How to Build a Small Meeting Room That Actually Works

Start With the Room Everyone Avoids Booking



Picture a small meeting room that gets booked constantly, but never gets booked twice by the same person. Six chairs, a screen, a camera mounted above it, and a complaint that keeps coming back in slightly different words - someone on the call cannot quite hear the person sitting furthest from the microphone.

Nothing in this room has failed in the sense of stopping working. The camera turns on, the microphone picks up sound, and the call connects every time. The actual issue sits one level deeper than that.

The frustrating part is that nobody can quite point to what is wrong. IT checks the equipment and finds nothing faulty. The room booking system shows the room is being used constantly. The only evidence of a problem is a slow accumulation of small complaints that never quite add up to a formal ticket.

The Sizing Mistake Behind Most Bad Huddle Rooms



What usually happened is that the hardware was specified for the wrong room size, not the wrong room. A device built for a longer table or a bigger group gets dropped into a six-person space, and the camera angle or microphone pickup pattern simply does not match what the room actually needs.

The recurring audio complaint almost always traces back to where the microphone physically sits in the room. If it is mounted near the screen rather than centred over the seating area, the person at the far end of the table is going to be the quietest voice on every single call.

Room acoustics tend to get ignored entirely during setup, despite being one of the easiest things to test for. Hard surfaces, glass walls and bare floors all add reflection and echo that sits underneath the audio problem, regardless of which microphone is installed.

Four to six people is the realistic range for a true huddle room. Past that point, the room starts behaving more like a medium meeting room, and the gear needs to scale with it.

The Yealink A30 and Logitech MeetUp Approach



For a genuine huddle room of four to six people, an all-in-one system - camera, microphone and speaker combined into a single unit - solves most of what goes wrong in the scenario above. Devices like the Yealink A30 or Logitech MeetUp are specifically built for this room size, not scaled down from a boardroom product.

The room was never the problem. The camera chosen for a different room was.

Built specifically for this scale, these units place the microphone pickup pattern correctly for a small table without needing separate positioning, and the camera field of view matches the room rather than overshooting it.

A single-unit system also tends to be far tidier from a cabling perspective, with one connection running to the display rather than three separate devices each needing their own cable run and power source.

This matters beyond aesthetics. A room with cables running across the floor or trailing along a table edge is also a room with a higher chance of something getting knocked loose mid-call, which tends to produce the exact same symptom as a genuine hardware fault - a dropped call or a frozen screen that has nothing to do with the equipment itself.

For acoustic issues, a basic fix is often enough - a rug, some soft seating, or acoustic panels on one hard wall can meaningfully reduce the echo that a microphone alone cannot solve. This does not require a full room renovation, just attention to the worst offending surface.

Before locking anything in, see quick huddle room build before settling on a single all-in-one unit.

Most devices in this category are certified for both Microsoft Teams Rooms and Zoom Rooms, though the exact certification can differ by model and firmware, so it is worth a quick confirmation before the room gets finalised rather than after.

Common Questions on Small Room Video Conferencing



How many people fit in a typical huddle room?



A small meeting room or huddle room is generally four to six people. Past that, the room starts to need the wider camera coverage and separate audio components associated with medium-sized rooms.

Do I need acoustic treatment in a small room?



It is not strictly necessary, but rooms with hard walls, glass partitions or bare floors benefit noticeably from even basic acoustic treatment on one surface. It is a low-cost fix that often solves what a microphone upgrade alone cannot.

Can a small room outgrow an all-in-one setup?



An all-in-one unit covers most small rooms comfortably. The point where it starts falling short is when seating grows beyond six people or the room shape changes to a longer, narrower layout.

Can I set this up myself or do I need help?



Most all-in-one systems can be installed in under an hour, since they typically connect through a single cable to the display and require minimal configuration. Acoustic treatment, if needed, can add some additional time depending on what is being installed.

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