Resources
Blog
Insights on events, technology, and the future of gathering
Latest articles
Insights on events, technology, and the future of gathering
Check-in is the first physical interaction an attendee has with your event. It sets the tone for everything that follows. A smooth, fast check-in signals professionalism and builds confidence. A slow, error-prone process creates frustration that colours the entire experience -- no matter how good the keynote is.
But check-in is not just an operational hurdle. It is also the single richest data-capture moment of any event. When attendees identify themselves at the door, you unlock real-time attendance tracking, session capacity management, lead-retrieval activation, and post-event analytics that sponsors actually value. Getting this right is not optional -- it is foundational.
The three dominant identification technologies each serve different use cases. Understanding their trade-offs is essential before choosing a setup.
QR remains the workhorse of event check-in. Attendees receive a unique code via email or mobile app, which is scanned at entry. QR is universally understood, works on any smartphone, and requires minimal hardware investment -- a tablet or phone with a camera is enough. The downside is that QR codes can be screenshotted and shared, so pairing them with photo verification or ID matching adds a security layer for high-profile events.
Near-field communication is increasingly popular for multi-day conferences where attendees carry badges throughout the event. An NFC chip embedded in the badge enables tap-to-check-in at every session, exhibition booth, and networking zone. This creates a rich behavioural dataset without requiring attendees to take any action beyond tapping their badge. Hardware costs are higher, but the per-interaction data quality is superior.
Contactless and fast, facial recognition eliminates the need for any credential at all. Walk up, look at the camera, proceed. Processing times under two seconds are now standard. However, privacy regulations in the EU and several US states require explicit opt-in consent and clear data-handling disclosures. For global events, offering facial recognition as an opt-in fast lane alongside a traditional check-in option is the pragmatic approach.
Self-service kiosks scale better. A single kiosk can process 120 to 180 attendees per hour, compared to 60 to 80 for a staffed desk. Kiosks also reduce labour costs and eliminate human error in name lookup and badge assignment. Platforms like Canapii offer integrated kiosk software that handles identification, badge printing, and wayfinding in a single touchpoint.
Staffed desks still have a role, particularly for VIP registration, accessibility needs, and events where a personal greeting is part of the brand experience. The best setups combine both: kiosks for the majority, staffed desks for guests who need assistance or a white-glove welcome.
On-demand badge printing has replaced pre-printed name badges at most professional events. The advantages are clear: no wasted badges from no-shows, support for last-minute registrations and name changes, and a faster setup since there are no alphabetical sorting tables to manage.
Modern badge printers produce full-colour, high-quality badges in under eight seconds. Integration with check-in software means the badge prints automatically the moment identity is confirmed -- no separate step, no queue splitting. Look for systems that support variable data on badges: name, company, role, session track, dietary requirements, or custom fields the organiser defines.
The moment check-in begins, your event dashboard should light up with live data. Key metrics include total arrivals versus expected, arrival rate per hour, no-show percentage, and capacity utilisation by session room. This is not vanity reporting -- it drives operational decisions in real time. If a session room is at 90% capacity thirty minutes before the talk, you can redirect overflow to a live-stream room. If VIP attendance is below forecast, your host team can send personalised reminders.
Post-event, the same data powers sponsor reports, ROI analysis, and planning for the next edition. The check-in system is not just a gate -- it is the foundation of your event intelligence layer.
There is no universal answer, but the decision framework is straightforward:
Event size under 200: QR scan on tablets with optional on-demand badge printing. Simple, low-cost, fast to deploy.
200 to 1,000 attendees: Self-service kiosks with integrated badge printing, supplemented by one or two staffed desks. QR or NFC depending on event duration.
1,000+ attendees: Multiple kiosk banks, NFC badges for multi-session tracking, real-time dashboards for operations, and staffed desks for VIPs and accessibility.
Multi-day or campus events: NFC badges are strongly recommended. The ongoing data capture across days and venues justifies the higher per-badge cost.
Whatever the scale, the technology should be invisible to the attendee. The goal is a check-in experience so seamless that people barely notice it happened -- they just walk in and get started.
See how Canapii handles check-in, badge printing, and real-time analytics on a single platform.