Event tech has seen a flurry of M&A activity in the last year. Platforms have been acquired. Some have been acquired again. The trade press covers the major deals — but the experience on the client side gets less attention.
Talk to enough event organizers right now and the same patterns come up. The platform isn’t keeping up. The team that used to know the show has turned over. Or the renewal conversation isn’t happening at all.
The specifics vary. The dynamics fall into three patterns.
Pattern one: the slow drift
The relationship doesn’t end. It just stops being what it was.
After an acquisition, service cultures often get restructured. New owners introduce tiered service models, with the highest-touch experience reserved for the largest contracts. Mid-market and smaller clients move to a different track — same platform, different experience.
The people who knew the show start leaving, too. The founder who built the relationship, the VP who knew the event inside and out, the account manager who picked up on a Sunday — these are the team members who often leave within 18 to 24 months of an acquisition. Institutional knowledge walks out the door with them, and clients are left explaining their show from scratch to people who weren’t there for the last five years of it.
Nothing about the software changed. Everything about the experience did.
Pattern two: the strategic exit
For some clients, the timeline ends with a notification email.
As part of this transition, we will be focusing our services on a more defined segment of the market. Your contract will be honored through its current term.
Translation: the new owners reviewed the book of business and decided you weren’t in it.
This is the sharper end of the same dynamic. A new owner — usually a PE firm with a 5-to-7-year hold and a return target — looks at the acquired company’s client base differently than the company’s founders ever did. Which clients are most profitable? Which require the most service relative to revenue? Which segments align with the broader portfolio strategy?
The clients who don’t fit get a polite exit. Sometimes at renewal. Sometimes mid-contract, with services sunsetting at the end of the current term. Either way, the window to evaluate, contract, implement, and train on a new platform is suddenly measured in months — not the 12-to-18-month runway most associations and show organizers would prefer when changing core event technology.
Pattern three: the disconnected stack
When two companies merge, their often products don’t merge with them — at least not for years, and sometimes not at all.
Full technical consolidation is expensive and time-consuming. The acquiring company often runs both platforms in parallel, markets them as one, and asks clients to live with the seams. Registration sits on one system. Exhibits sit on another. Conference management sits on a third. Even when the logins are unified, the platforms underneath frequently are not.
For organizers, this shows up as data that doesn’t flow between modules, integrations that need maintenance, support tickets that get bounced between teams, and no single person accountable when something breaks across systems. Clients end up managing the gaps themselves — moving data manually, troubleshooting handoffs, and absorbing work the platform was supposed to absorb for them.
The architecture is the acquisition, frozen in place.
Questions worth asking right now
Organizers can’t control whether their vendor gets acquired. But there are signals worth tracking, and questions worth asking — ideally before a renewal cycle.
Ask the vendor directly: What is your ownership structure, and has it changed in the last three years? What is your projected service model for clients of our size over the next contract term? Who on our account team has been here longer than two years? Is your platform built on one system, or assembled from several?
Ask internally: Does our account team still know our show the way they used to? Are we managing gaps between modules that shouldn’t exist? If we received notice tomorrow that our current platform would no longer serve us, how long would it take to evaluate, select, and implement a replacement?
None of these conversations are comfortable. All of them are easier to have before something changes than after.
A different kind of stability
Several event tech platforms have been acquired, restructured, or sold at least once. A small number haven’t.
eShow has been founder-led since 1996. Same founder, same company, same architecture — built as one system from the start, on a single codebase and a single database. Registration, exhibits, conference, mobile, and onsite all run on the same foundation, with one team accountable for all of it. No private equity, no portfolio strategy, no book-of-business review coming next quarter. The account team that knows the show this year is the same one that will know the show next year.
That doesn’t make eShow right for every organizer. But for associations and show organizers feeling the drift, facing a transition they didn’t ask for, or tired of managing the gaps between systems that were never built to work together — it’s worth knowing which platforms in the market are structured to still be there in 10 years, and which ones are structured around a different timeline entirely.
