Slido is an easy to use Q&A and polling platform. For most of your employees, it can be intimidating to ask a question in front of everyone. With Slido, people can ask questions anonymously from their phones and upvote their favorites, uncovering the most pressing issues.
It helps people to get the most out of meetings and events by bridging the gap between speakers and their audiences. From internal communications professionals to trainers, team leaders, conference organizers and individual presenters, Slido is used by anyone looking to enable open conversation at a live meeting, whether in-person or virtual. It allows meeting and event organisers to crowdsource top questions to drive meaningful conversations, engage participants with live polls and capture valuable event data.
The service works great for all-hands and remote meetings, team brainstorming, team retrospective, introducing new hires, collaborative decision making, and more. Event organizers can make most out of the app during fireside chats and panel discussion, introduce conference icebreakers, and run post-event feedback surveys.
They have also recently launched a special product Slido for Education, with the aim of helping lecturers stay connected with their students by powering two-way interaction during live and virtual classes. Slido’s focus is on simplicity, allowing organisers to create an event in less than a minute, while participants can join from any device with just one simple code. Its core features are Q&A, polls, quizzes and integrations with Google Slides, Microsoft PowerPoint, Zoom, and Slack.
Since its foundation in 2012, Slido has helped to transform over 849,200 events across more than 100 countries by engaging millions of participants. Slido has been adopted by a number of renowned conferences, including SXSW, Web Summit and Money20/20 and has worked with high-profile clients including Spotify, Lufthansa, BBC and Oracle. Headquartered in Bratislava, Slovakia, Slido has a team of more than 150 people, with offices in London, New York, San Francisco and Sydney.