The Real Video Conferencing Equipment List for 2026
Where Most Equipment Budgets Go First - And Why That Is Backwards
Across enough Australian offices, the buying pattern repeats itself in a way that is almost predictable. A manager orders a camera, plugs it in, and assumes the job is finished. The mistake only becomes obvious once people on a call start asking someone to repeat themselves.
The instinct makes sense on the surface. A screen is the most visible part of the room, so it gets bought first. What gets missed is that audio pickup is usually the actual point of failure, and it is the part almost nobody shops for first.
The hardware is rarely wrong. The planning usually is.
Very few businesses end up with genuinely bad hardware - they end up with the right hardware bought in the wrong order.
Room Size, Platform and Audio - The Only Three Variables That Matter
Strip the category back far enough and the buying process really only depends on three things: the platform the business already runs on. Everything else - brand, price tier, design - sits underneath those three answers rather than above them.
Room size sets the baseline.
Small and large rooms do not just need bigger versions of the same gear, they need a genuinely different approach.
Platform comes next.
Whether the business runs on Microsoft Teams or Zoom changes which certified hardware is even on the table.
The simplest way in is checking virtual meeting room equipment which most IT managers wish they had read sooner, simply because it lays out the camera, microphone and speaker categories without assuming a room size first.
Then there is audio reach, which is the quietest decision in the whole list and the one that causes the loudest complaints later. A microphone built for a four-person huddle room will not hear someone seated at the far end of a boardroom table, no matter how good the camera in the room happens to be.
Applying the Framework: Small, Medium and Large Rooms
In a small room - four to six people, roughly - a single combined unit handling video and audio together tends to outperform separate components. There is little to gain from buying separate components in a room this size, and the cost difference rarely justifies the added complexity.
A camera does not fix a room. A room plan does.
Medium rooms - eight to twelve people, a typical meeting room rather than a huddle space - start to need a dedicated camera with a wider field of view paired with a microphone built for table-length pickup, because a single combined device starts running out of range right around this point.
Large rooms and boardrooms are a different category again. Room control systems start to earn their place once the room gets past a certain size. The spend increases because the problem genuinely changes, not because bigger rooms simply cost more by default.
Video Conferencing Equipment - Quick Answers
Webcam vs dedicated camera - does it matter?
For one person at a laptop, the built-in camera is rarely the weak link. The problem shows up once a room full of people needs to fit in frame, at which point a purpose-built camera with proper field of view coverage takes over from there.
Is Teams Rooms hardware different to Zoom Rooms hardware?
There is more shared hardware between the two platforms than the marketing around each one suggests. Plenty of devices carry certification for both Teams Rooms and Zoom Rooms, so platform choice narrows the list less than room size does.
What does a basic video conferencing setup cost?
A small room running on a single all-in-one unit is the most cost-effective category in the entire space, since one device covers camera, microphone and speaker together. Costs climb once a room moves into medium or large territory and separate components come into play.
Can I upgrade audio without replacing the whole system?
This is one of the more forgiving parts of the category. Outside of small all-in-one rooms, audio and video are typically separate enough that fixing one does not require replacing the other.