
Post-Event Follow-Up Strategies: Keeping Engagement High and Maximizing ROI
Post-Event Follow-Up Strategies: Keeping Engagement High and Maximizing ROI
Post-Event Follow-Up Strategies: Keeping Engagement High and Maximizing ROI
Events like webinars, conferences, and workshops are fantastic for generating leads and engaging your audience – but the real magic happens in the follow-up. A strong post-event follow-up strategy ensures that the connections you made during the event continue to flourish, turning one-time attendees into long-term customers or community members. In this guide, we’ll cover best practices for following up after events to maintain engagement and boost your return on investment (ROI), including how automation and AI can support these efforts.
Events like webinars, conferences, and workshops are fantastic for generating leads and engaging your audience – but the real magic happens in the follow-up. A strong post-event follow-up strategy ensures that the connections you made during the event continue to flourish, turning one-time attendees into long-term customers or community members. In this guide, we’ll cover best practices for following up after events to maintain engagement and boost your return on investment (ROI), including how automation and AI can support these efforts.

Image courtesy of Charlesdeluvio via Unsplash
Why Post-Event Follow-Up Matters
Why Post-Event Follow-Up Matters
Investing time and resources into an event is only worthwhile if you capitalize on the interest it generates. Immediately after an event, attendees are at peak awareness of your brand. They’ve shown interest by signing up or attending – which means they are warm leads. Without follow-up, this interest will fade. A thoughtful follow-up strategy can:
Nurture leads further down the funnel (turn that initial interest into a sale or deeper engagement).
Reinforce key messages and content from the event, increasing retention of your insights or product in their mind.
Gather feedback to improve future events and offerings (improving ROI long-term).
Solidify relationships – showing attendees that you value their participation and want to keep providing value.
In short, post-event follow-up is the bridge between an event and tangible outcomes (sales, partnerships, loyalty). It’s an essential part of event ROI – some say the event isn’t over until the follow-up is done.
Investing time and resources into an event is only worthwhile if you capitalize on the interest it generates. Immediately after an event, attendees are at peak awareness of your brand. They’ve shown interest by signing up or attending – which means they are warm leads. Without follow-up, this interest will fade. A thoughtful follow-up strategy can:
Nurture leads further down the funnel (turn that initial interest into a sale or deeper engagement).
Reinforce key messages and content from the event, increasing retention of your insights or product in their mind.
Gather feedback to improve future events and offerings (improving ROI long-term).
Solidify relationships – showing attendees that you value their participation and want to keep providing value.
In short, post-event follow-up is the bridge between an event and tangible outcomes (sales, partnerships, loyalty). It’s an essential part of event ROI – some say the event isn’t over until the follow-up is done.
Timing is Everything: The 24-Hour Rule and Beyond
Timing is Everything: The 24-Hour Rule and Beyond
Follow Up ASAP (within 24 hours): Send a thank-you message to attendees within a day of the event. While the excitement is still fresh, a quick thank you notes gratitude and keeps the momentum. It can be very simple: thank them for attending, highlight how their presence or input was valuable, and tease that more resources or answers to questions are coming. This immediate touchpoint shows you’re responsive and on the ball.
Stagger Your Communication: Don’t unload everything at once. A common best practice is a multi-touch follow-up sequence over a few days or weeks. For example:
Day 1: Thank-you email (as mentioned, with a brief recap or key takeaway reminder).
Day 2-3: A link to the event recording or slides, and perhaps any promised resources.
Day 3-5: A follow-up asking for feedback (e.g., a short survey).
Week 2: Share additional content that builds on the event – like a related blog post, an e-book, or answers to questions that were asked.
Week 3 or 4: An invitation to the next event or a demo call, depending on context.
By spacing out communications, you avoid overwhelming the attendee and give them reasons to engage with you multiple times post-event. Each touch should provide value (see next section) so it doesn’t feel like pestering.
Segment Your Audience: If you have data on your attendees, use it to tailor timing and content. For example, hot leads (people who asked a lot of questions or explicitly showed buying signals) might warrant a faster and more direct follow-up from a sales rep. Casual attendees might just enter your regular nurture email flow. Also consider different follow-up for those who registered but didn’t attend live – they might need a slightly different approach (“We’re sorry we missed you at the event – here’s the recording”).
