Interpretation quality depends on planning the full chain: microphones, interpreter booths, language channels, receivers, monitoring and room acoustics.
Confirm languages and room layout
The number of languages, booth positions and delegate seating affect equipment quantity and cable routes. Confirm these details before the technical plan is locked.
Keep speech clear at the source
Delegate microphones and moderator control help interpreters receive clean input. Background noise and unclear microphone discipline are the most common causes of poor interpretation quality.
Schedule a channel test
Each language channel, receiver and interpreter monitor should be checked with real speech before the audience arrives.
