
For years, meeting room technology was evaluated primarily on ease of use and audiovisual quality. If people could walk in, plug in, and start presenting, the job was considered done. That mindset no longer holds. Today’s meeting rooms are deeply connected to digital environments, and security has become a business-critical concern rather than a technical afterthought.
According to IDC, 50.8% of organizations now rank security as the most important factor when selecting collaboration and videoconferencing technology, ahead of price or quality considerations. That shift reflects a broader reality: what happens in meeting rooms has direct implications for data protection, regulatory compliance, operational resilience, and corporate trust.
The meeting room as an expanded attack surface
Hybrid work has fundamentally changed the role of the meeting room. It is no longer a closed, isolated space. Instead, it has become a convergence point where corporate networks, cloud services, collaboration platforms, and personal devices meet. Content is shared wirelessly, participants join remotely, and devices are connected dynamically, often by non-IT users.
This evolution significantly expands the attack surface. Collaboration environments are increasingly targeted because they combine sensitive data with high connectivity and frequent user interaction. Risks range from unauthorized access and data interception during wireless sharing to malware propagation via unmanaged or personal devices. In hybrid scenarios, these risks are amplified by blurred boundaries between secure corporate environments and external networks.
As a result, meeting room security can no longer be treated separately from the broader enterprise security strategy. Any vulnerability introduced in a meeting space can ripple across the organization.
Regulation moves meeting rooms into the spotlight
At the same time, regulatory pressure is intensifying. Across Europe, new and evolving frameworks such as NIS2, the RED Delegated Act, and the Cyber Resilience Act are raising the bar for connected devices. These regulations introduce mandatory requirements that span the entire product lifecycle, from secure design and development to patching, vulnerability management, and end-of-support practices.
Meeting room solutions clearly fall within scope. They process sensitive corporate information, connect to enterprise networks, and often rely on wireless and cloud-based technologies. Non-compliance is no longer a theoretical risk. It can lead to financial penalties, operational disruption, and reputational damage.
International standards like ISO/IEC 27001 further reinforce this shift by defining best practices for information security management, risk assessment, and operational trust. Together, these frameworks signal a clear message: security in collaboration environments is now a governance issue as much as a technical one.
Security without usability is a false promise
However, strong security alone is not enough. When security controls disrupt the user experience, employees look for shortcuts. Shadow IT, unsecured workarounds, and bypassed controls often emerge not from negligence, but from friction.
In meeting rooms, this risk is particularly acute. Meetings are time-sensitive, social, and often involve external participants. If connecting securely feels complex or restrictive, users will prioritize speed and convenience over policy compliance. Paradoxically, that increases risk rather than reducing it.
This is why security must be built in by design, not bolted on. Secure-by-design solutions embed encryption, authentication, access control, and update mechanisms into the core architecture, while keeping the user experience intuitive. Such approaches reduce reliance on manual processes and minimize the temptation for unsafe shortcuts, enabling secure collaboration without compromising productivity.
From IT checkbox to business enabler
The most forward-looking organizations now treat meeting room security as a strategic enabler. Secure, compliant collaboration environments build trust with customers and partners, support regulatory readiness, and reduce operational risk over time. IDC notes that 70% of CIOs cite risk mitigation as a top priority, reflecting the growing recognition that resilience is a competitive differentiator, not just a defensive measure.
Importantly, this shift also changes how decisions are made. Meeting room technology can no longer be selected in isolation by facilities or procurement teams. Excluding IT expertise from these decisions can compromise not only meeting rooms, but the entire digital workplace. Security, usability, and integration must be evaluated together, through a cross-functional lens.
Security as the foundation of modern collaboration
As meeting rooms continue to evolve, one principle becomes clear: security is no longer something you add later. It is the foundation that enables safe, scalable, and human-centric collaboration. Organizations that align regulatory requirements, recognized security standards, and enterprise-grade protection with friction-free user experiences are better positioned to support hybrid work, protect sensitive information, and earn long-term trust.
In today’s workplace, a secure meeting room is not just a safer space. It is a smarter one.
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