Be mindful of Time Zones and Context: If your attendees spanned regions, sending a follow-up at 8 AM your time might hit some inboxes at midnight. Use tools that allow send-time optimization or just schedule thoughtfully. Also consider the event type – a webinar during work hours might mean attendees expect follow-up during work hours, whereas a weekend conference might blur lines between personal and professional inbox use.
Follow Up ASAP (within 24 hours): Send a thank-you message to attendees within a day of the event. While the excitement is still fresh, a quick thank you notes gratitude and keeps the momentum. It can be very simple: thank them for attending, highlight how their presence or input was valuable, and tease that more resources or answers to questions are coming. This immediate touchpoint shows you’re responsive and on the ball.
Stagger Your Communication: Don’t unload everything at once. A common best practice is a multi-touch follow-up sequence over a few days or weeks. For example:
Day 1: Thank-you email (as mentioned, with a brief recap or key takeaway reminder).
Day 2-3: A link to the event recording or slides, and perhaps any promised resources.
Day 3-5: A follow-up asking for feedback (e.g., a short survey).
Week 2: Share additional content that builds on the event – like a related blog post, an e-book, or answers to questions that were asked.
Week 3 or 4: An invitation to the next event or a demo call, depending on context.
By spacing out communications, you avoid overwhelming the attendee and give them reasons to engage with you multiple times post-event. Each touch should provide value (see next section) so it doesn’t feel like pestering.
Segment Your Audience: If you have data on your attendees, use it to tailor timing and content. For example, hot leads (people who asked a lot of questions or explicitly showed buying signals) might warrant a faster and more direct follow-up from a sales rep. Casual attendees might just enter your regular nurture email flow. Also consider different follow-up for those who registered but didn’t attend live – they might need a slightly different approach (“We’re sorry we missed you at the event – here’s the recording”).
Be mindful of Time Zones and Context: If your attendees spanned regions, sending a follow-up at 8 AM your time might hit some inboxes at midnight. Use tools that allow send-time optimization or just schedule thoughtfully. Also consider the event type – a webinar during work hours might mean attendees expect follow-up during work hours, whereas a weekend conference might blur lines between personal and professional inbox use.
Crafting the Perfect Follow-Up Message
Crafting the Perfect Follow-Up Message
Personalize Where Possible: Use the attendee’s name and, if feasible, reference the specific event or session they attended (“Thank you for joining our webinar on [Topic]”). If you met them in person and took notes, mention something from your conversation (“It was great chatting with you about [specific interest] at our booth”). Personalization can dramatically increase engagement rates because it shows the email isn’t just a mass blast.
Express Appreciation Sincerely: Start with a thank you. Simple and genuine: “Thank you for attending [Event Name]. We loved having you with us.” Gratitude sets a positive tone and makes people feel valued, not just marketed to.
Provide Value in Every Communication: Each follow-up touchpoint should answer the attendee’s unspoken question: “What’s in it for me?” Some valuable content ideas:
Event Materials: Share the recording, slide decks, speaker notes, or an infographic of key insights. Attendees appreciate the ability to review content.
Questions & Answers: If the event had a Q&A, send a compiled list of great questions and answers (especially those you couldn’t get to live).
Related Resources: Suggest blog posts, whitepapers, or case studies that relate to the event topic. e.g., “Since you showed interest in [event topic], you might enjoy this case study on the subject.”
Exclusive Offers: As a token, you might give attendees something exclusive – early access to a feature, a free trial extension, a discount code, or an invite to an “attendees-only” future roundtable. This rewards them for engaging.
Community & Social Proof: Encourage them to join a community (LinkedIn group, forum, etc.) or see what others are saying (perhaps a hashtag recap). For instance, “Continue the conversation with peers on [Community Name]” can foster networking and keep them engaged around your brand.
Clear Call-to-Action (CTA): Decide what the primary next step is for these attendees and make that CTA prominent in your communications. It might be “Schedule a demo” if it was a product-oriented webinar, or “Download our free guide” for an educational event. Only include one, or at most two, CTAs per message to avoid decision paralysis. For example, your thank-you email’s CTA could be “Watch the Recording” whereas a later email’s CTA might be “Try our product for free” or “Register for our next webinar.”
Tone and Brevity: Keep follow-up emails concise. People have full inboxes, so get to the point quickly. Use a friendly, conversational tone – similar to how you’d speak at the event. And break up text for readability: use bullet points (like highlighting 3 key takeaways from the event), or bold important info (“Access the webinar recording here”).
