Venues
The people responsible for the physical or spatial environment where the event happens.
This stripped back version keeps only the essentials: the five groups Pryntd supports and a calculator to explore what better joined up delivery could mean.
Each group has different priorities, but all of them benefit from better visibility, clearer communication and secure collaboration.
The people responsible for the physical or spatial environment where the event happens.
The people accountable for putting the event together, selling it, funding it and making it commercially work.
The people shaping what the audience sees, feels, hears and shares.
The operators, producers and delivery teams who make the live experience actually function.
The people attending, buying, watching, participating and returning, or not returning.
Choose the group closest to you, enter a few working numbers and see what better coordination, clearer visibility and less fragmentation could unlock.
This view shows how better coordination across one event can improve the result for this group.
Pryntd is the infrastructure for human environments where people, space, and systems converge across physical and digital worlds. Today, events, venues, and hybrid experiences are fragmented. Teams use disconnected tools, audiences are split across formats, and operations are inefficient. This fragmentation drives up costs, limits reach, and excludes millions of people, particularly disabled audiences. Pryntd unifies these environments into a single, AI-powered system. We create real-time, browser-native digital twins of spaces and experiences, allowing venues and organisers to coordinate operations, deliver hybrid access, and adapt environments dynamically for every participant. The result is measurable: up to 40% operational efficiency gains, 2 to 5 times audience reach, and significant new revenue from previously excluded participants, including access to the UK’s £274 billion Purple Pound. Language models understand text. Pryntd is building models that understand human experience. We call this shared reality.