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Your last event produced more data than you’ll ever look at.
Registration numbers, check-in times, session attendance, app activity. Your platform captured all of it, and since then it’s been sitting in a folder you opened once.
Collecting the data was never the hard part. Having a system to turn it into a decision was, and most teams don’t have one.
So when leadership asks what worked, you reach for a gut feeling instead of a number. This month, we’re fixing that.
Most platforms hand you a flood of numbers and no instructions on what to do with them. So the data piles up while the decisions are still made on instinct.
The fix isn’t more data.
It’s a simple way to sort what you already have, plus the habit of actually reading it. Start with the four kinds of data every event gives you, and what each one can answer:
Most planners pull the headline numbers and stop there. But the signals worth acting on sit one layer down.
For instance, total attendance tells you little, but session drop-off rates point to weak content or a flat speaker rather than a bad room. And if your check-in line backs up during peak arrival, that’s a staffing gap you can plan around next time instead of apologizing for it again.
Download the Post-Event Review Checklist
Doing all this for one event is good. What’s better? When each event’s data feeds the next, instead of every plan starting from scratch.
But most teams struggle here because the data lives in separate event accounts.
Cross-event reporting tools like vFairs Reporting 360 fill this gap, pulling every event into one organization-level dashboard. So you can compare formats, regions, and teams, catch a slipping show rate before it becomes a pattern, and trace the funnel from email open to attendance in one view.
Do this for a few cycles, and the advantage compounds, since every event starts smarter than the last.
Knowing what to measure is one thing. Measuring it at the right time is another. Most teams wait until the event is over, and by then, the most useful number is already gone.
Matt Kovacs, President of Blaze PR, has built his whole process around the opposite. Before any campaign, he runs a “perception audit”: he interviews media and tracks sentiment to capture a baseline of what people think going in.
That baseline is the whole point. Without a number from before, the number from after means nothing.
The same applies to your events. Decide what success looks like and capture your starting numbers up front. This way, you’ll have something real to measure against when leadership asks what changed.
Want to hear more on measuring before you start, not just after? Listen to the full episode on the Epic Events Podcast.
Want to close the gap between collecting data and using it? These three will help:
Here’s to designing events that get smarter every time.
See you next month.
Amna Bajwa
Our responsive project managers provide end-to-end event support to help you host incredible experiences for your audience.