Personalize Where Possible: Use the attendee’s name and, if feasible, reference the specific event or session they attended (“Thank you for joining our webinar on [Topic]”). If you met them in person and took notes, mention something from your conversation (“It was great chatting with you about [specific interest] at our booth”). Personalization can dramatically increase engagement rates because it shows the email isn’t just a mass blast.
Express Appreciation Sincerely: Start with a thank you. Simple and genuine: “Thank you for attending [Event Name]. We loved having you with us.” Gratitude sets a positive tone and makes people feel valued, not just marketed to.
Provide Value in Every Communication: Each follow-up touchpoint should answer the attendee’s unspoken question: “What’s in it for me?” Some valuable content ideas:
Event Materials: Share the recording, slide decks, speaker notes, or an infographic of key insights. Attendees appreciate the ability to review content.
Questions & Answers: If the event had a Q&A, send a compiled list of great questions and answers (especially those you couldn’t get to live).
Related Resources: Suggest blog posts, whitepapers, or case studies that relate to the event topic. e.g., “Since you showed interest in [event topic], you might enjoy this case study on the subject.”
Exclusive Offers: As a token, you might give attendees something exclusive – early access to a feature, a free trial extension, a discount code, or an invite to an “attendees-only” future roundtable. This rewards them for engaging.
Community & Social Proof: Encourage them to join a community (LinkedIn group, forum, etc.) or see what others are saying (perhaps a hashtag recap). For instance, “Continue the conversation with peers on [Community Name]” can foster networking and keep them engaged around your brand.
Clear Call-to-Action (CTA): Decide what the primary next step is for these attendees and make that CTA prominent in your communications. It might be “Schedule a demo” if it was a product-oriented webinar, or “Download our free guide” for an educational event. Only include one, or at most two, CTAs per message to avoid decision paralysis. For example, your thank-you email’s CTA could be “Watch the Recording” whereas a later email’s CTA might be “Try our product for free” or “Register for our next webinar.”
Tone and Brevity: Keep follow-up emails concise. People have full inboxes, so get to the point quickly. Use a friendly, conversational tone – similar to how you’d speak at the event. And break up text for readability: use bullet points (like highlighting 3 key takeaways from the event), or bold important info (“Access the webinar recording here”).
Multi-Channel Follow-Up: Beyond Email
Multi-Channel Follow-Up: Beyond Email
While email is the workhorse of follow-up, don’t forget other channels:
Phone Calls: For high-value leads or key clients, a personal phone call the day after a conference can leave a strong impression. A quick “thank you, how can we help further?” call can set you apart. For webinars with product interest, a sales call within 24-48 hours can greatly increase conversion of that lead.
LinkedIn or Social Media: Encourage speakers or company representatives to post highlights or thank-yous on LinkedIn, and tag attendees or commenters (when appropriate). You can also directly message attendees on LinkedIn with a thank-you note – this can be effective in B2B contexts. Just keep it personal and not overly salesy at first contact.
Direct Mail: If you have physical addresses (and the budget), a handwritten thank-you card or a small swag gift can be a delightful surprise after a big conference or VIP event. It’s old-school but memorable in a digital age. Even a printed certificate of completion (for a workshop) can be a nice touch.
SMS/Text: For certain events (like local workshops or time-sensitive offers after a webinar), an SMS reminder (“Hi [Name], thanks for joining our webinar. Don’t forget to download your certificate at [link]”) can cut through email clutter. Use sparingly and only if users have consented to texts.
Retargeting Ads: One subtle follow-up is adding your attendee list to an ad campaign audience. After the event, showing them ads related to the event content or your product keeps you in their periphery. For example, a week after a webinar, they might see a Facebook or LinkedIn ad for a case study on the topic. It’s a supportive touch that can reinforce your message passively.
Using multiple channels ensures your message is received and shows a holistic engagement. However, ensure consistency across channels – the messaging and tone should align so it feels like a coherent conversation, not disjointed marketing blasts.
While email is the workhorse of follow-up, don’t forget other channels:
Phone Calls: For high-value leads or key clients, a personal phone call the day after a conference can leave a strong impression. A quick “thank you, how can we help further?” call can set you apart. For webinars with product interest, a sales call within 24-48 hours can greatly increase conversion of that lead.
LinkedIn or Social Media: Encourage speakers or company representatives to post highlights or thank-yous on LinkedIn, and tag attendees or commenters (when appropriate). You can also directly message attendees on LinkedIn with a thank-you note – this can be effective in B2B contexts. Just keep it personal and not overly salesy at first contact.
