Mobile-first event engagement product
Come Back
A mobile-first event engagement platform that turns QR scans, on-site actions, staff checks, rewards, and leads into one measurable loop.
Event engagement
Platform
Physical to digital
Scan. Do. Prove it.
I built a mobile-first platform for the moment where someone walks past a booth and either disappears, or turns into a real interaction.
One closed loop
Visitor to report
Less vague than busy.
People do something. Staff can verify it. The business can reward it and report on what happened.
01
Scan
02
Act
03
Verify
04
Reward

Events have this weird gap in the middle.
Businesses spend a ridiculous amount of energy getting people into a room, a booth, a venue, a festival, a showroom, whatever. And then people walk by.
This project was built for that little moment. A visitor scans a QR code and gets pulled into a small interactive journey: follow something, answer a quiz, leave a comment, fill in a lead form, visit a physical spot, collect points, unlock a reward.
Product loop
The room finally talks back.
01
Scan
02
Act
03
Verify
04
Reward
05
Report


Visitor
Clear mobile tasks
Tasks, points, progress, rewards, status and short steps that work while someone is standing in a busy venue.
Staff
Fast verification
Short codes, proof, approvals, rejections and reward unlocks without turning the booth into a back-office desk.
Organizer
Actual event data
Participants, leads, QR codes, reports, rewards, branding and event settings in one operational view.
The useful part is the loop.
Participants know what to do. Staff know what to check. Organizers can see what happened. That makes it closer to a reusable product than a cute event microsite with sponsor logos and a countdown.
The whole thing connects the physical and digital world without turning it into innovation theater. That was the point.
Trust layer
Claimed is not verified.
That distinction makes the product feel serious. People can start progress themselves, but rewards need a proper check.
01
Claimed
02
Pending
03
Verified
04
Rewarded
Verification
Staff check
The phone becomes the proof.
Staff can check progress, approve tasks and unlock rewards without turning the booth into an admin ritual.


Campaign actions
Social engagement became something you could actually measure.
A participant could comment on Facebook or Instagram using a unique code, and the system could verify that action. That is a standout detail because event social usually ends with people vaguely hoping the algorithm is in a good mood.
QR operations
The boring stuff mattered.


01
Wrong event
02
Expired code
03
Duplicate scan
04
Scan limits
The mobile flow was the whole game.
Big tap targets. Stacked cards. Clear status chips. Short steps. Visible progress. Claimed points, verified points, pending tasks, completed tasks, and next reward distance.
The participant phone became the verification artifact. Staff could check progress, approve tasks, and unlock the reward without making the moment feel heavy.
Most event marketing still ends with someone saying it was busy. This gives you a bit more than that.



