Picture a Meeting Where Half the Room Cannot Be Heard
There is a specific kind of meeting that goes smoothly right up until someone speaks from the wrong part of the room. The video looks sharp, the call connects without issue, and then the first comment from the far end of the table gets met with confused silence from the remote side, followed by an awkward repeat.
Every business running enough boardroom calls eventually hits this exact complaint. It rarely escalates into a formal support ticket, since the meeting technically still happens. Instead, people develop quiet workarounds - leaning in, raising their voice, repeating points - without anyone stopping to ask why this keeps happening in the first place.
What makes this particularly frustrating is that it tends to happen on the calls that matter most. A small internal catch-up with the same three people every week is rarely affected, because everyone already knows to sit close. The problem shows up specifically in client pitches, board updates and larger cross-team meetings, where the room is fuller and the stakes of being clearly heard are higher.
Why This Keeps Happening Even With Decent Equipment
This pattern almost always traces back to a mismatch between the microphone pickup range and the actual room size, rather than any equipment fault. A camera built-in microphone is typically designed for short-range pickup, and using it unmodified in a larger boardroom stretches it well past what it was ever built to cover.
Audio gets treated as an afterthought during most purchasing decisions, because the camera is the visible, easily compared part of the spec sheet. Microphone pickup range and polar pattern rarely get the same scrutiny, despite being the part of the system most directly responsible for whether a meeting actually works.
There is also a difference between omnidirectional pickup, which captures sound from all directions but loses clarity over distance, and a properly designed array built for table-length coverage. A boardroom genuinely needs the latter, and a small-room omnidirectional microphone simply was not built to solve this particular problem.
It explains why a partial fix often fails to resolve the complaint. Upgrading to a better camera with a modestly improved built-in microphone tends to produce only a small improvement, because the core issue - using a short-range device in a long-range room - has not actually been addressed.
Where Jabra Speak and Evolve Fix This Specifically
Both Poly and Jabra build audio ranges specifically designed to solve this exact problem, rather than treating microphone pickup as a secondary feature bolted onto a camera. Poly Studio and Sync ranges focus on wider pickup coverage suited to medium and large rooms, while Jabra Speak and Evolve ranges lean toward consistent voice clarity across a similar room-size spectrum.
Nobody upgrades audio until someone complains twice. By then it has already cost three meetings of credibility.
Both brands carry certification for Microsoft Teams Rooms and Zoom Rooms across most of their relevant product range, so platform choice does not need to drive the audio decision either way. The real differentiator between them tends to be subtle tonal balance and how each handles multiple overlapping voices in a busy boardroom discussion.
For a small to medium boardroom, either brand will generally solve the original problem outlined above. For larger rooms with longer tables, Jabra larger Evolve units and Poly higher-end Sync range both extend further, and the choice at that scale often comes down to which existing brand a business already has installed elsewhere.
Regardless of which brand is selected, the broader point from the original scenario still applies. Audio hardware has to be matched to the actual room size, not assumed to work simply because the rest of the setup looks complete on paper.
Local buyers comparing both brands usually land with Kickstart Computers before the final microphone choice is locked in.
What People Usually Ask About These Audio Ranges
Which brand is better for a large boardroom specifically?
Neither brand is clearly ahead for large boardrooms - both Poly higher-end Sync range and Jabra larger Evolve units extend to cover bigger rooms effectively. The decision often comes down to existing brand consistency or specific tonal preference rather than a meaningful performance gap.
Are Poly and Jabra both certified for Teams and Zoom?
Most of the relevant product range from both brands carries certification for Microsoft Teams Rooms and Zoom Rooms, so platform compatibility is rarely the deciding factor between them.
Can I add a Poly or Jabra mic to my existing camera setup?
Yes, both Poly and Jabra audio devices generally work independently of camera brand, so adding either to an existing Logitech or Yealink camera setup is a common and straightforward combination.
How do you diagnose whether audio is genuinely the fault?
A useful test is whether complaints are specifically about hearing people who sit further from the device, while video quality is never mentioned as an issue. That pattern points clearly to a microphone pickup limitation rather than a camera fault.