Post-Event Follow-Up Do’s and Don’ts: Keeping the Conversation Going

Post-Event Follow-Up Do’s and Don’ts: Keeping the Conversation Going

Post-Event Follow-Up Do’s and Don’ts: Keeping the Conversation Going

The event might be over, but the real work – converting contacts and insights into results – has just begun. Effective post-event follow-up is crucial for sustaining the interest generated and moving towards concrete outcomes. Here’s a breakdown of do’s and don’ts to guide your follow-up strategy after webinars, conferences, or any events, so you can maintain engagement and drive ROI.

The event might be over, but the real work – converting contacts and insights into results – has just begun. Effective post-event follow-up is crucial for sustaining the interest generated and moving towards concrete outcomes. Here’s a breakdown of do’s and don’ts to guide your follow-up strategy after webinars, conferences, or any events, so you can maintain engagement and drive ROI.

Image courtesy of Charlesdeluvio via Unsplash

Do’s

Do’s

Do Follow Up Quickly: Strike while the iron is hot. Send a thank-you or follow-up message within 24 hours of the event. Prompt communication shows attendees you value their time and are eager to continue the engagement. A quick email like “Thank you for attending [Event]. Here are the key takeaways and next steps…” keeps the momentum going.

  • Do Personalize Your Outreach: Make each attendee feel important. Address them by name and, if possible, reference something relevant – the session they attended, their company, or a question they asked. For example, “Hi Jane, it was great to have you at our marketing webinar yesterday. I recall you were interested in social media tips – attached is an eBook that dives deeper into that topic.” Personalization significantly increases the chance they’ll read and respond, because it doesn’t feel like a mass blast.

  • Do Provide Value in Follow-Ups: Every touchpoint after the event should offer something useful. This could be sharing the presentation slides, a link to the webinar recording, a summary of key insights, or additional resources related to the event’s topic. By giving value (instead of immediately pushing a sale), you build goodwill and trust. For example, “As promised, here’s the toolkit we mentioned that can help improve your workflow.”

  • Do Segment Your Audience: Tailor your follow-up messages based on attendee types or behaviors. For instance, treat leads differently than existing customers. If someone visited your booth and expressed interest in Product A, follow up about Product A specifically. Segmenting ensures relevancy. You might have one follow-up track for hot leads (e.g., “Let’s schedule a personalized demo” for those who showed buying signals) and another for general attendees (e.g., “Join our newsletter for more insights”). This targeted approach respects their journey stage and interests.

  • Do Include Clear Next Steps (Call to Action): Guide attendees on what to do next. After you’ve thanked them and provided value, invite them to take a specific action. It could be scheduling a meeting, trying out your product, registering for another event, or simply consuming more content. Make this CTA prominent and easy – for example: “>> Book a free consultation to discuss how we can implement these ideas in your business <<”. A compelling CTA turns passive recipients into active participants in the next phase of your relationship.

  • Do Use Multiple Touchpoints: Mix up your follow-up channels to increase engagement chances. Start with email, but consider a LinkedIn connection request or message referencing the event. Perhaps make a phone call to high-priority contacts. Each channel has its strengths: email for detail and links, phone for personal connection, social for casual touch, etc. Multiple touchpoints (spread out reasonably) reinforce your message and accommodate communication preferences.

  • Do Ask for Feedback: Show that you care about their opinion by asking attendees how they found the event. A simple survey link or even a quick question in your email (“What was your favorite part of the event? Is there anything you wanted to learn more about?”) can yield feedback. Not only does this engage them further (people like to be heard), but it provides you valuable insights for improvement. If they respond, it also opens a dialogue you can continue.

  • Do Connect Attendees with Each Other/Community: One value of events is networking. In follow-ups, encourage attendees to join a community forum or social media group related to the event. You could say, “Continue the conversation with peers in our LinkedIn Group for event alumni.” This extends engagement beyond just you-and-them to among themselves, deepening their connection to the event’s content and by extension, your brand.

