How to share your screen on Zoom

It's as easy as "click that green button."
 By 
Christianna Silva
 on 
Your options for sharing a screen on Zoom.
Your options for sharing a screen on Zoom. Credit: Your options for sharing a screen on Zoom.

The pandemic has fundamentally changed the way we work, and that means from now on we're going to be using Zoom a lot more than we ever did before March 2020.

Total Time
  • 5 min
What You Need
  • Computer
  • Zoom

Step 1: Step 1: Join your Zoom meeting

Launch the Zoom application and join the meeting — either by clicking a link that was sent to you, entering the meeting code, or starting the meeting yourself if you're the one hosting.

Join your Zoom meeting
To begin the process of sharing a screen during a Zoom meeting, you have to first be in a Zoom meeting. Credit: Join your Zoom meeting

Step 2: Step 2: Click Share Screen

On the bottom of your Zoom app screen, you will see a list of options. Mute and Stop Video are on the bottom left. Security, Participants, Chat, Share Screen, Record, and Reactions are all on the bottom middle. The bottom right has the end call button. Here, all you have to do is click "Share Screen." You'll have the option to share from multiple different sources, including a whiteboard that allows you to draw to your fellow Zoomers, an AirPlay option for your iPhone or iPad which allows you to share your phone screen, and more. Most often, you'll want to share your Desktop 1, which will show everyone in your meeting what's happening on on your computer screen.

Click "Share Screen"
Click that big, green "share screen" button Credit: Click "Share Screen"

Step 3: Step 3

Before you share anything, though, you'll want to make sure your computer is ready to be shared with the office or your friends on the call, so close out of anything you don't want your colleagues to see.

There are a ton of things you can do with the video conferencing app Zoom if you know where to look. From having a second source transcribe the call for you so you don't have to listen in to allowing paid Zoom users to virtually "create, host, and monetize events," to plenty of other ways to make your video conferencing just that much more fun and engaging. But there are small parts of Zooming that are equally important — like, for instance, if you're hosting a meeting and want to share your screen, how, exactly, would you do that?

Join your Zoom meeting

Join your Zoom meeting
To begin the process of sharing a screen during a Zoom meeting, you have to first be in a Zoom meeting. Credit: Join your Zoom meeting

Launch the Zoom application and join the meeting — either by clicking a link that was sent to you, entering the meeting code, or starting the meeting yourself if you're the one hosting.


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Click "Share Screen"

Click "Share Screen"
Click that big, green "share screen" button Credit: Click "Share Screen"

On the bottom of your Zoom app screen, you will see a list of options. Mute and Stop Video are on the bottom left. Security, Participants, Chat, Share Screen, Record, and Reactions are all on the bottom middle. The bottom right has the end call button.

Here, all you have to do is click "Share Screen." You'll have the option to share from multiple different sources, including a whiteboard that allows you to draw to your fellow Zoomers, an AirPlay option for your iPhone or iPad which allows you to share your phone screen, and more. Most often, you'll want to share your Desktop 1, which will show everyone in your meeting what's happening on on your computer screen.

Before you share anything, though, you'll want to make sure your computer is ready to be shared with the office or your friends on the call, so close out of anything you don't want your colleagues to see.

Mashable Image
Christianna Silva
Senior Culture Reporter

Christianna Silva is a senior culture reporter covering social platforms and the creator economy, with a focus on the intersection of social media, politics, and the economic systems that govern us. Since joining Mashable in 2021, they have reported extensively on meme creators, content moderation, and the nature of online creation under capitalism.

Before joining Mashable, they worked as an editor at NPR and MTV News, a reporter at Teen Vogue and VICE News, and as a stablehand at a mini-horse farm. You can follow her on Bluesky @christiannaj.bsky.social and Instagram @christianna_j.

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