Microsoft Teams
4.2Video Conferencing
Microsoft Teams is Microsoft's unified communication platform combining video conferencing, chat, and collaboration. It's integrated with Microsoft 365 and serves over 320 million monthly active users. Teams is the go-to solution for enterprises using Microsoft's ecosystem.
Key Features
- Video Conferencing
- Team Chat
- File Sharing
- Microsoft 365 Integration
- Channels
- Apps & Bots
- Recording
- Webinars
Pros
- +Microsoft integration
- +All-in-one platform
- +Strong enterprise features
- +Included with M365
Cons
- −Complex interface
- −Resource heavy
- −Can be overwhelming
Compare Microsoft Teams with Alternatives
Other Video Conferencing Tools
Riverside
4.7Riverside is a professional recording studio in your browser, built for podcasters, content creators, and media companies. It records locally in studio quality (up to 4K video), then uploads in the background. Riverside is used by major media companies including ESPN and Marvel.
Loom
4.6Loom is an asynchronous video messaging platform that helps teams communicate through recorded videos. Instead of scheduling meetings, users record their screen and camera, then share instantly. Loom is used by over 25 million people to replace meetings with video messages.
Zoom
4.5Zoom is the world's most popular video conferencing platform, hosting over 300 million daily meeting participants. It offers HD video, screen sharing, breakout rooms, and webinars. Zoom became synonymous with video meetings during the pandemic and remains the industry standard.
Butter
4.5Butter is a video conferencing tool designed specifically for workshops, training, and interactive sessions. It offers built-in collaboration tools, timers, polls, and breakout rooms in an integrated workspace. Butter helps facilitators run engaging sessions without switching between tools.