Get Hired



Stop Hiding Behind Zoom: The Best Ideas Are Born from In-Person Collaboration

Whether your team is hybrid, remote, or fully in-office, you can’t build a strong company culture on video calls alone. Here’s what actually works.

Key Takeaways
- 1 in 3 U.S. adults reports feeling lonely, and roughly 1 in 4 lacks adequate social and emotional support (U.S. Census Bureau).
- Teams perform at their best when they collaborate in person. Even in office environments, different schedules, locations, and time zones can keep people apart.
- For remote and hybrid companies, occasional face-to-face gatherings — whether retreats, offsites, or conferences — are essential for building real connection and sparking innovation.


After 20 years running Jotform, one truth stands out clearly: my favorite memories and best ideas have come from times when our entire team was together in person.

As a programmer and self-described introvert, this surprised even me. I assumed I’d prefer quiet days alone with my code and coffee. But the energy, creativity, and bonds that form when people gather face-to-face are irreplaceable.

One of our most valued traditions is **Jotformers Week** — an annual event where employees from nearly two dozen countries fly in to collaborate, connect, and celebrate what we’ve built, without a single Zoom link. These gatherings are not only enjoyable; they’ve produced some of our strongest ideas. Post-event feedback (collected via Jotform, naturally) consistently confirms their value.

 Why In-Person Interaction Still Matters

Humans are social creatures, yet we’re facing a growing isolation crisis. Social media and AI can simulate connection, but they often deepen disconnection. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, about one in three American adults feels lonely, and one in four lacks sufficient social and emotional support.

Working from home can intensify this. While remote tools helped us navigate the pandemic, I watched morale dip as kitchen tables became permanent offices and the boundary between work and life blurred.

Work relationships matter more than many admit. A YouGov study found that **76% of Americans** have made at least one friend through their job. Yet true camaraderie rarely develops in Slack threads or forced Zoom happy hours. Those virtual events often feel draining rather than energizing.

Real bonds form in spontaneous moments: conversations after meetings, shared meals, laughing over bad coffee or chaotic commutes. These small, human experiences create the glue that holds teams together.

How to Make In-Person Gatherings Actually Worth It

In-person work isn’t automatically better — it has to be *designed* to be better. A gathering should offer something that simply isn’t possible remotely.

**Mix people up.** If everyone only interacts with their usual team, you’ve just moved the office somewhere else. Deliberately create cross-functional groups. Seat people strategically and design activities that force collaboration across departments. Some of the best ideas come from unexpected conversations.

**Leave space for spontaneity.** Over-scheduling kills the magic. Build breathing room into the agenda for long lunches, impromptu coffees, and casual conversations. These unstructured moments often deliver the greatest value.

**Focus on quality over quantity.** Whether it’s a full company retreat or a smaller offsite, the goal is meaningful connection and creative momentum — not exhaustion.


Zoom and Slack are excellent tools for keeping work moving, but they should support — not replace — in-person interaction. Face-to-face time builds trust, sparks creativity, and strengthens the foundation for everything a team does when apart.

Leaders who prioritize bringing people together, even occasionally, aren’t just improving culture. They’re investing in better ideas, stronger relationships, and a more resilient organization.

The best ideas rarely come from a grid of faces on a screen. They’re born where real humans meet, talk, and build something together.