The all-in-one meeting production platform targets IT-led environments that need broadcast output without broadcast staffing.
At NAB Show 2026 in Las Vegas, Ross Video pushed Quorum One toward IT and AV decision makers. The company targeted teams responsible for corporate broadcast spaces. The all-in-one meeting production platform combines automated camera tracking, switching, clip playout, and graphics in a single NDI-native box. Ross first introduced Quorum One at InfoComm 2025. The NAB 2026 demonstration positioned the system specifically for boardrooms, council chambers, town hall rooms, and executive briefing centers.
The pitch is operational simplicity at broadcast quality. Quorum’s interface uses a floor plan of the room as the control surface. Operators place marks on the plan to identify where speakers will sit. They then assign cameras to each mark in advance. When a person speaks, the operator clicks on that mark. As a result, the system pulls three preview angles for that position. The operator picks the best angle and takes the shot. Ross’s XPression graphics engine populates lower-third graphics automatically with the speaker’s name and title.
Corporate Broadcast

Why this matters: most corporate broadcast spaces still depend on a small AV team. When the lead operator is sick or on vacation, output quality drops. Quorum lets a non-specialist run the show with minimal training. Ross says new operators reach proficiency in under thirty minutes. According to the showcase, the company is targeting under fifteen minutes.
Microphone integration extends the automation. Quorum can connect to push-to-talk conference microphone systems from multiple vendors. In auto mode, the system follows mic activity. When a presenter activates a microphone, the cameras frame that position and switch to it. When the mic shuts off and another opens, coverage follows. As a result, legislative chambers and large boardrooms can run hands-off, with no operator intervention.
The Zoom integration handles hybrid meetings directly. Remote participants join through a meeting link, then appear in Quorum’s attendee list. The operator can put any remote participant on preview or program. Quorum can also pull shared screens from Zoom participants as program sources. Ross has not yet announced parallel integration for Microsoft Teams.
Pricing and Configuration
Ross’s Quorum software starts at approximately $36,000 based on figures the company shared at the showcase. That figure covers the automation layer only. Buyers also need a switcher, cameras, microphones, and graphics hardware. Quorum One bundles those elements into a single all-in-one box. Pricing for Quorum One currently lands in the $80,000 to $90,000 range. However, Ross expects that figure to drop. The company plans to handle most commissioning at the factory before deployment.
What This Means for IT and AV Buyers
Quorum One reads as Ross’s answer to a real gap in the corporate broadcast market. Microsoft Teams Rooms and Zoom Rooms handle meetings well, but they are not production systems. Conversely, traditional broadcast switchers handle production well, but they require trained operators. Quorum One sits between the two. It targets IT-led environments that need broadcast output without broadcast staffing.
The resilience pitch is worth weighing. Unlike fully cloud-dependent meeting platforms, Quorum One runs on local hardware with NDI-based transport. As a result, an internet outage does not kill the production. The system can record locally, stream to Zoom or Teams, and continue operating during connectivity gaps. For executive town halls and government sessions, that resilience matters.
Buyers should still ask hard questions. NDI camera selection drives image quality, so camera budget matters. Microphone integration depends on the specific brand and protocol in use. Custom graphics templates require XPression authoring skills. Quorum One simplifies operations, but it does not eliminate the engineering work behind the system.
For IT and AV teams running executive communications spaces, Quorum One is Ross’s strongest answer yet.
AVNation covered NAB Show 2026 independently. Ross Video did not provide travel, accommodations, or sponsored access for this report.
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Tim Albright is the founder of AVNation and is the driving force behind the AVNation network. He carries the InfoComm CTS, a B.S. from Greenville College and is pursuing an M.S. in Mass Communications from Southern Illinois University at Edwardsville. When not steering the AVNation ship, Tim has spent his career designing systems for churches both large and small, Fortune 500 companies, and education facilities.











