Most event organisers think transcription is a small operational task. You record the sessions, send the audio files to a transcription service, and receive transcripts a few days later. On the surface, it seems simple. In reality, manual transcription creates a chain of hidden costs that most teams never calculate. The invoice you receive from […]
Blog
Discover latest news about Snapsight and technology advancements in the event industry
You’re running a global conference. Speakers present in English. Half your audience speaks Spanish. The other half speaks Mandarin. What happens? Option one: You hire interpreters. Expensive. Logistically complex. And attendees still miss nuance. Option two: You run sessions in one language and hope for the best. Some attendees tune out. Others leave early. Option […]
How redesigning for clarity helped us understand what we’re actually building. The hardest part of rebuilding Snapsight wasn’t the code. It wasn’t the design system. It wasn’t even figuring out how to reorganise two years of product features into a coherent story. The hardest part was admitting that our old website had become a reflection […]
Most event organizers leave content on the table. A keynote happens. An expert shares insights. The audience learns something valuable. And then it’s over. Maybe you have a recording. Maybe you don’t. Either way, turning that event into content usually means hiring an editor, transcribing audio manually, and spending hours reformatting everything into blog posts, […]
Event accessibility compliance in 2026 is no longer a future consideration. It is an operational deadline. On April 24, 2026, public entities serving populations of 50,000 or more must comply with updated ADA Title II regulations requiring WCAG 2.1 Level AA accessibility for web and video content, including live and recorded events. Smaller entities must […]
Your event recordings are sitting in cloud storage, gathering digital dust. Hundreds of hours of expert discussions, strategic debates, and institutional knowledge are captured but rarely used. Industry research consistently shows that most event content is never reused after the event concludes. Organizations invest heavily in bringing together their smartest people, record everything, and then […]
Event Intelligence vs Event Transcription: Key Differences The debate around event intelligence vs. event transcription is no longer theoretical. For modern conferences, enterprise summits, and large-scale exhibitions, the difference between passive documentation and real-time strategic insight directly impacts measurable business outcomes. While transcription captures what was said, event intelligence analyzes what matters as it happens. […]
Your keynote speaker talked about digital transformation. So did the breakout session on operations. And the customer panel. And the innovation workshop. But no one realized this was the dominant theme until three weeks after the event—too late to address it, amplify it, or build next year’s programming around it. This is the problem with […]
Events generate more valuable content than any other enterprise activity. A three-day conference produces hundreds of hours of expert discussion, strategic debate, and institutional knowledge. Yet, according to research on the Ebbinghaus forgetting curve, attendees forget 70% of new information within 24 hours and up to 90% within a week. Traditional event technology captures logistics, […]
Five thousand doctors and nurses, representing forty-seven nations, gathered in Singapore for a medical meeting. Everyone had their own experience, spoke a distinct tongue, and arrived with varied viewpoints. The challenge? To grasp the collective significance beyond individual presentations. It’s a shift; instead of simply sending out news, technology now weaves together what everyone’s saying […]