Direct Mail: If you have physical addresses (and the budget), a handwritten thank-you card or a small swag gift can be a delightful surprise after a big conference or VIP event. It’s old-school but memorable in a digital age. Even a printed certificate of completion (for a workshop) can be a nice touch.
SMS/Text: For certain events (like local workshops or time-sensitive offers after a webinar), an SMS reminder (“Hi [Name], thanks for joining our webinar. Don’t forget to download your certificate at [link]”) can cut through email clutter. Use sparingly and only if users have consented to texts.
Retargeting Ads: One subtle follow-up is adding your attendee list to an ad campaign audience. After the event, showing them ads related to the event content or your product keeps you in their periphery. For example, a week after a webinar, they might see a Facebook or LinkedIn ad for a case study on the topic. It’s a supportive touch that can reinforce your message passively.
Using multiple channels ensures your message is received and shows a holistic engagement. However, ensure consistency across channels – the messaging and tone should align so it feels like a coherent conversation, not disjointed marketing blasts.
Continued Engagement and Relationship Building
Continued Engagement and Relationship Building
Solicit Feedback and Act on It: Within a few days of the event, ask attendees for feedback with a short survey. Keep it very concise – a few rating-scale questions and one open-ended question for comments. For example: “How would you rate the event? What did you find most valuable? What could be improved?” Not everyone will respond, but those who do give you valuable input for next time. Importantly, if feedback reveals any issues, consider responding personally. For instance, if someone said the webinar lacked depth, you might reply thanking them and offering an advanced resource. It shows you listen and care.
Nurture Leads According to Interest Level: Not all attendees are equal in terms of sales readiness. Use their engagement to segment:
Those who asked questions, clicked links in follow-ups, or spent a lot of time with your content likely deserve direct outreach from sales or a personalized follow-up plan.
Those who attended but didn’t interact might go into a general nurture funnel – e.g., they’ll receive your newsletter or invites to future events.
No-shows (registrants who didn’t attend) should get a different follow-up: “Sorry we missed you, here’s the recording – hope to catch you next time!” They might still be good leads, just scheduling didn’t work out.
Leverage Event Content for Ongoing Touchpoints: An event often produces lots of content – use it. Transcribe webinar discussions into a blog post (“Q&A from our Webinar on X”). Create an infographic of key insights shared at the conference. Then share these in the weeks following. This keeps the conversation alive. Attendees will be reminded of the value they got, and non-attendees might also engage with this content and regret missing out – making them more likely to attend the next one.
Invite Further Engagement: Your final follow-up in the sequence might be an invitation to do something else: join a user community, participate in a free trial, attend another upcoming event, or even a one-on-one consultation. Since you’ve provided value in the preceding touches, this invite comes as a natural next step rather than an abrupt sales pitch. For example: “We discussed a lot about [topic] in the webinar. If you’re looking to implement these ideas, we’d love to offer you a free consultation call to help apply them to your business.” This extends the relationship and moves them along the journey with you.
Monitor and Measure Results: Track metrics like email open rates, click-through rates on follow-up content, social media engagement, meeting bookings, and eventually conversion to opportunities or sales. This will tell you what follow-up content works best. For instance, you might find that 30% of webinar attendees who clicked the “related blog post” ended up signing up for a trial. That’s a sign that piece of content and that CTA was effective. Measuring ROI might involve longer-term tracking (did event attendees convert at a higher rate than non-attendees over 3 months? By how much revenue?). These insights will help refine future follow-up strategies and justify the investments in events by showing the downstream impact.
Solicit Feedback and Act on It: Within a few days of the event, ask attendees for feedback with a short survey. Keep it very concise – a few rating-scale questions and one open-ended question for comments. For example: “How would you rate the event? What did you find most valuable? What could be improved?” Not everyone will respond, but those who do give you valuable input for next time. Importantly, if feedback reveals any issues, consider responding personally. For instance, if someone said the webinar lacked depth, you might reply thanking them and offering an advanced resource. It shows you listen and care.
Nurture Leads According to Interest Level: Not all attendees are equal in terms of sales readiness. Use their engagement to segment:
Those who asked questions, clicked links in follow-ups, or spent a lot of time with your content likely deserve direct outreach from sales or a personalized follow-up plan.
Those who attended but didn’t interact might go into a general nurture funnel – e.g., they’ll receive your newsletter or invites to future events.
No-shows (registrants who didn’t attend) should get a different follow-up: “Sorry we missed you, here’s the recording – hope to catch you next time!” They might still be good leads, just scheduling didn’t work out.