  • Do Keep the Tone Warm and Human: After events, people appreciate friendly, human correspondence, not just corporate form letters. Write your follow-ups as if you’re speaking to them directly – because you are. Use a tone of a helpful colleague or friend. For instance, “I hope you enjoyed the conference – I loved the energy during the Q&A! I wanted to reach out to share the resources we talked about…” Such a tone makes your follow-up emails more relatable and less likely to be ignored.

Do Follow Up Quickly: Strike while the iron is hot. Send a thank-you or follow-up message within 24 hours of the event. Prompt communication shows attendees you value their time and are eager to continue the engagement. A quick email like “Thank you for attending [Event]. Here are the key takeaways and next steps…” keeps the momentum going.

  • Do Personalize Your Outreach: Make each attendee feel important. Address them by name and, if possible, reference something relevant – the session they attended, their company, or a question they asked. For example, “Hi Jane, it was great to have you at our marketing webinar yesterday. I recall you were interested in social media tips – attached is an eBook that dives deeper into that topic.” Personalization significantly increases the chance they’ll read and respond, because it doesn’t feel like a mass blast.

  • Do Provide Value in Follow-Ups: Every touchpoint after the event should offer something useful. This could be sharing the presentation slides, a link to the webinar recording, a summary of key insights, or additional resources related to the event’s topic. By giving value (instead of immediately pushing a sale), you build goodwill and trust. For example, “As promised, here’s the toolkit we mentioned that can help improve your workflow.”

  • Do Segment Your Audience: Tailor your follow-up messages based on attendee types or behaviors. For instance, treat leads differently than existing customers. If someone visited your booth and expressed interest in Product A, follow up about Product A specifically. Segmenting ensures relevancy. You might have one follow-up track for hot leads (e.g., “Let’s schedule a personalized demo” for those who showed buying signals) and another for general attendees (e.g., “Join our newsletter for more insights”). This targeted approach respects their journey stage and interests.

  • Do Include Clear Next Steps (Call to Action): Guide attendees on what to do next. After you’ve thanked them and provided value, invite them to take a specific action. It could be scheduling a meeting, trying out your product, registering for another event, or simply consuming more content. Make this CTA prominent and easy – for example: “>> Book a free consultation to discuss how we can implement these ideas in your business <<”. A compelling CTA turns passive recipients into active participants in the next phase of your relationship.

  • Do Use Multiple Touchpoints: Mix up your follow-up channels to increase engagement chances. Start with email, but consider a LinkedIn connection request or message referencing the event. Perhaps make a phone call to high-priority contacts. Each channel has its strengths: email for detail and links, phone for personal connection, social for casual touch, etc. Multiple touchpoints (spread out reasonably) reinforce your message and accommodate communication preferences.

  • Do Ask for Feedback: Show that you care about their opinion by asking attendees how they found the event. A simple survey link or even a quick question in your email (“What was your favorite part of the event? Is there anything you wanted to learn more about?”) can yield feedback. Not only does this engage them further (people like to be heard), but it provides you valuable insights for improvement. If they respond, it also opens a dialogue you can continue.

  • Do Connect Attendees with Each Other/Community: One value of events is networking. In follow-ups, encourage attendees to join a community forum or social media group related to the event. You could say, “Continue the conversation with peers in our LinkedIn Group for event alumni.” This extends engagement beyond just you-and-them to among themselves, deepening their connection to the event’s content and by extension, your brand.

  • Do Keep the Tone Warm and Human: After events, people appreciate friendly, human correspondence, not just corporate form letters. Write your follow-ups as if you’re speaking to them directly – because you are. Use a tone of a helpful colleague or friend. For instance, “I hope you enjoyed the conference – I loved the energy during the Q&A! I wanted to reach out to share the resources we talked about…” Such a tone makes your follow-up emails more relatable and less likely to be ignored.

