Every layer of your stack is doing its job. The problem is the layer nobody built.
The capture tool scans badges. The CRM stores contacts. The marketing automation platform sends follow-up emails. The enrichment tool fills in the blanks. Each one works exactly as advertised. And yet, two weeks after the show, your sales team is calling cold. Nobody knows who to prioritize. The leads that looked promising on the floor look identical to the ones that were never going to buy. The stack did not fail you. It just was not designed to produce event intelligence.
This article defines what a coherent event intelligence stack actually looks like, not as a product list, but as a functional architecture. Five layers. A specific job at each layer. And a clear-eyed account of where the tools most teams are running fall short — and what falls through as a result.
Why “event tech stack” needs a new frame
The MarTech stack is a well-established concept. It is built around the customer lifecycle — awareness, consideration, decision, retention — and every tool maps to a stage in that journey. It works because the journey is long, linear, and measurable over time.
Events do not work that way. A trade show compresses the entire buyer engagement cycle into 90 minutes. Signals are generated fast, decay fast, and require a different architecture to capture and activate. The standard MarTech stack was not built for that context. It was retrofitted into it. Badge scanners were bolted onto CRM integrations. Email sequences were pointed at lead lists. Survey tools were added to measure satisfaction after the fact.
The result is a stack that captures volume and loses value.
An event intelligence stack is structured differently. It is built around five distinct jobs: capture identity, enrich the record, track post-event engagement, interpret the signals into intelligence, and activate the right rep with the right context. Each layer has a specific output. Each output feeds the next. When all five are connected, a booth conversation becomes a scored, contextualized, sales-ready record. When one is missing — specifically Layer 4 — the rest of the stack produces data that nobody acts on.
The five layers: what each does, what most teams use, and where the gap is
The table below maps each layer of the event intelligence stack: the tools most B2B teams currently run at that layer, and the gap those tools leave behind.
| Layer | Tools most teams use | The gap it leaves |
| Layer 1: Capture | Cvent LeadCapture, iCapture, Captello, Bizzabo Klik SmartBadge, show organizer badge rentals | Contact identity only. Name, company, email, and a qualification score. No behavioral context — no record of what was discussed, what content was shown, what objection was raised. |
| Layer 2: Enrichment | Clearbit, ZoomInfo, LinkedIn Sales Navigator, HubSpot enrichment | A more complete contact record — not a more actionable one. Job title, company size, LinkedIn URL. Nothing about what happened in the booth. |
| Layer 3: Engagement tracking | Marketo, HubSpot, email open tracking, generic link analytics | Digital behavior on known channels only. No visibility into post-event content engagement tied to a specific booth conversation. |
| Layer 4: Intelligence | Nothing purpose-built. CRM fields, spreadsheets, rep judgment. | This is the missing layer. No tool in the typical stack synthesizes capture + enrichment + engagement into a scored, prioritized, context-rich record. That synthesis does not happen. So it does not get used. |
| Layer 5: Activation | Salesforce, HubSpot CRM, Outreach, Salesloft, email sequences | Activation tools are only as good as the input they receive. A sequence built on a badge scan contact is generic. A sequence built on an intelligence record is specific. The layer works. It is starved. |
Layer by layer: the full breakdown
Layer 1: The capture layer
The capture layer exists to collect identity and context at the moment of interaction. In practice, it collects identity only.
Tools like Cvent LeadCapture, iCapture (now Cvent-owned), Captello, and Bizzabo’s Klik SmartBadge have made badge scanning fast, reliable, and CRM-connectable. That is genuine progress. But the output is still a contact record. Name, company, email, and sometimes a one-to-five qualification rating a rep applied in three seconds before moving to the next person.
The conversation context — the objection raised, the buying timeline disclosed, the specific product interest expressed — lives in the rep’s head or, if you are lucky, in a free-text notes field that nobody reads systematically.
The universal lead capture capability most teams default to is built for volume, not intelligence. That is Layer 1’s structural limitation: it was designed to answer “who did we meet?” not “what did they tell us?”
