Pryntd powers hybrid, accessible and data driven experiences through one unified platform.
Hybrid participation is rising, yet venues rely on disconnected legacy systems that cannot support accessibility,
compliance or immersive delivery. 1 in 4 people are disabled, 6 in 10 feel excluded and
over 9M face access barriers, costing more than £12B each year. Fragmentation blocks
delivery, leaving audiences excluded and venues unable to evolve.
Hybrid is becoming normal and accessibility is becoming regulated. Manual compliance cannot scale, fragmented tools
are failing and audience expectations have shifted. AI and spatial technologies now make real hybrid operations
possible for the first time. Venues urgently need unified infrastructure to deliver inclusive, compliant and
immersive experiences at scale.
Pryntd is the unified platform that powers hybrid, accessible and data driven experiences. It brings digital twins,
AI powered accessibility, immersive hybrid delivery and complete operational workflows together in one intelligent
system. Venues, organisers and institutions can plan, operate and deliver shared reality experiences at scale.
Digital twins, spatial data and personalised accessibility journeys.
Real time XR layers, immersive streams and shared reality participation.
CRM to ERP workflows, compliance, planning, automation and reporting.
AI assessments, adaptive journeys and measurable inclusive compliance.
Hybrid activations, brand integrations and new revenue surfaces.
The future of experiences is hybrid, inclusive and data-driven. Audiences will expect blends of physical presence,
digital depth, remote access and personalised accessibility. Venues adopting unified systems will deliver shared
reality at scale and unlock new markets, new reach and new revenue.
Pryntd is building accessibility first AI infrastructure for hybrid and shared reality, enabling artists, venues, organisers and brands to create inclusive experiences that connect performance, audience and commerce across physical and digital worlds for the 16 million disabled people in the UK and over one billion globally, while for everyone else the accessibility simply fades into the background.