Boardrooms Are Not Just Bigger Huddle Rooms
A lot of businesses treat boardroom AV as small-room gear with a bigger price tag attached. The logic seems reasonable on the surface, but it misses what actually changes once a room moves from six seats to fifteen or twenty.
A boardroom is not a larger version of the same problem a huddle room solves. It is a genuinely different set of decisions, made in a specific order, where each choice constrains the next one.
Getting the order wrong does not save money, it just relocates the cost to later in the project, usually as an unplanned second purchase once the original camera or microphone choice turns out to be the wrong fit for the room.
The most common starting point for this kind of build is kickstartcomputers.com.au which handles boardroom installs across South Australia.
Where the Sequence Actually Starts - PTZ Camera Placement
The sequence genuinely starts with the camera, because the field of view it covers determines where people can sensibly sit and still be seen clearly. A PTZ camera that can pan and zoom toward whoever is speaking becomes worth the extra cost once a room passes roughly twelve people.
For rooms in the twelve to twenty person range, a single well-placed PTZ camera is usually sufficient, provided the table layout is reasonably standard. Beyond that, some boardrooms genuinely need a second camera angle to avoid blind spots at either end of a long table.
AVer and Logitech both make boardroom-grade PTZ ranges, and the choice between them often comes down to how the room is wired and whether the business already has a preference from a smaller room elsewhere in the office. Image quality between the two is closer than the price difference might suggest.
Lens quality and low-light performance are worth comparing directly between models, since boardrooms are not always lit as well as a dedicated studio space would be. A camera that performs well in bright product photography is not automatically the same camera that performs well in a dimly lit afternoon meeting.
Audio Coverage and Room Control - The Consequence of Step One
Once the camera coverage and seating layout are settled, the microphone decision follows directly from it. A table-based microphone that worked fine in a small room starts missing people the moment the table extends past a certain length, which is where ceiling-mounted microphone arrays start to earn their cost.
Get the camera wrong and the microphone budget doubles to compensate. Every boardroom mistake is really two mistakes.
Room control systems are the third step in the sequence, and they only become genuinely worthwhile once the camera and audio layout are already locked in. A room control panel that lets staff start a Teams or Zoom call with one button removes the friction that otherwise causes meetings to start five minutes late.
At boardroom scale, Teams Rooms or Zoom Rooms certification is worth confirming early, given how much more expensive a mismatch becomes compared to a small room. It is a cheap check relative to the cost of redoing a boardroom-grade install.
Budgeting for a boardroom build is easiest when the three steps are costed separately rather than as a single lump figure. Camera coverage, audio coverage and room control each have their own price range, and treating them as one combined number tends to hide which part of the build is actually driving the total cost.
The same three-step logic applies to collaboration spaces used as informal larger meeting areas, even when the room was never designed as a dedicated boardroom. Camera coverage still has to be solved before audio, and audio still has to be solved before room control becomes worth adding.
The businesses that get this right are not necessarily the ones with the biggest budget. They are the ones that resisted the urge to buy everything at once and instead let the camera decision genuinely inform the audio decision before any money was spent on either.
Frequently Asked Questions About Boardroom AV
What determines camera count in a large room?
One PTZ camera is usually enough for rooms up to roughly twenty people with a standard table layout. Beyond that, or with unusually long or irregularly shaped tables, a second camera angle is often needed to avoid blind spots.
What is wrong with table microphones in large rooms?
Ceiling arrays tend to win over table mics once a table extends past a certain length, mainly because they provide even pickup across the room instead of favouring whoever sits closest to a single device.
Can a boardroom function without room control?
Room control is a single-touch panel for starting calls without manual setup each time. A boardroom can function without one, but meetings tend to start later and with more friction as a result.
Is certification required for boardroom-grade hardware?
Certification is not strictly mandatory, but at boardroom price points a mismatch is a far costlier mistake to discover after installation than it would be in a small room. Confirming certification in advance is the cheaper option.