Caelan Huntress
Caelan Huntress is an international speaker, website designer, sales strategist, and creative director of Stellar Platforms.
By using games and simple icebreakers to open virtual meeting sessions, speakers can design an engaging experience that helps participants find common ground and get to know each other.
So, thank you for coming.
We’ll get um … started in just a few—hang on, I can’t see my slides anymore. One second.
Hey, can you see my slides? I can’t … uhhh … oh, hi there, we’ll get started soon, I’m just … um …
Has that ever happened to you?
Maybe you were the host of the meeting, with a big ball of tension in your stomach, trying to troubleshoot the tech quickly enough to get back to your anxiety over everyone’s boredom, and the meeting hasn’t even started yet.
Maybe you were attending the meeting, and as soon as it started, you opened up another tab to surf the internet until it was over.
When the opening is intentional, an icebreaker collects the attention of the group, so we can gather with purpose.
Meetings continue how they begin: We create momentum in the first few minutes of our meetings, and that momentum can be designed. That’s why breaking the ice—between new people who have never met, or familiar groups meeting again—will help participants find a direction in the meeting.
Once a direction is begun, it is easy to follow it. If you start by fumbling with the tech, that is the momentum your participants will keep. If you start enthusiastic and engaged, your participant will follow that momentum.
I like to show up early to my meetings and set the space with an icebreaker. This “unofficial start” will provide immediate engagement for those who arrive early and allow extra time for people to arrive a few minutes late.
If my meeting starts at 9:00 am, I plan for the “unofficial start” to take place between 8:50 and 9:03.
Recently I finished reading Priya Parker’s book, The Art of Gathering. This book taught me how to start meetings with intention, how to create a container for the purpose, and how to curate the opening moments.
“The opening is an opportunity to sear your event’s purpose into the minds of your guests,” Parker wrote. “In those first few moments, people are at their most ready to be inspired.”
For me, this crystallized the difference between meetings that I half ignored and meetings where I could not click away.
When the opening is intentional, an icebreaker collects the attention of the group, so we can gather with purpose.
Here are some easy icebreaker exercises from my Zoom Host Checklist (registration required):
The next time you find yourself in the slow start of a meeting, and the energy begins to dissipate, just ask this simple question: “Does anyone want to play a game?”
After all, games bring us all together.