Portland startup CrowdCompass, which makes smartphone apps for conferences, plans to announce this morning that it has sold its business to a Virginia software company called for $10 million. Cvent ...
It’s been an active seven days for Cvent, one of the largest event management companies in the world you’ve never heard of. The company, which offers web-based software for online event registration, ...
Cvent will sunset the CrowdCompass mobile event app at the end of 2022 in favor of Attendee Hub, which the company introduced as Cvent Engagement Hub in 2020 and which has evolved into an attendee ...
MCLEAN, Va.--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- Cvent (NYS: CVT) , a leading cloud-based enterprise event management platform, today announced a partnership with technology service provider PSAV to resell the ...
Cvent, the world’s largest cloud-based provider of event management solutions, today announced the acquisition of CrowdCompass, a leader in creating mobile applications for business and association ...
CrowdCompass was launched in 2009 in Portland, where it still operates. But it has accelerated and expanded since it was acquired in 2012 by McLean, Va.,-based Cvent, the event management company, for ...
CrowdCompass, a Portland startup whose mobile apps are used to power events, including the 2012 Seattle Science Festival and the Lions Club 95th International Convention, has been acquired for $10 ...
The new CrowdCompass office at 308 S.W. 2nd Ave. doesn’t have a formal reception area because the company is client-facing since it was acquired back in 2012. Instead, the office has a mural of its ...
MCLEAN, Va. & PORTLAND, Ore.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Mobile apps have become essential for driving engagement and success at corporate meetings and conferences. Corporate meeting and event attendees are ...
CrowdCompass, a supplier of mobile apps for conferences and events, has closed $1.3 million in venture capital funding in a Series A round led by the Oregon Angel Fund. The investment will be used to ...
Portland startup CrowdCompass, which makes smartphone apps for conferences, plans to announce this morning that it has sold its business to a Virginia software company called Cvent for $10 million.
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