Don’ts

Don’ts


  • Don’t Wait Too Long to Reach Out: Timing matters immensely. If you wait a week or two before following up, you risk attendees forgetting the event or losing that initial interest. A late follow-up can come across as an afterthought. Avoid the scenario where an attendee thinks, “Oh, I barely remember that webinar… what was this about again?” Promptness shows professionalism and respect.


  • Don’t Send a One-Size-Fits-All Email to Everyone: Mass, generic emails are easy to spot and easier to ignore. If your follow-up feels like a template that doesn’t acknowledge who the recipient is or what they attended, engagement will drop. For example, sending a sales pitch about product XYZ to someone who joined just for an educational session (with no sales intent) is a mismatch. Tailor content at least at a segment level, if not individually. Lack of personalization is a prime reason people disengage.

  • Don’t Overwhelm with Too Many Messages: While multiple touchpoints are good, bombarding attendees with daily emails and calls is counterproductive. Be mindful of frequency. If they get a thank-you email, a sales email, a call, a LinkedIn message, and a text all in two days, that’s overkill. Respect boundaries – a couple of well-timed, meaningful follow-ups in the first week, then perhaps another gentle touch a week or two later is usually sufficient. Over-communication can annoy potential leads and push them away.

  • Don’t Focus Only on Sales: Especially immediately after the event, don’t make every communication a sales pitch. If the first thing an attendee hears post-event is “Buy our product now!” with no regard for the content or experience they just had, it feels disingenuous. Prioritize relationship and value in the early communications. That doesn’t mean you ignore sales opportunities, but weave them in contextually (“We talked about problem X at the event – we do offer a solution if you’re interested...”). Avoid coming across as if the event was just a bait to trap them into a sales funnel; instead, frame it as a continuing journey of value.

  • Don’t Forget No-Shows and Late Registrants: People who registered but didn’t attend, or signed up and couldn’t make it, often get ignored in follow-ups. That’s a mistake – they showed interest initially, so they are still worthwhile to engage. Send them a slightly modified follow-up: acknowledge that you missed them and provide the event materials (recording, slides) so they can benefit anyway. Many will appreciate this gesture and may engage with the content on their own time, keeping them in your orbit.

  • Don’t Neglect to Follow Through on Promises: If during the event you or your team said “We’ll send out X after the event” or “I’ll email you that answer,” be absolutely sure to do so. Failing to deliver promised resources or answers in the follow-up quickly erodes trust. Keep a checklist of commitments made (maybe noted during sessions or chats) and double-check that each is addressed in your follow-ups. For example, if you promised a code or a special offer, include it. Don’t make attendees chase you for something you said you’d provide.

  • Don’t Make Follow-Ups Overly Formal or Robotic: While professionalism is key, an overly stiff email that reads like a press release can be a turn-off. For instance, avoid something that feels auto-generated like: “Dear Sir/Madam, Thank you for attending Event 2025. Your participation is appreciated. Please find attached items.” This lacks warmth and personal touch. You can be professional yet personable: use a friendly tone, maybe even a bit of the event’s vibe (if it was fun and energetic, reflect a bit of that in your language).

  • Don’t Give Up After One Attempt: Many marketing and sales studies show it often takes multiple touches to get a response or conversion. If your first follow-up gets crickets, don’t assume the lead is dead. They might have missed the email or been busy. Send a polite second email a few days later, perhaps with a different subject line or angle (“Wanted to share this resource in case you missed it…”). Not hearing back immediately isn’t a no – often, persistence (to a reasonable point) pays off. Just don’t confuse persistence with spamming (see the earlier “don’t overwhelm”).

  • Don’t Forget Internal Follow-Up: This one is more about you than the attendees: ensure you debrief with your team about the event results and follow-up plan. Don’t let the leads collected sit in a spreadsheet untouched. Don’t assume someone else is handling it – assign owners for follow-up tasks. Basically, don’t drop the ball internally, because that will directly affect the quality of follow-up that attendees receive.


