DIAGNOSTIC · 6 QUESTIONS · 60 SECONDS

How much networking value is your event leaving on the table?

Six questions. Your personalised score, tailored recommendations, and the research behind them.

Question 1 of 6

How many people typically attend your events?

Frequently asked

Questions worth answering first

What is the Networking Gap Calculator?

The Networking Gap Calculator is a free six-question tool for event organisers. It gives you a personalised networking score out of 100, benchmarks you against other events in your category and delivers practical recommendations for closing the gap. It takes under a minute to complete.

How does the networking gap score work?

Your score is calculated from six inputs: attendance size, how much attendees prioritise networking, your current networking approach, attendee satisfaction with networking so far, your event format and your typical churn. Each answer is weighted and combined into a score from 0 to 100. Higher is better.

Is the calculator really free?

Yes. No email required to get your score, no credit card, no trial. You will see an option at the end to share your score or try All Along on your next event, but the tool itself is completely free to use.

How accurate is the benchmark?

The benchmark is built from aggregated, anonymised data across the events All Along has run or analysed, plus industry research from Event Manager Blog, Freeman and Skift. It is directional rather than a clinical score. Use it as a conversation starter with your team about what networking at your event could be, not as a definitive audit.

Who is the calculator for?

It is for anyone who runs events where people expect to meet each other: conference organisers, association executives, co-working community managers, event agencies, university programmes and corporate events teams. If networking is on your agenda but you are not sure how well it works, this is for you.

What do I do with my score?

Your results page gives you three practical recommendations ranked by impact, based on your answers. Many organisers send the score to their team as a conversation starter, or use it to build a business case for investing in structured networking.