Event Engagement Analytics

EventIntro surfaces which attendees connected, which matches landed, and where energy is high or low — engagement signal you can act on, not vanity attendance counts.

Who this is for

  • Organizers who need to report on outcomes, not just attendance.
  • Hosts who want to spot a disengaging member or a dead group in time to act.
  • Teams justifying an event's value to a client or a budget owner.

What does the analytics layer measure?

Connection, not attendance. It surfaces who's matching, which introductions turned into conversations, how complete profiles are, and where engagement is thin. The question it answers — "did people actually connect?" — is the one that matters and the one a headcount can't touch. A full room where nobody met anyone is a failure the attendance number would happily call a success.

Most event tooling reports vanity metrics because they're easy to collect. The useful metric is harder and more valuable: evidence that the event produced the relationships it existed to produce.

Can I use it live, during the event?

Yes. Real-time engagement signal lets a facilitator spot a group that's gone quiet or an attendee who's disengaged and intervene — regroup, nudge, introduce — while it still matters. It turns the host from a spectator of the room's energy into someone who can steer it.

Does it compromise attendee privacy?

Organizers see engagement signals without reading the contents of private profiles. That's enough to manage the event and report on outcomes, without turning the dashboard into a window onto what individual attendees wrote — a line the analytics deliberately hold.

Frequently asked questions

What does the analytics layer actually show?
Connection-level signal: who's matching, which introductions turned into conversations, profile completion, and where engagement is thin. It answers 'did people connect?' — a far more useful question than 'how many showed up?', which is all a headcount can tell you.
Can I use it during the event?
Yes. Live engagement signal lets a facilitator spot a group that's gone quiet or a member who's disengaged and act — regroup, nudge, introduce — before the moment passes.
Does it respect attendee privacy?
Organizers see engagement signals without reading private profile contents. It's enough to manage the event, without turning the dashboard into surveillance of what attendees wrote.
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