Leverage Event Content for Ongoing Touchpoints: An event often produces lots of content – use it. Transcribe webinar discussions into a blog post (“Q&A from our Webinar on X”). Create an infographic of key insights shared at the conference. Then share these in the weeks following. This keeps the conversation alive. Attendees will be reminded of the value they got, and non-attendees might also engage with this content and regret missing out – making them more likely to attend the next one.
Invite Further Engagement: Your final follow-up in the sequence might be an invitation to do something else: join a user community, participate in a free trial, attend another upcoming event, or even a one-on-one consultation. Since you’ve provided value in the preceding touches, this invite comes as a natural next step rather than an abrupt sales pitch. For example: “We discussed a lot about [topic] in the webinar. If you’re looking to implement these ideas, we’d love to offer you a free consultation call to help apply them to your business.” This extends the relationship and moves them along the journey with you.
Monitor and Measure Results: Track metrics like email open rates, click-through rates on follow-up content, social media engagement, meeting bookings, and eventually conversion to opportunities or sales. This will tell you what follow-up content works best. For instance, you might find that 30% of webinar attendees who clicked the “related blog post” ended up signing up for a trial. That’s a sign that piece of content and that CTA was effective. Measuring ROI might involve longer-term tracking (did event attendees convert at a higher rate than non-attendees over 3 months? By how much revenue?). These insights will help refine future follow-up strategies and justify the investments in events by showing the downstream impact.
How Peel Helps with Post-Event Follow-Up
How Peel Helps with Post-Event Follow-Up
Peel’s AI-driven engagement platform can supercharge your post-event follow-up strategy by automating personalized, timely touchpoints:
Automated, Personalized Outreach: Peel’s conversational voice agents can be programmed to reach out to event attendees with personalized messages. For example, the day after your webinar, Peel could call or message each attendee with a tailored thank-you that uses their name and references the event, ensuring that 100% of attendees get a prompt follow-up without your team manually crafting each email or making each call. This kind of personal touch at scale is Peel’s specialty.
Smart Content Delivery: Using the data from the event (like which sessions someone attended or which topics they showed interest in), Peel can automatically send different follow-up content to different segments. Suppose your conference had multiple tracks – Peel can send Track A attendees the Track A materials, and Track B attendees a different set, sparing them info-dumps that aren’t relevant. It leverages its AI-Powered Script Agent to generate or select the right message for each audience slice.
Multi-Channel Engagement: Peel isn’t limited to email – it can engage via phone calls, SMS, or chat. So if you want to follow up an online workshop with a quick interactive survey by voice, Peel can call attendees with a friendly automated voice that asks them to rate the event and captures their feedback. This feels more engaging than a standard survey link, and Peel’s voice agents can even ask follow-up questions conversationally based on responses. Similarly, it could text a thank you with a link to resources for those who prefer mobile communication.
Instant Lead Qualification: Peel can converse with attendees post-event to gauge their interest and qualify leads. For instance, a Peel agent could ask, “Did the webinar spark interest in trying our product?” and based on the answer, either nurture them with more info or escalate to a sales rep. It’s like having a virtual BDR (Business Development Rep) follow up with everyone immediately. Hot leads can be flagged in real-time and routed to your sales team for prompt follow-up while the attendee’s interest is high.
Tracking and Analytics: Peel provides real-time analytics on engagement with follow-up campaigns. You’ll see who engaged with the AI follow-up, how they responded, and what content they accessed. This data is invaluable; it can feed into your CRM to update lead scores or trigger specific workflows. Essentially, Peel not only executes the follow-up touches but also measures them, showing you the ROI from your event outreach. For example, if an attendee interacts positively with the Peel agent and asks to be contacted, you know that attendee is a hot prospect directly attributable to the event follow-up.
Consistency and Scalability: With Peel handling follow-ups, you ensure no attendee slips through the cracks. Whether you had 50 or 5,000 attendees, Peel scales to touch each one in a consistent, brand-aligned voice. This is especially useful for large webinars or marketing events where manual follow-up to each person is impractical. Peel can send thousands of individualized messages that feel one-on-one, which is far more engaging than a generic mass email.
By integrating Peel into your post-event strategy, you effectively get a tireless assistant that nurtures your event leads with timely, personalized communication. This not only improves your immediate post-event engagement but also frees your team to focus on high-value interactions (like talking to the most interested leads or planning the next big event) rather than routine follow-up tasks. In essence, Peel helps turn event momentum into measurable results, maximizing the ROI of every webinar or conference your organization runs.