  • Don’t Wait Too Long to Reach Out: Timing matters immensely. If you wait a week or two before following up, you risk attendees forgetting the event or losing that initial interest. A late follow-up can come across as an afterthought. Avoid the scenario where an attendee thinks, “Oh, I barely remember that webinar… what was this about again?” Promptness shows professionalism and respect.


  • Don’t Send a One-Size-Fits-All Email to Everyone: Mass, generic emails are easy to spot and easier to ignore. If your follow-up feels like a template that doesn’t acknowledge who the recipient is or what they attended, engagement will drop. For example, sending a sales pitch about product XYZ to someone who joined just for an educational session (with no sales intent) is a mismatch. Tailor content at least at a segment level, if not individually. Lack of personalization is a prime reason people disengage.

  • Don’t Overwhelm with Too Many Messages: While multiple touchpoints are good, bombarding attendees with daily emails and calls is counterproductive. Be mindful of frequency. If they get a thank-you email, a sales email, a call, a LinkedIn message, and a text all in two days, that’s overkill. Respect boundaries – a couple of well-timed, meaningful follow-ups in the first week, then perhaps another gentle touch a week or two later is usually sufficient. Over-communication can annoy potential leads and push them away.

  • Don’t Focus Only on Sales: Especially immediately after the event, don’t make every communication a sales pitch. If the first thing an attendee hears post-event is “Buy our product now!” with no regard for the content or experience they just had, it feels disingenuous. Prioritize relationship and value in the early communications. That doesn’t mean you ignore sales opportunities, but weave them in contextually (“We talked about problem X at the event – we do offer a solution if you’re interested...”). Avoid coming across as if the event was just a bait to trap them into a sales funnel; instead, frame it as a continuing journey of value.

  • Don’t Forget No-Shows and Late Registrants: People who registered but didn’t attend, or signed up and couldn’t make it, often get ignored in follow-ups. That’s a mistake – they showed interest initially, so they are still worthwhile to engage. Send them a slightly modified follow-up: acknowledge that you missed them and provide the event materials (recording, slides) so they can benefit anyway. Many will appreciate this gesture and may engage with the content on their own time, keeping them in your orbit.

  • Don’t Neglect to Follow Through on Promises: If during the event you or your team said “We’ll send out X after the event” or “I’ll email you that answer,” be absolutely sure to do so. Failing to deliver promised resources or answers in the follow-up quickly erodes trust. Keep a checklist of commitments made (maybe noted during sessions or chats) and double-check that each is addressed in your follow-ups. For example, if you promised a code or a special offer, include it. Don’t make attendees chase you for something you said you’d provide.

  • Don’t Make Follow-Ups Overly Formal or Robotic: While professionalism is key, an overly stiff email that reads like a press release can be a turn-off. For instance, avoid something that feels auto-generated like: “Dear Sir/Madam, Thank you for attending Event 2025. Your participation is appreciated. Please find attached items.” This lacks warmth and personal touch. You can be professional yet personable: use a friendly tone, maybe even a bit of the event’s vibe (if it was fun and energetic, reflect a bit of that in your language).

  • Don’t Give Up After One Attempt: Many marketing and sales studies show it often takes multiple touches to get a response or conversion. If your first follow-up gets crickets, don’t assume the lead is dead. They might have missed the email or been busy. Send a polite second email a few days later, perhaps with a different subject line or angle (“Wanted to share this resource in case you missed it…”). Not hearing back immediately isn’t a no – often, persistence (to a reasonable point) pays off. Just don’t confuse persistence with spamming (see the earlier “don’t overwhelm”).

  • Don’t Forget Internal Follow-Up: This one is more about you than the attendees: ensure you debrief with your team about the event results and follow-up plan. Don’t let the leads collected sit in a spreadsheet untouched. Don’t assume someone else is handling it – assign owners for follow-up tasks. Basically, don’t drop the ball internally, because that will directly affect the quality of follow-up that attendees receive.

