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Insights on events, technology, and the future of gathering
On-demand badge printing has become the default for professional events, but the delivery model varies. Self-service kiosks let attendees scan their QR code, confirm their details on a touchscreen, and collect a freshly printed badge without any staff interaction. Staffed desks follow the traditional model: a registration team member looks up the attendee, verifies identity, and hands over the badge.
Both approaches work. The question is which one fits your event's profile, audience, and operational goals.
Self-service kiosks excel at throughput. A single kiosk can process 120 to 180 attendees per hour -- roughly double the rate of a staffed desk. For events with large arrival peaks, such as a morning registration window before a keynote, kiosks dramatically reduce queue times.
Kiosks also reduce staffing requirements. Instead of hiring and briefing a team of registration staff, you deploy hardware that works consistently from first attendee to last. There is no variation in speed, no human error in name lookup, and no breaks needed.
Modern kiosk software, like the solution Canapii provides, guides attendees through the process step by step: scan, confirm, print. The learning curve is effectively zero, even for attendees who have never used one before.
Staffed desks offer something kiosks cannot: a human greeting. For VIP programmes, executive events, and hospitality-focused gatherings, the personal touch at registration sets the right tone. A staff member who greets the attendee by name, hands them a badge, and points them toward the welcome reception creates a moment of warmth that a touchscreen cannot replicate.
Staffed desks also handle exceptions more gracefully. Walk-in registrations, name corrections, group check-ins, accessibility needs, and attendees who simply need help -- all of these are easier to manage with a person behind the desk.
Most events above 300 attendees benefit from a hybrid setup. Deploy kiosks as the primary check-in channel for speed and efficiency, and maintain one or two staffed desks for VIPs, accessibility, and exception handling.
The ratio depends on your audience. A tech conference with a younger, self-directed audience might run 80% kiosk and 20% staffed. A corporate leadership summit might flip that to 40% kiosk and 60% staffed. The key is to give attendees a choice without creating confusion -- clear signage and a simple layout make the hybrid model seamless.
Whichever model you choose, the hardware matters. For kiosks, look for thermal or dye-sublimation printers that produce badges in under eight seconds. The kiosk enclosure should be sturdy, ADA-accessible, and designed for high throughput with minimal paper jams.
For staffed desks, the same printers work, but the workflow is different -- staff trigger the print from a laptop or tablet after verifying the attendee. Ensure the software supports both workflows so you can flex between models as needed.
Network reliability is critical for both. Badge printing requires a live connection to the registration database. Have a backup plan -- whether that is a local data cache, offline mode, or mobile hotspot -- so that a network hiccup does not halt check-in entirely.
Canapii provides kiosk software, hardware rental, and on-site support for badge printing at any scale.