Conference planning has always meant juggling moving parts — abstracts coming in from one direction, speakers needing bios and headshots from another, room setups and AV orders from a third. For years, the standard approach was to patch it together: a submission portal here, a spreadsheet there, email threads holding the rest in place.

That patchwork still works, until it doesn’t. A speaker swap at 4 p.m. on a Friday, a reviewer asking which version of the rubric is current, a venue calling about a setup that changed two updates ago — these are the moments where disconnected tools show their cost.

Going into 2026, the conference management tools worth looking at aren’t the ones with the longest feature lists. They’re the ones that solve for how the work actually flows: submissions into scheduling, scheduling into logistics, logistics into the run-of-show. Here’s what to look for.

1. Abstract and Call for Papers Management That Handles the Whole Lifecycle

Abstract review is one of the most labor-intensive parts of conference planning, and it’s often the first place cracks show. Submissions come in through one system, reviewers score them in another, the program committee tracks status in a spreadsheet, and approved content gets re-entered into scheduling by hand.

Look for tools that keep the full process in one place: a submission portal for presenters, a separate portal for reviewers with open or blind review options, configurable cutoff dates, and standardized data collection so submissions can actually be compared side by side. The goal isn’t fewer emails for their own sake — it’s making sure the data you collect at submission is still usable six months later when you’re building the program.

2. Speaker and Session Management With Conflict Detection

Once abstracts are approved, the work shifts to building the program. That means tracking speakers, sessions, rooms, schedules, and materials at the same time — often hundreds of moving pieces for a mid-size conference.

The tools worth evaluating give speakers their own portal to submit bios, headshots, and session materials directly, rather than asking your team to chase and upload on their behalf. They flag room and schedule conflicts automatically. And they publish session and speaker schedules from the same data your team is managing, so Schedule-at-a-Glance and full program views stay accurate without a separate update step.

If your abstract management and session management tools share a database, approved content moves into scheduling without re-entry. If they don’t, that handoff is a manual step — worth asking about directly in a demo.

3. A Central Home for Meeting Logistics

Every conference has a layer of operational detail that lives outside the session schedule: room setups, food and beverage orders, AV requirements, signage, staffing, vendor coordination, and the function sheets that pull it all together for the venue.

Historically, this has lived in binders, shared drives, and whoever-has-the-latest-version email threads. The shift to look for in 2026 is tooling that treats this operational layer as first-class — not an afterthought bolted onto registration or session management. Room layouts, setup and teardown, food and beverage, signage, and staffing coordination all in one view, with the ability to generate function sheets, banquet event orders, and expense reports from the same source your team is working in.

4. Accommodating Late Registration Without Breaking the Program

Attendee behavior has shifted. Over 50% of registrations are coming in the final weeks leading up to the event. For conference planners, that’s a real operational problem: session capacities set months in advance, room assignments locked, printed materials ordered.

This isn’t strictly a conference management question — it’s where registration and conference management meet. But it’s worth evaluating your conference tools for how they handle late-arriving attendees: Can session capacities be adjusted in real time? Can room assignments be updated without breaking downstream schedules? Does the program view attendees see reflect changes made the day of? The planners who handle late registration well aren’t the ones with the most sophisticated prediction tools. They’re the ones whose systems can absorb a change without it cascading into five other places.

5. Support From People Who Know Live Events

This one isn’t a feature, but it belongs on the list. Conference software lives or dies on what happens when something goes sideways at 7 a.m. the morning of day one. The difference between a vendor whose support team has worked conferences and one whose support team hasn’t is the difference between a ten-minute fix and a three-hour scramble.

Ask for specifics in evaluation conversations: Who answers the phone onsite? What’s the escalation path? How many of the people you’d be working with have actually staffed events? The answers vary widely, and they matter more than the demo makes them seem.

How eShow’s Conference Management Software Fits

eShow’s Conference Management software covers the three modules above — abstract and call for papers management, speaker and session management, and meeting logistics. Each module is built to stand on its own as a best-in-class solution. When an organization uses more than one, they run on the same database, so data flows between them without re-entry.

If you’re evaluating conference management tools for 2026, we’d be glad to walk you through the modules that fit your event. Book a 20-minute demo.

eShow and NoteAffect Announce
New Strategic Partnership

eShow and NoteAffect Empower Events
to Use Education as a Strategy

January 8, 2026, South Barrington, IL – eShow, a leading provider of event management solutions, and NoteAffect, an interactive learning experience for education and events, today announced a strategic partnership to empower events to use their education as a strategy that delivers real measurable engagement.

“With eShow and NoteAffect, event education is no longer a checkbox, it’s a strategy. Even in a world of economic and geopolitical uncertainty, education is a variable that events can actually control and use to their advantage as a top reason to attend, extend their reach, and generate new revenue.” said Jay Tokosch, CEO and Founder of NoteAffect.

The partnership empowers event organizers with tools to streamline the planning and execution of their conference along with leveraging their education content and attendee learning experience to create and measure real engagement for program success.

“eShow makes it easy for organizers to manage their entire event in one place where the data and attendee experience pairs seamlessly with NoteAffect through the eShow event app to maximize engagement before, during, and after the event.” said Raju Patel, CEO and Founder of eShow.

eShow offers a full suite of event technology solutions that cover the entire event lifecycle, including registration management, trade show and exhibition tools, mobile apps, conference management, and more. eShow’s platform allows for better management of logistics, attendee tracking, and engagement.

NoteAffect software simultaneously records and broadcasts live session content directly through the eShow event app for in-person attendees to take notes, follow along with multilingual live captioning, and ask questions. The recorded visuals+audio then sync into segmented chapters with AI summaries that attendees will actually watch.

Organizers using eShow and NoteAffect can now create and measure tangible engagement so they know exactly what content to program, repurpose, promote, and monetize that anchors attendance, extends their reach, and generates new revenue. eShow’s conference management tools centralize speaker coordination, session scheduling, and venue logistics into one integrated platform, automating workflows and freeing meeting planners to focus on delivering exceptional attendee experiences. Current clients of either company are encouraged to reach out to their account representative to learn more about how they can leverage this powerful partnership.

About eShow
Founded in 1996, eShow provides powerful solutions for event organizers, including registration, mobile apps, conference management, exhibit management, and more. For 30 years, eShow has helped thousands of clients streamline their event processes and deliver exceptional experiences. Learn more at goeshow.com.

About NoteAffect
NoteAffect interactive learning and recording tools turn your event education content and attendee learning experience into measurable engagement that anchors attendance, extends your reach, and generates new revenue. Learn more at www.noteaffect.com/event-engage

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Media Inquiries:
Diane Hurley
eShow, Director of Marketing and Communications
diane.hurley@goeshow.com
847.620.4474

Collin Tokosch
NoteAffect, Business Development
collin@noteaffect.com
410.991.8498