Layer 2: The enrichment layer
Enrichment makes the contact record more complete. Tools like Clearbit, ZoomInfo, and the enrichment modules built into HubSpot and Salesforce pull firmographic and technographic data — company size, revenue, tech stack, job seniority — and append it to the captured record.
This is necessary. It is not sufficient. An enriched record tells you who the person is. It does not tell you where they are in a buying decision, what they engaged with at your booth, or why they stopped to talk. Enrichment fills in the contact card. The intelligence layer — which most stacks do not have — is what makes the card actionable.
The mistake most teams make is treating enrichment as the finish line. The CRM record is populated. The lead is “ready for sales.” It is not. It is ready for a cold call dressed in the costume of a warm one.
Layer 3: The engagement tracking layer
After the show, something happens — or does not. The lead receives a follow-up email. Maybe they click. Maybe they visit a page. Marketing automation captures some of it. Email open rates are logged. Link clicks are tracked.
The problem is the disconnect from the event context. Standard engagement tracking tools — Marketo, HubSpot, most email platforms — capture digital behavior on known channels. They have no visibility into what happened at the event that generated the lead. A prospect who visited the booth twice, watched a product demo, and asked specific pricing questions looks identical in a standard marketing automation system to someone who was handed a brochure while walking past.
What the engagement tracking layer needs — and almost never has — is continuity with the conversation that started at the booth. That means personalized post-event microsites tied to specific content shown at the event, with tracked revisit frequency, time-per-asset, and re-engagement signals tied back to the individual lead record. LiveMicrosites™ are built exactly for this: a content experience personalized to the booth conversation, tracked at the individual level, feeding engagement data back into the intelligence layer.
Layer 4: The intelligence layer
This is the layer nobody built.
The first three layers generate data: contact data, firmographic data, engagement data. None of it, in isolation or in combination through a standard stack, becomes intelligence. Intelligence requires synthesis — a system that reads what was captured, what was enriched, what was engaged with post-event, and produces a scored, prioritized, context-rich output that a sales rep can act on without interpretation.
In most B2B stacks, this synthesis is either absent or performed manually — a marketing ops person exports a spreadsheet, applies a scoring formula, and emails the sales team a ranked list three days after the show. By that point, the warm leads have gone cold.
As we mapped in Event intelligence vs. event data, the gap between data and intelligence is not a minor calibration. It is a structural difference in what the output can do. Data describes. Intelligence prescribes. Data sits in a CRM field. Intelligence tells a rep who to call, what to say, and why now.
The intelligence layer is what AI IntelliSense™ is built to provide: real-time lead scoring across behavioral dimensions — content engagement, revisit frequency, conversation depth, qualification signals — synthesized into a prioritized output that routes the right leads to the right reps with context attached. IntelliStream surfaces the same data at the manager level: which reps captured structured context, which defaulted to a rating and a name, where follow-up velocity is breaking down.
No combination of Cvent, Clearbit, and HubSpot produces this. They are built for different jobs. The intelligence layer requires a tool purpose-built for the event context — and most teams simply do not have one. This is the ownership gap Article 4 in this series identified directly: nobody owns the intelligence layer inside most B2B organizations, so it never gets built.
Layer 5: The activation layer
The activation layer — Salesforce, HubSpot CRM, Outreach, Salesloft — is not broken. These are mature, well-integrated tools. The problem is what they receive.
A Salesloft sequence triggered from a badge scan contact is generic because the contact record is generic. The rep knows the name, the company, and the job title. They do not know what was discussed. The sequence cannot be specific because the input was not specific. The activation layer is starved.
When the intelligence layer is working — when a fully scored, context-rich, engagement-tracked record arrives in the CRM — the activation layer performs differently. The rep knows which leads to call first, what objection to address, which content the prospect already engaged with. The post-event follow-up is specific, not templated. The sequence is built on intelligence, not inference.
What to cut
A functional event intelligence stack is not more tools. For most teams, it is fewer — replaced with tools that do the right job at each layer.
