
Training large teams on interconnected software workflows can often create fragmentation that undermines both learning quality and operational readiness. Traditional virtual lab setups are designed to be isolated, but when participants train on activities that require a group response, inconsistencies in configurations, permissions, and system states can cause confusion and misalignment.
This problem is especially apparent in IT and cybersecurity simulations. Participants depend on access to shared resources like Active Directory, network topography, a shared filesystem, or a centralized server. Without a connected environment, trainees cannot accurately practice and observe real-world workflows such as managing group policies, troubleshooting permissions, or coordinating incident response procedures.
Collaborative virtual labs address the limitations of traditional training by providing users and instructors access to the same shared environment. This ensures that users are experiencing the real-time impact of all activity across every system, configuration, and user.
In IT simulations, teams can work together to observe the impact of configuration changes on other users and learn to troubleshoot cross-functional workflows. This shared setup not only improves learning outcomes but also mirrors the interconnected nature of real enterprise systems.
In cybersecurity training, collaborative labs can serve as a cyber range where attack-and-defense exercises can unfold dynamically across a shared network. Teams can simulate real incidents, observe adversary behavior, and coordinate responses as events unfold, all within a safe, monitored space. This allows for hands-on experience with incident response, threat hunting, and communication under pressure; skills that are difficult to develop in isolated setups.
Collaborative labs are most effective when training scenarios require multiple participants to respond to events in real time.
In many cases, the instructor can act as the “instigator” of an event, but collaborative labs can expand into a group dynamic in which one set of participants actively changes the shared environment while another set actively monitors and reacts.
These types of interactions lend well to cybersecurity cyber range exercises (such as Red Team vs. Blue Team in which the instructor is primarily responsible for real-time assistance and skill monitoring while separate groups of participants engage with one another.
For example:
Shared Resource: Network
Objective: Train users on a tool to monitor and flag suspicious network activity
Scenario: Instructor deploys a variety of network exploits towards the shared resource (server), allowing all participants to see how their monitoring tool identifies those exploits. The instructor can even change the type of exploit at any time, so all participants can experience it in real time.
Shared Resource: Trading platform and market engine
Objective: Train risk analysts on monitoring risk exposure triggers
Scenario: Instructor acts as a trader that place a high-volume trade that triggers a volatility threshold on their platform. Participants have access to a portfolio exposure dashboard and receive real-time alerts. Each participant is then trained on escalation and mitigation policies.
Shared Resource: Staging server
Objective: Train QA team on how to monitor automated tests and execute manual test cases if needed.
Scenario: Instructor acts as a developer who deploys faulty code that fails a unit test on the staging environment. Participants must actively detect a unit test failure, identify and troubleshoot code.
Shared Resource: Corporate infrastructure (Active Directory, file servers, email systems)
Objective: Train the support team on potential issues arising from misconfigured infrastructure.Scenario: Instructor acts as an IT Admin who implements a faulty policy that corrupts permissions to the shared filesystem. Participants act as both an end-user and a help desk technician, experiencing how the error appears to a potential end-user and how to document and escalate the issue for a fix.
CloudShare’s ‘shared environments’ is an existing feature within our virtual lab platform that allows an instructor or admin to create a shared resource that is then automatically connected to all participant machines.
This enables every user to interact and engage with the same database, server, or filesystem. Instructors can also use their ‘over-the-shoulder’ view to actively monitor each participant’s activities throughout the exercise.
In mid-2026, an expanded feature will enable all participants to view the screen of the shared environment (similar to a joint screenshare) separately from their individual machines. This new release will open collaborative labs where an instructor can either perform an action on a shared system themselves or select a participant to perform it while other users watch.
If you or your organization would benefit from having hands-on, collaborative virtual lab environments that are easy to create and performant at scale, book a demo with us to start delivering learning experiences that drive skill growth, customer acquisition, and retention.