How Peel Helps with Post-Event Follow-Up

How Peel Helps with Post-Event Follow-Up

Peel’s AI-powered engagement platform is a boon for executing all the “do’s” and avoiding many of the “don’ts” in post-event follow-up:

  • Personalized At Scale: Peel can send out individualized thank-you messages or follow-ups to each attendee, automatically pulling in personal details like name, company, and even specific session interests (if that data is available). This means even if you have hundreds of attendees, each one gets a message that feels hand-crafted just for them – a task that would be nearly impossible to do manually. Peel’s AI ensures no one receives a one-size-fits-all bland email, sidestepping that don’t.

  • Timely Automation: You can program Peel to initiate follow-ups exactly when you want – say, 1 hour after the event for a thank you, next morning for resources, 3 days later for a feedback survey, etc. Once set up, it executes like clockwork. No waiting too long, no human slip-ups. This automation ensures you never miss that critical 24-hour window (a major “do”), and it also prevents overwhelming frequency because you can space out the communications intelligently.

  • Multi-Channel Outreach by AI: Peel’s conversational agents can engage attendees through email, SMS, or even voice calls. For instance, it could send a text reminder with the link to event slides, or a friendly voice call that says, “Hi! This is an automated but personalized message from [Your Name] at [Company] – just wanted to thank you for attending and let you know we emailed you some resources. Have a great day!” Such touches can complement emails and feel high-touch without burdening your team. It covers the multi-channel “do” effectively.

  • Handling No-Shows and Segments Automatically: Peel can differentiate between those who attended and those who didn’t. It could send the “sorry we missed you” version of the email to no-shows, including the recording link (thus covering that often-forgotten segment) while simultaneously sending an “it was great having you” version to attendees. Each segment can have its own workflow in Peel. This ensures no one falls through cracks and everyone gets the right message.

  • Conversational Follow-Up and Lead Qualification: One of Peel’s strengths is engaging in a dialogue. Instead of just sending static info, Peel’s agent can ask attendees if they have any questions, or even quiz them on their interest. For example, after a product demo webinar, Peel might ask via chat or email, “Are you interested in exploring [Product] further?” and provide buttons or options. If the attendee clicks “Yes, I’d like a demo,” Peel can instantly alert your sales team or even schedule a meeting. If they click “Not right now,” Peel can funnel them into a nurturing sequence instead. This dynamic handling ensures you’re responsive to their level of interest – doing more for those who want it, and respectfully easing off for those who don’t, which addresses several do’s and don’ts about relevance and not being too pushy.

  • Tracking and Insights: Peel’s dashboard will show you who engaged with what follow-up – who opened emails, who clicked links, who interacted with the AI agent. This means you can quickly see which leads are warm and prioritize them. It also helps you measure what follow-ups worked best. Say Peel A/B tested two subject lines or two content offers – you’d get data on which yielded more responses. That continuous learning helps refine your approach to align with the do’s (like providing value and clear CTAs) by seeing exactly what your audience responds to.

  • Consistent Tone and Branding: Peel’s AI can be tuned to match your brand voice, ensuring every communication feels consistent with the event’s tone. You won’t have to worry about robotic or awkward phrasing that might come from hastily written mass emails. Peel’s content can be pre-vetted and improved with AI such that it remains warm, error-free, and on-message across all follow-ups.

In summary, Peel can act as your reliable follow-up coordinator. It remembers every attendee, knows what to send them and when, reaches out through the best channel, and even chats with them to keep them engaged – all while freeing your team from the mechanical tasks so they can focus on the high-level strategy or personal calls where needed. By using Peel, you practically automate all the follow-up “do’s” and build a shield against the “don’ts,” ensuring your post-event process is smooth, effective, and yields the maximum ROI from your event efforts.

Peel’s AI-powered engagement platform is a boon for executing all the “do’s” and avoiding many of the “don’ts” in post-event follow-up:

  • Personalized At Scale: Peel can send out individualized thank-you messages or follow-ups to each attendee, automatically pulling in personal details like name, company, and even specific session interests (if that data is available). This means even if you have hundreds of attendees, each one gets a message that feels hand-crafted just for them – a task that would be nearly impossible to do manually. Peel’s AI ensures no one receives a one-size-fits-all bland email, sidestepping that don’t.

