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Insights on events, technology, and the future of gathering
The registration and check-in experience is the first real interaction an attendee has with your event. A smooth process signals professionalism and builds confidence. A slow, confusing one creates frustration before the first session has even started. The good news is that most registration pain points are entirely avoidable with the right setup and a bit of planning.
Whether you are running a 200-person workshop or a 5,000-delegate conference, these ten tips will help you deliver a check-in experience that is fast, professional, and stress-free for both your team and your attendees.
Every additional field on your registration form reduces your completion rate. Research consistently shows that forms with fewer than five fields convert significantly better than longer ones. Ask only for what you genuinely need at the point of registration -- name, email, ticket type, and perhaps one or two custom questions relevant to their experience.
Information you might want but do not strictly need -- dietary preferences, session interests, networking goals -- can be collected later through a pre-event survey or within the event app itself. Splitting the data collection across touchpoints keeps each interaction light and reduces abandonment.
Not every attendee needs the same access. Offering tiered ticket types -- general admission, VIP, speaker, exhibitor, single-day passes -- makes pricing transparent and simplifies on-site access control. Each ticket type can carry its own permissions: which sessions are accessible, which networking lounges are available, whether catering is included.
A well-structured ticket catalogue also gives you cleaner data. When you know exactly who has which access level, your check-in staff can handle edge cases faster, and your badge printing can include visual indicators for different access tiers.
Manual name lookups are the single biggest cause of check-in queues. QR code check-in eliminates them entirely. Each registrant receives a unique QR code in their confirmation email and event app. At the venue, staff scan the code with a tablet or phone, and the attendee is checked in within seconds.
The speed difference is dramatic. Manual lookup averages 30-45 seconds per attendee. QR code scanning takes three to five seconds. For a 1,000-person event, that is the difference between a 45-minute queue and a five-minute one.
This sounds obvious, but it is skipped more often than you would expect. Run a full end-to-end test at least 48 hours before the event: register a test attendee, receive the confirmation email, open the QR code, scan it at a check-in device, print a badge. Verify that every step works as expected.
Test with the actual devices and network you will use on-site. A check-in app that works perfectly on your office Wi-Fi may behave differently on a venue's congested network. Identify issues when you still have time to fix them.
Venue Wi-Fi is notoriously unreliable. Your check-in system must work even when the internet does not. The best check-in apps cache the attendee list locally on each device, allowing staff to scan QR codes and check in attendees offline. When connectivity returns, the data syncs automatically.
Without offline capability, a Wi-Fi outage turns your sleek digital check-in into a scramble for printed lists and manual ticking. Always confirm that your chosen platform supports offline mode before committing.
For events with more than 500 attendees, self-service kiosks dramatically reduce staffing requirements and queue times. Attendees walk up, scan their QR code or type their name, confirm their details, and collect a freshly printed badge -- all without needing to interact with a staff member.
Kiosks work best as a complement to staffed check-in desks, not a replacement. Provide two or three kiosks for every staffed desk. Tech-savvy attendees will gravitate to the kiosks, leaving your staff free to help those who need more assistance.
Pre-printed badges have a hidden cost: someone has to sort, alphabetise, and distribute them on-site. For large events, this means hundreds of badges laid out on tables, staff rifling through boxes, and inevitable delays when a badge is missing or misspelt.
On-demand badge printing eliminates all of this. When an attendee checks in, their badge is printed instantly with the correct name, title, company, and any access-level indicators. No pre-sorting, no missing badges, no reprints for last-minute name changes. The badge is always current and always correct.
Knowing how many attendees have arrived -- and how many are still expected -- is essential for managing the event day. Real-time dashboards show check-in rates by hour, by ticket type, and by entry point. This data helps you make informed decisions on the fly: should you open an additional check-in lane? Is it safe to start the keynote, or are 200 people still in the queue?
Dashboards also provide valuable post-event data. Arrival patterns help you plan staffing levels for future events and identify peak periods that need additional resources.
Send a reminder email 24 to 48 hours before the event. Include the attendee's QR code prominently, along with essential logistics: venue address, door opening times, parking information, and a link to the event app. Make the QR code easy to access on a mobile device -- attendees should not have to search through their inbox at the venue entrance.
A well-timed reminder reduces the number of attendees who arrive without their QR code, which in turn reduces the load on your manual check-in backup process. It also serves as a final confirmation that reduces no-shows.
The end of the event is an underused data collection opportunity. A brief check-out survey -- two or three questions, delivered through the event app or a kiosk near the exit -- captures impressions while the experience is fresh. Response rates for check-out surveys are consistently higher than for post-event emails sent days later.
Keep it short: an overall rating, one open-ended question about highlights, and one about improvements. You can follow up with a more detailed survey by email, but the check-out moment gives you immediate, high-quality signal about attendee satisfaction.
Registration and check-in are not isolated functions. They are part of a connected event experience that spans from the first registration page visit to the final feedback form. When your registration, check-in, badge printing, and analytics all live within the same platform, data flows seamlessly and your team spends less time reconciling systems and more time delivering an excellent event.
Canapii handles registration, QR code check-in, on-demand badge printing, self-service kiosks, and real-time dashboards -- all included in the platform with all-inclusive pricing. No add-ons to purchase, no third-party integrations to configure.
From branded registration pages to QR code scanning and on-demand badge printing -- everything you need, built in.