Cut the show organizer’s badge scanner rental at Layer 1. It locks you into the organizer’s data format and gives you no control over what gets captured or how it maps to your CRM. Replace it with a universal lead capture solution that works at any event, on any badge format, and captures contextual data alongside contact data.
Cut post-event survey tools from your engagement measurement. They generate lagging, self-reported data from the subset of leads who bother to respond. The behavioral signals generated by tracked content engagement in Layer 3 are more accurate, more timely, and tied to individual leads rather than aggregate populations.
Cut generic link shorteners and untracked content shares. If a rep emails a PDF after the show with no tracking attached, that engagement is invisible. Replace it with a content sharing mechanism that creates a tracked microsite per lead, tied to the specific content discussed at the booth.
Cut any manual CRM data entry workflow that requires a rep to describe what happened at the booth. Any process that depends on rep memory and free-text fields is a Layer 4 failure by design. The intelligence layer has to capture context at the moment of the conversation, not reconstruct it two days later.
What a complete event intelligence stack looks like
The full architecture is simpler than most teams’ current stacks. Two core platforms. Five layers covered.
momencio sits across Layers 1 through 4. Universal lead capture at the booth. AI-powered enrichment in real time during the conversation — not batch processing after the event. Personalized LiveMicrosites™ for tracked post-event engagement at Layer 3. AI IntelliSense™ synthesizing behavioral signals into a scored, prioritized, context-rich record at Layer 4. IntelliStream surfacing rep-level activity data for managers.
Your CRM — Salesforce, HubSpot, Microsoft Dynamics — sits at Layer 5. It receives fully enriched, scored, and contextualized lead records with structured notes, engagement history, and qualification tags. Reps do not open a spreadsheet. They open a prioritized queue with everything they need to make the first call specific.
That is the complete stack. Two platforms. Five layers. No gaps.
The five layers of event intelligence we mapped in Article 2 of this series describe the intelligence maturity a team can build toward. The stack architecture described here is what makes reaching those upper layers structurally possible — not a function of effort or rep discipline, but of having the right tool doing the right job at each layer.
Audit your current stack against the five layers
Before your next event, run a simple audit. For each of the five layers, answer one question:
Layer 1 – Capture: Does our capture tool record anything beyond contact identity? Can a rep attach conversation context — objections, content shown, buying timeline — in a structured, searchable format at the time of the interaction?
Layer 2 – Enrichment: Does enrichment happen before or after the event? Real-time enrichment during the conversation means a rep knows who they are talking to before the conversation ends. Batch processing after the event means enrichment arrives after follow-up should have already started.
Layer 3 – Engagement tracking: Can you see what each individual lead does with content after the event? Not aggregate email open rates — individual behavior, tied to the specific content shown in the booth, tracked per lead?
Layer 4 – Intelligence: Does any tool in your current stack produce a prioritized, scored, context-rich output that tells a rep who to call first and why? If the answer is “we have a spreadsheet” or “we rely on rep judgment,” Layer 4 does not exist.
Layer 5 – Activation: When a lead record arrives in your CRM after an event, does it contain engagement history, conversation context, a qualification score, and structured rep notes? Or does it contain a name, a company, and a job title?
Most teams answer yes to Layers 1, 2, and 5 in some form. Layer 3 is partial. Layer 4 is absent.
That is where the problem lives. And it is also where the fix is most tractable — because Layer 4 is not a people problem. It is not a process problem. It is a tooling gap. Close the gap, and the layers you already have start performing at a fraction of their actual potential.
The stack you have is not the stack you need
The tools most B2B teams run at their first, second, and fifth event intelligence layers are capable tools. They were selected deliberately. They do their jobs. The problem is not the tools. The problem is the missing layer between them — the layer that was never built because nobody defined it, nobody owned it, and every adjacent tool claimed it was covered.
It was not covered. It is not covered now. And until it is, the rest of the stack will keep producing data that nobody acts on.
The event intelligence stack is not a longer tool list. It is a more coherent one. Five layers. One job each. And for most B2B teams, one layer left to build.