  • Timely Automation: You can program Peel to initiate follow-ups exactly when you want – say, 1 hour after the event for a thank you, next morning for resources, 3 days later for a feedback survey, etc. Once set up, it executes like clockwork. No waiting too long, no human slip-ups. This automation ensures you never miss that critical 24-hour window (a major “do”), and it also prevents overwhelming frequency because you can space out the communications intelligently.

  • Multi-Channel Outreach by AI: Peel’s conversational agents can engage attendees through email, SMS, or even voice calls. For instance, it could send a text reminder with the link to event slides, or a friendly voice call that says, “Hi! This is an automated but personalized message from [Your Name] at [Company] – just wanted to thank you for attending and let you know we emailed you some resources. Have a great day!” Such touches can complement emails and feel high-touch without burdening your team. It covers the multi-channel “do” effectively.

  • Handling No-Shows and Segments Automatically: Peel can differentiate between those who attended and those who didn’t. It could send the “sorry we missed you” version of the email to no-shows, including the recording link (thus covering that often-forgotten segment) while simultaneously sending an “it was great having you” version to attendees. Each segment can have its own workflow in Peel. This ensures no one falls through cracks and everyone gets the right message.

  • Conversational Follow-Up and Lead Qualification: One of Peel’s strengths is engaging in a dialogue. Instead of just sending static info, Peel’s agent can ask attendees if they have any questions, or even quiz them on their interest. For example, after a product demo webinar, Peel might ask via chat or email, “Are you interested in exploring [Product] further?” and provide buttons or options. If the attendee clicks “Yes, I’d like a demo,” Peel can instantly alert your sales team or even schedule a meeting. If they click “Not right now,” Peel can funnel them into a nurturing sequence instead. This dynamic handling ensures you’re responsive to their level of interest – doing more for those who want it, and respectfully easing off for those who don’t, which addresses several do’s and don’ts about relevance and not being too pushy.

  • Tracking and Insights: Peel’s dashboard will show you who engaged with what follow-up – who opened emails, who clicked links, who interacted with the AI agent. This means you can quickly see which leads are warm and prioritize them. It also helps you measure what follow-ups worked best. Say Peel A/B tested two subject lines or two content offers – you’d get data on which yielded more responses. That continuous learning helps refine your approach to align with the do’s (like providing value and clear CTAs) by seeing exactly what your audience responds to.

  • Consistent Tone and Branding: Peel’s AI can be tuned to match your brand voice, ensuring every communication feels consistent with the event’s tone. You won’t have to worry about robotic or awkward phrasing that might come from hastily written mass emails. Peel’s content can be pre-vetted and improved with AI such that it remains warm, error-free, and on-message across all follow-ups.

In summary, Peel can act as your reliable follow-up coordinator. It remembers every attendee, knows what to send them and when, reaches out through the best channel, and even chats with them to keep them engaged – all while freeing your team from the mechanical tasks so they can focus on the high-level strategy or personal calls where needed. By using Peel, you practically automate all the follow-up “do’s” and build a shield against the “don’ts,” ensuring your post-event process is smooth, effective, and yields the maximum ROI from your event efforts.

Jan 26, 2024

Start saving time today

Engage Smarter with AI-Powered Conversations

Try Peel for free or schedule a personalized demo to see how it can streamline your customer interactions.

Active studies

21

Invitations sent

3456

Participants

340


Insights gathered

48

Dashboard

Information about your current plan and usage

Wednesday, 17 May 2024

10:30 AM

1k

5k

9k

3k

7k

12:30 AM

11:30 AM

01:30 PM

02:30 PM

03:30 PM

Insights

7546

Insight count in the past 30 days

Insights

Jeff Sussex

Called “Books-API” with the JavaScript webhook and commented.

“Books-API was readily available with proper documentation and reliability of a proper API. It was just a webhook away from application.”

