Skip to main content

How to schedule a Zoom meeting

While technology has yet to live up to the promises of Tomorrow’s World and The Jetsons — such as android servants and flying cars — the ability to speak face-to-face via videoconferencing from almost anywhere on the planet has gone from science fiction to an everyday occurrence. Whether you’re connecting a distributed business team for a weekly update meeting or just saying hello to distant friends and family, Zoom is an excellent means of scheduling meetings for personal and professional occasions.

If only you could get everyone together at the same time! The best way to do so is to schedule a Zoom meeting.

When scheduling a meeting for your business, be aware that your account administrator can block specific features or require further information from participants to use them. If this is the case, you might see an asterisk (“*”) next to the setting, but you can click on the embedded links in each option for further information. Note that meetings for basic account users will automatically end after 40 minutes if there are three or more participants.

Step 1: Open the Zoom client or sign in to Zoom in a web browser

After signing into Zoom via the client or a browser, select the Schedule icon that resembles a calendar page. This will either open a new window or take you to the Schedule Meeting page where you can confirm the details of your videoconference.

Image-Of-Zoom-Host-A-Meeting-Page
Daniel Martin/Screenshot

Step 2: Select Schedule Meeting settings

From the Schedule Meeting window, you can peruse the following settings. Basic options include choosing a name, duration, date, and time for your meeting — the time and duration can be adjusted by 15-minute increments. Note that you and other participants’ meeting can begin at any time before the scheduled time. Zoom will automatically use your computer’s time zone, but you can select a different time zone using the drop-down menu.

Image-Of-Zoom-Schedule-Meeting-Options
Daniel Martin/Screenshot

You may not see options disabled and locked by the account administrator, but typically the options include:

  • Create a recurring ID that will remain the same for each session for regular meetings. You can use your Personal ID, or create a randomly generated one. If you do make the meeting recurring, don’t forget to schedule it in your calendar service.
  • Use a meeting passcode that participants will have to enter before they gain access (business users must create passwords that meet their admin’s security requirements).
  • Decide whether the host and participants’ video is off or on when joining your meetings, though the host and participants always have the option to start their video.
  • Send out invites with quick links to open calendar services and create events with iCal and Outlook or download ICS files for using other email services. You can also select Other Download Services to copy the meetings URL, date, and time.

Advanced options include enabling the Waiting Room, allowing participants to join before the host, determining whether participants are automatically muted on entry, and choosing whether the local computer is recording the meeting.

Step 3: Create your Zoom Meeting

Select Schedule to create your meeting, and a window with your preferred service will open (Google, in this example). You can add guests and set their permissions, send out pre-meeting notifications, determine your default visibility, and send invitations with a URL, Meeting ID, and password (if needed).

Zoom meeting schedule

Editors' Recommendations

Daniel Martin
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Daniel Martin is a technology expert, freelance writer, and researcher with more than a decade of experience. After earning a…
Your Siri conversations may have been recorded without your permission
iOS 16 and Mac Ventura on Apple devices.

Apple has patched a security flaw that left macOS and iOS devices vulnerable to having interactions with Siri spied upon and recorded when using accessories such as AirPods or Beats headsets via Bluetooth.

The flaw, which is now referred to as vulnerability CVE-2022-32946, was discovered by app developer Guilherme Rambo, according to Apple Insider.

Read more
Apple quietly launches unprecedented price cuts to its best MacBook Pros
The back lid of the MacBook Pro.

Apple's top of the line MacBook Pro 16-inch and 14-inch models are some of the best laptops the company has ever made -- but they're extremely expensive machines that rarely come down in price.

However, Apple has quietly dropped the price on these sought-after laptops with some surprising price cuts.

Read more
If the Mac gets a Dynamic Island, I’m not sure I want it
A mockup of a MacBook Pro with an iPhone-style Dynamic Island replacing the menu bar at the top of the screen.

The Dynamic Island was one of the standout features at Apple’s iPhone 14 launch event in September, and it contained just enough classic Apple magic to wow audiences tuning in. But it left us wondering -- how would it look on a Mac?

Now, we have an answer thanks to Reddit user DavidGamingHDR, who posted a mocked-up render of the Dynamic Island adorning a MacBook Pro to the r/Mac sub-reddit. And now that we’ve seen it, we’re intrigued -- and a little concerned.

Read more