Meeting Bridges: Designing Information Artifacts that Bridge from Synchronous Meetings to Asynchronous Collaboration
A recent surge in remote meetings has led to complaints of ``Zoom fatigue'' and ``collaboration overload,'' negatively impacting worker productivity and well-being. One way to alleviate the burden of meetings is to de-emphasize their synchronous participation by shifting work to...
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Zusammenfassung: | A recent surge in remote meetings has led to complaints of ``Zoom fatigue''
and ``collaboration overload,'' negatively impacting worker productivity and
well-being. One way to alleviate the burden of meetings is to de-emphasize
their synchronous participation by shifting work to and enabling sensemaking
during post-meeting asynchronous activities. Towards this goal, we propose the
design concept of meeting bridges, or information artifacts that can
encapsulate meeting information towards bridging to and facilitating
post-meeting activities. Through 13 interviews and a survey of 198 information
workers, we learn how people use online meeting information after meetings are
over, finding five main uses: as an archive, as task reminders, to onboard or
support inclusion, for group sensemaking, and as a launching point for
follow-on collaboration. However, we also find that current common meeting
artifacts, such as notes and recordings, present challenges in serving as
meeting bridges. After conducting co-design sessions with 16 participants, we
distill key principles for the design of meeting bridges to optimally support
asynchronous collaboration goals. Overall, our findings point to the
opportunity of designing information artifacts that not only support users to
access but also continue to transform and engage in meeting information
post-meeting. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2402.03259 |