For trade shows or complex venues, consider adding an interactive mapping element. Interactive Maps produce a pin drop on the correct location when an attendee clicks on an agenda location or sponsor booth number.
Interactive Mapping can be set up by Support, but requires about weeks to create. Including social media in your event app can be a matter of preference or company policy, and is entirely optional. Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn. Adding the event hashtag to the Social Media module will ensure the hashtag is pre-populated in these tweets.
To add social media links or a Twitter hashtag to your app, select the Social Media module in the Content Manager. Select add, choose your social media source from the icons provided, and add the social media account or Twitter hashtag. Rather than fielding repeated questions from attendees, event organizers can set up a virtual event information booth within the app.
There, they can include general event information as well as frequently asked questions. Onsite staff can direct attendees to the Infobooth within the app to find answers which will save time and increase event app adoption and engagement. Event organizers can also easily add popular questions and answers onsite. You can also add direct links to offsite venues, hotels or destination information. Another way to provide information to attendees in the Infobooth module is to set up a Help Desk.
This feature allows attendees to email the Help Desk with a specific question and receive an answer via email in return. Help Desk will be hidden from view by default. To set it up, enter an event support email on the Event Info tab. Next, access the Customize tab within the Info Booth module to make it visible and accessible to users. The Companies module is where attendees can access information on your event sponsors or exhibitors.
Depending on the number of sponsors or exhibitors at your event, you can choose to build the company profiles manually or upload a list of sponsor names and email addresses using the excel template and sending each an email with a self-edit link.
You can create tiers for your sponsors and select each in the category details. As well, you can add sponsorship ribbons to denote a high-value sponsor. Companies will appear in alphabetical order by default, but you can sort manually to highlight top sponsors.
If your event app houses sensitive company information or contact details for attendees and exhibitors, you may want to consider App Security. Securing your app prevents those outside the registration list from accessing information housed on the app.
There are a couple of options for App Security. The first restricts users from accessing the app without a passcode distributed to attendees by the organizer.
The second requires users to login with the email they used to register for the event. You can enable as many or as few of these options as you like. Event apps can be so much more than just a digital agenda for attendees. By using the interactive features of your event app, you give attendees a voice at your event and create a program truly tailored to their needs. Live Polls allow the speaker to ask the audience a question and receive and share the results immediately with the session audience.
Polls can help generate session content, gauge audience interest, and provide live feedback. One of the best uses for Live Polls is to generate excitement and reveal responses within seconds during education sessions or in a larger general session. Short, clear and concise questions with a singular focus are best for polls because they can be answered quickly and the results can be displayed neatly on screen.
This works well for information gathering purposes, like event surveys. But for Live Polls, you want to be able to display the most popular answer on screen in a graph or percentage value and react quickly to the response i.
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It will also help you categorize and browse through your events, because all actions with a specific object will be shown next to each other in the interface. Here I want to repeat the idea of this article in one sentence. Think in advance about what you want to learn from the data collected, and make sure that your analytics system is able to give you this knowledge with the existing event structure in advance. If you have your own hacks for embedding analytics in mobile apps, feel free to share them in the comments below.
Thank you! Skip to content Creating the app of your dreams can be a daunting challenge. This is where analytics and event-tracking platforms come into play. In this article I will be talking about the following: Common mistakes in setting up analytics for mobile apps The right approach to integrating analytics in mobile apps Some hacks that will allow you to use data more efficiently P. Why do we need to track events in mobile apps Mobile app analytics are usually based on events.
When it comes to releasing the app, analytics is just one of the many problems the team has to take care of. Logging too many events: Sometimes, the app logs too many events, regardless of whether the data is useful or applicable.
This is not an optimal approach. The data you collect might be suitable to answer the future questions you will have—or it will require a lot of additional work to transform it so that it will be able to help you. Also, collecting too many events increases the chances of making mistakes at the integration stage. Additionally, it will be more challenging to support the integrity and reliability of your data in the future when you roll out new updates.
For instance, some analytics systems set limits on event properties or the number of steps in funnels. These characteristics can affect your event deployment plan. The process for creating the events structure for a mobile app Step 1: Define key questions you want to answer First, you need to decide which questions you want to answer with the data you collect from your app, and which hypotheses you want to validate.
The standard part usually looks like this: At which steps do users churn during the onboarding flow? How many people continue using the app after 1, 7, 14, 30 days? What share of new users see the screen with the premium version of your product or see an in-app purchase offer? What is the purchase conversion rate? What percent of users make repeat purchases? How much does it cost to acquire one user?
How much do we earn per user by the 1st, 7th, 14th, 30th day? How do the answers to previous questions differ across different platforms, device types, countries, and traffic sources? Suscripit Donec eleifend nulla mollis pulvinar. Fames dolor nunc a lorem vestibulum Ligula hac luctus netus maecenas iaculis. Placerat nostra urna molliss praesent orci. Vehicula ultricies.
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