Peel’s AI-driven engagement platform can supercharge your post-event follow-up strategy by automating personalized, timely touchpoints:
Automated, Personalized Outreach: Peel’s conversational voice agents can be programmed to reach out to event attendees with personalized messages. For example, the day after your webinar, Peel could call or message each attendee with a tailored thank-you that uses their name and references the event, ensuring that 100% of attendees get a prompt follow-up without your team manually crafting each email or making each call. This kind of personal touch at scale is Peel’s specialty.
Smart Content Delivery: Using the data from the event (like which sessions someone attended or which topics they showed interest in), Peel can automatically send different follow-up content to different segments. Suppose your conference had multiple tracks – Peel can send Track A attendees the Track A materials, and Track B attendees a different set, sparing them info-dumps that aren’t relevant. It leverages its AI-Powered Script Agent to generate or select the right message for each audience slice.
Multi-Channel Engagement: Peel isn’t limited to email – it can engage via phone calls, SMS, or chat. So if you want to follow up an online workshop with a quick interactive survey by voice, Peel can call attendees with a friendly automated voice that asks them to rate the event and captures their feedback. This feels more engaging than a standard survey link, and Peel’s voice agents can even ask follow-up questions conversationally based on responses. Similarly, it could text a thank you with a link to resources for those who prefer mobile communication.
Instant Lead Qualification: Peel can converse with attendees post-event to gauge their interest and qualify leads. For instance, a Peel agent could ask, “Did the webinar spark interest in trying our product?” and based on the answer, either nurture them with more info or escalate to a sales rep. It’s like having a virtual BDR (Business Development Rep) follow up with everyone immediately. Hot leads can be flagged in real-time and routed to your sales team for prompt follow-up while the attendee’s interest is high.
Tracking and Analytics: Peel provides real-time analytics on engagement with follow-up campaigns. You’ll see who engaged with the AI follow-up, how they responded, and what content they accessed. This data is invaluable; it can feed into your CRM to update lead scores or trigger specific workflows. Essentially, Peel not only executes the follow-up touches but also measures them, showing you the ROI from your event outreach. For example, if an attendee interacts positively with the Peel agent and asks to be contacted, you know that attendee is a hot prospect directly attributable to the event follow-up.
Consistency and Scalability: With Peel handling follow-ups, you ensure no attendee slips through the cracks. Whether you had 50 or 5,000 attendees, Peel scales to touch each one in a consistent, brand-aligned voice. This is especially useful for large webinars or marketing events where manual follow-up to each person is impractical. Peel can send thousands of individualized messages that feel one-on-one, which is far more engaging than a generic mass email.
By integrating Peel into your post-event strategy, you effectively get a tireless assistant that nurtures your event leads with timely, personalized communication. This not only improves your immediate post-event engagement but also frees your team to focus on high-value interactions (like talking to the most interested leads or planning the next big event) rather than routine follow-up tasks. In essence, Peel helps turn event momentum into measurable results, maximizing the ROI of every webinar or conference your organization runs.
Jan 26, 2024

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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

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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

Fresh business conversations at scale
How's it work?
About Us

Fresh business conversations at scale

Fresh business conversations at scale
How's it work?

Fresh business conversations at scale
How's it work?
About Us
2024 © ChatGems Inc. DBA Peel AI - Conversation Automation
2024 © ChatGems Inc. DBA Peel AI - Conversation Automation
2024 © ChatGems Inc. DBA Peel AI - Conversation Automation
How to get started
Jump right in — get an overview of the basics and get started on building.
Watch all video
Phosphor Icons
Phosphor is a flexible icon family for interfaces, diagrams, presentations — whatever, really.
Visit website
Download Now!
Ready to optimize the performance of your business? Get Sellify now!
How to get started
Jump right in — get an overview of the basics and get started on building.
Watch all video
Phosphor Icons
Phosphor is a flexible icon family for interfaces, diagrams, presentations — whatever, really.
Visit website
Download Now!
Ready to optimize the performance of your business? Get Sellify now!
How to get started
Jump right in — get an overview of the basics and get started on building.
Watch all video
Phosphor Icons
Phosphor is a flexible icon family for interfaces, diagrams, presentations — whatever, really.
Visit website
Download Now!
Ready to optimize the performance of your business? Get Sellify now!