Nether Stone

Called “Books-API” with the JavaScript webhook and commented.

“Books-API was readily available with proper documentation and reliability of a proper API. It was just a webhook away from application.”

Vector Sam

Called “Books-API” with the JavaScript webhook and commented.

“Books-API was readily available with proper documentation and reliability of a proper API. It was just a webhook away from application.”

James Anderson

“Common Amazon Seller Pain Points:

1.High fees

2. Inventory management

3. PPC costs

4. Amazon support

5. Competition”

Integrations

Study invitations

Total Invitatitions sent: 1500

Completed

36%

Unfinished

38%

Unopened

25%

Incentives

May 2024

$400/$1,000

Gift card budget used

410/500

Activated Participants

7.5k/10k

Unclaimed gift cards

Gift Card budget

$1000/mo

Start saving time today

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Experience the power of AI-driven conversations with a free trial

Active studies

21

Invitations sent

3456

Participants

340


Insights gathered

48

Dashboard

Information about your current plan and usage

Wednesday, 17 May 2024

10:30 AM

1k

5k

9k

3k

7k

12:30 AM

11:30 AM

01:30 PM

02:30 PM

03:30 PM

Insights

7546

Insight count in the past 30 days

Insights

Jeff Sussex

Called “Books-API” with the JavaScript webhook and commented.

“Books-API was readily available with proper documentation and reliability of a proper API. It was just a webhook away from application.”

Nether Stone

Called “Books-API” with the JavaScript webhook and commented.

“Books-API was readily available with proper documentation and reliability of a proper API. It was just a webhook away from application.”

Vector Sam

Called “Books-API” with the JavaScript webhook and commented.

“Books-API was readily available with proper documentation and reliability of a proper API. It was just a webhook away from application.”

James Anderson

“Common Amazon Seller Pain Points:

1.High fees

2. Inventory management

3. PPC costs

4. Amazon support

5. Competition”

Integrations

Study invitations

Total Invitatitions sent: 1500

Completed

36%

Unfinished

38%

Unopened

25%

Incentives

May 2024

$400/$1,000

Gift card budget used

410/500

Activated Participants

7.5k/10k

Unclaimed gift cards

Gift Card budget

$1000/mo

Start saving time today

Engage Smarter with AI-Powered Conversations

Try Peel for free or schedule a personalized demo to see how it can streamline your customer interactions.

Active studies

21

Invitations sent

3456

Participants

340


Insights gathered

48

Dashboard

Information about your current plan and usage

Wednesday, 17 May 2024

10:30 AM

1k

5k

9k

3k

7k

12:30 AM

11:30 AM

01:30 PM

02:30 PM

03:30 PM

Insights

7546

Insight count in the past 30 days

Insights

Jeff Sussex

Called “Books-API” with the JavaScript webhook and commented.

“Books-API was readily available with proper documentation and reliability of a proper API. It was just a webhook away from application.”

Nether Stone

Called “Books-API” with the JavaScript webhook and commented.

“Books-API was readily available with proper documentation and reliability of a proper API. It was just a webhook away from application.”

Vector Sam

Called “Books-API” with the JavaScript webhook and commented.

“Books-API was readily available with proper documentation and reliability of a proper API. It was just a webhook away from application.”

James Anderson

“Common Amazon Seller Pain Points:

1.High fees

2. Inventory management

3. PPC costs

4. Amazon support

5. Competition”

Integrations

Study invitations

Total Invitatitions sent: 1500

Completed

36%

Unfinished

38%

Unopened

25%

Incentives

May 2024

$400/$1,000

Gift card budget used

410/500

Activated Participants

7.5k/10k

Unclaimed gift cards

Gift Card budget

$1000/mo

2024 © ChatGems Inc. DBA Peel AI - Conversation Automation

2024 © ChatGems Inc. DBA Peel AI - Conversation Automation

2024 © ChatGems Inc. DBA Peel AI - Conversation Automation

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Ready to optimize the performance of your business? Get Sellify now!