Why Virtual Workshops Fail
A requirements workshop is a high-bandwidth event: you are trying to elicit tacit knowledge, surface disagreement, and reach decisions, all in a few hours. In a room, you have body language, side conversations, sticky notes, and the social pressure that stops people hiding. Online, every one of those affordances is stripped away — and most facilitators respond by simply running the in-person agenda over a video call. It does not work.
The symptoms are familiar: cameras off, one or two dominant voices, long silences mistaken for agreement, and a follow-up email three days later where someone says "actually, that won't work for us." The workshop produced notes, not decisions. The good news is that virtual facilitation is a learnable craft, and a handful of deliberate techniques close most of the gap.