactional
  • 49 What are the best value video meeting apps for small businesses? transactional
  • 50 Do any video meeting apps offer monthly pricing for small teams? transactional

TOM — Top of Mind (15)

  • 1 What are the best small business video meeting apps?
  • 2 What are the top video meeting apps for small businesses?
  • 3 Which video meeting apps are most popular for small teams?
  • 4 What are the most recommended video meeting apps for businesses?
  • 5 What are the best video conferencing tools for small businesses?
  • 6 Which online meeting apps are best for small businesses?
  • 7 What are the best affordable video meeting apps for teams?
  • 8 What video meeting apps are easiest for small business teams to use?
  • 9 What are the best video meeting platforms for startups?
  • 10 What are the top online meeting platforms for small teams?
  • 11 What are the best Zoom alternatives for small businesses?
  • 12 What are the best team video call apps for small companies?
  • 13 What are the best business meeting apps with screen sharing?
  • 14 What are the best video chat apps for work meetings?
  • 15 What are the best meeting apps for remote small businesses?