
What Works, What Doesn’t, and How to Plan Better
As more organizations embrace distributed work, one question keeps resurfacing: how do we keep people connected when we’re not in the same room?
All-Hands meetings are a big part of that. But running them remotely isn’t the same as walking into a boardroom and presenting from a stage. Remote All-Hands require more intention, more structure, and a bit more creativity. Done well, they become some of the most energizing and unifying moments for a remote team.
Remote All-Hands Aren’t Just “Town Halls on Zoom”
One of the biggest misconceptions is that you can simply take an in-person town hall and move it online. Remote environments change how people interact, absorb information, and participate.
Here’s what makes remote All-Hands distinct:
- You need more structure. In remote meetings, people rely on the agenda to understand where the conversation is going.
- Everyone gets an equal seat. No front rows or back rows, just equal presence on screen.
- Engagement must be intentional. You don’t get the natural buzz of an in-person gathering without designing it.
Remote changes the medium, which means it should change the strategy too.
What Works: The Foundations of a Strong Remote All-Hands
- Build Engagement Early: Short pre-show music, a welcome slide or pre-show slides, light chat – prevents that awkward silence while people join.
- Keep the Agenda Clear and Focused: Focus on big updates, decisions, and direction, and leave the smaller details for follow-up channels.
- Choose a Cadence That Fits Your Culture: There’s no one-size fits all. Monthly cadence works for some teams; quarterly or annual deep dives work for others. The right rhythm is the one your team consistently finds valuable.
- Mix Up the Format: Team spotlights, panel discussions, customer insights, short demos – changing the format keeps energy high.
- Don’t Skip Facilitation: A good host keeps things flowing and connected. Poor facilitation makes the meeting feel twice as long.
- Add Interaction on Purpose: Polls, chat prompts, Q&A, or mini activities keep people participating rather than observing.
What Doesn’t Work: Common Pitfalls (and Why They Matter)
Trying to replicate an in-person town hall
What feels engaging on a stage often falls flat on a screen. Remote All-Hands need shorter segments, cleaner visuals, and more intentional pacing.
Cramming in too much content
When every update, chart, and reminder gets squeezed in, people stop retaining information. Focus on the big themes and share the rest in follow-up materials.
Turning it into a one-way broadcast
If leaders talk at people for the entire meeting, attention drops quickly. Small interactive moments make it feel like a company gathering, not a status report.
Skipping the dry run
A quick rehearsal ensures smooth transitions, working audio, and content that actually displays as intended.
Making Remote All-Hands More Engaging (and Even Fun)
The idea that remote culture can’t feel celebratory is a myth. Connection and joy absolutely can happen online – you just need to design for them with intention.
Seasonal themes, show-and-tell moments, interactive games, short videos, and thoughtful recognition all work well in a virtual setting and help bring personality into the meeting.
It’s not about recreating an in-person party. It’s about creating something that feels genuine and engaging for your team.
How We Approach Holiday All-Hands at Virtira
While this article isn’t meant to center on us, we’ll share our approach because it illustrates what’s possible when remote culture is designed intentionally.
At Virtira, we have an annual Holiday All-Hands. We pair meaningful business updates with activities that bring out everyone’s personality, like:
- A fast-paced virtual scavenger hunt
- Show-and-tell sessions that spark laughter and connection
- Friendly competitions with gift cards
- Year-end highlights and appreciation
This year, we’re adding something especially meaningful: recognizing teammates who completed their personal goals as part of our 2025 Incentive Plan. It’s a great way to wrap up the year by acknowledging individual growth and collective commitment.
(And there’s more to come on the incentive plan in our next post.)


