You know that sinking feeling when you are leading a video call on Zoom, Teams or Meet and someone says, “Can you share your screen?” Suddenly you are not thinking about your presentation or your family catch up any more. You are hunting for the right button, hoping you do not share the wrong window or flash a private document in front of everyone.
Maybe it is already happening. The sound doesn't work, the controls disappear and a whole grid of faces watches you struggle while you are supposed to be the steady one, the business owner, consultant, charity or community leader, or a grandparent keeping in touch with family overseas. To avoid feeling that small and exposed again, you type the same questions into Google, bounce between YouTube videos, hesitate to ask your kids or colleagues again and walk into the next call quietly hoping nothing goes wrong.
This is where a human guide makes the difference. I’m Azher. I’ve spent over three decades running and leading a family business, teams and community projects, and in recent years I’ve launched and managed more than 400 live video calls on platforms like Zoom, Teams and Meet. I didn’t grow up with any of this software; I had to learn it the hard way. Ask About Video Calls is my way of offering what I wish I’d had back then: one person you can lean on, so you stop wasting time searching, stop pestering family and colleagues, and stop feeling exposed in the middle of important video calls, whether they’re for your work, your community or the people you love.