Link5 min read

Saving Connections and Session Recaps

After people meet in a speed session or a one-on-one, attendees can save the connections worth keeping to their personal network, and organizers get a counts-only recap.

1

Turning People You Met Into Saved Connections

Meeting someone is only worth it if you can find them again. After your attendees network, Link Up lets them save the people worth keeping. A saved person is added to the attendee's personal My Network, a list they keep across every Gythr event, not just this one.

Saving is always the attendee's choice. Nothing is saved automatically from a speed round, and you as the organizer never see who anyone saved.

2

The Post-Session Recap

Right after a speed networking session ends, a participant opens Networking → Speed networking and sees a recap: "Here's everyone you just met." Every person they were paired with is listed, each with a Save button. They tap Save on the ones they hit it off with, and those land in My Network.

This recap is shown for a window right after the session, while it is fresh. It is intentionally not a permanent "everyone you met" list. If an attendee wants to find someone later, they can look them up in the attendee directory.

Screenshot: post-session recap listing partners with Save buttons
3

Saving From One-on-One Meetings

Saving is not just for speed rounds. On Networking → Your Meetings, every confirmed one-on-one meeting has a Save to network button too. After a good meeting, one tap keeps that person in My Network.

Pro tip

If someone you met does not have a Gythr account yet, their Save option shows as unavailable. You can still find them later in the directory once they are set up.

4

My Network

An attendee's saved connections live in My Network in Gythr Here. It shows the people they have saved, the events they connected at, and any shared interests. Because it carries across events, the network they build at your event keeps growing every time they attend another one.

5

The Organizer Recap

When a speed session ends, your Run console shows a recap card with the totals: how many connections were made, how many rounds ran, how many people took part, and a simple breakdown of the kinds of pairings (complementary, shared interest, and general).

This is the measure of how your networking went, and it is counts only. There is no roster and no who-met-whom, by design. The connections themselves belong to your attendees.