Hosts who completed an event and want to share a summary or keep a record.
I finished an event and want to know what to add to the recap page.
A recap is the event's memory
After an event ends, the page can still help people. Attendees may want notes, next steps, or resources. Future attendees may want proof that your events are real and worthwhile.
A recap does not need to be long. A clear summary, a few useful takeaways, and any relevant follow-up links are enough.
Write a useful recap
Summarize what happened
Write two or three paragraphs explaining the format, main moments, and what attendees did or learned.
Add practical takeaways
List the ideas, resources, exercises, questions, or decisions that would help someone remember the value of the event.
Share next steps
Mention follow-up materials, future sessions, community links, or the next event if they are relevant.
Protect attendee privacy
Do not publish names, personal stories, photos, quotes, or sensitive details unless you have the right permission.
Publish when ready
Preview the recap and make sure it is helpful without exposing anything private.
What to include
Recap safety checklist
No private attendee data is published.
Photos, quotes, or names have permission if included later.
Resources are safe to share publicly.
The recap is useful even without media.
Next steps are clear but not pushy.
The page still represents the event accurately.
No media is okay
A strong recap can be text-only. Focus on what happened, what mattered, and what someone should do next.
FAQ
Do I need photos or video to publish a recap?
No. A short written summary and useful takeaways are enough, especially when privacy or media quality is a concern.
Can I mention attendees by name?
Only when you have permission and the context is appropriate. When in doubt, summarize the group without naming individuals.
Should every event have a recap?
Not every event needs one, but recurring workshops, paid events, learning sessions, and community-building events often benefit from a recap.
Related guides
Share your event link and check the public page
A published page is not finished until you check the attendee view and confirm the registration path works.
Read guideWho owns attendee data on HereNow
Registration data is operational data for the host. Handle it carefully and use exports only when needed.
Read guideSet up your curator profile
Your profile is the trust layer behind every event page. Set it up before serious promotion.
Read guide