Event Tech Investment Surge: $70M Raises, New Platforms, and the MICE Startup Boom in 2026
Naboo raised $70M for venue sourcing, Connected Event Group launched AI-powered automation, and 95% of organizations plan to increase AI use in events. Here's what the 2026 event tech investment wave means for planners.
The MICE industry's technology layer is undergoing its most significant transformation in years. In Q1 2026 alone, venture capital firms have poured hundreds of millions of dollars into event technology startups, major platforms have launched AI-powered products, and new decision-support tools have entered the market. For event planners, this investment wave is reshaping the tools available for every stage of event management—from venue sourcing to post-event analytics.
Here's what's happening and what it means for the industry.
Naboo's $70 Million Bet on Venue Sourcing
The biggest funding headline in March 2026 came from Paris-based Naboo, which closed a $70 million Series B led by Lightspeed Venture Partners, according to BizBash. Naboo operates a venue sourcing platform that helps corporate event planners discover, compare, and book event spaces across Europe and beyond.
The size of the round signals investor confidence in a specific thesis: that venue discovery and booking remain one of the most fragmented and manually intensive parts of event planning. Despite the proliferation of event management platforms, many planners still rely on spreadsheets, personal contacts, and lengthy email chains to source venues.
Naboo's approach applies marketplace dynamics to the problem—aggregating venue inventory, standardizing comparison criteria, and streamlining the RFP process. For planners managing multiple events across regions, this kind of platform can reduce sourcing time significantly.
AI Adoption Hits a Tipping Point
The most striking data point in 2026 event technology is this: 95% of respondents in industry surveys expect their organization's use of AI in events to increase this year, according to Bizzabo. This isn't hypothetical adoption—it's happening now.
Key AI metrics across the industry:
- 80% of event managers find AI valuable for event planning and execution
- 61% of event technology organizations now offer at least one AI-powered feature
- 68% of organizers plan to invest in AR/VR solutions to make events more interactive
The areas where AI is making the most immediate impact include:
- Personalized agendas: Algorithms that recommend sessions based on attendee profiles, past behavior, and stated interests
- Smart matchmaking: AI-powered networking tools that suggest meaningful connections between attendees, replacing random networking with data-driven introductions
- Content optimization: Automated analysis of session engagement to help organizers understand what topics and formats resonate most
- Operational automation: From badge printing logistics to room assignment optimization, AI is handling routine tasks that previously required manual coordination
New Platforms Entering the Market
March 2026 has seen several notable new product launches that expand the event technology landscape, according to BizBash and Skift Meetings:
Event Tech Atlas
A new decision-support platform designed to help planners evaluate and compare event technology vendors. In a market with hundreds of tools, choosing the right technology stack has become a challenge in itself. Event Tech Atlas aims to simplify this by providing structured comparisons, user reviews, and feature breakdowns.
Connected Apps by Connected Event Group
Connected Event Group launched Connected Apps, a suite focused on AI-powered automation for live event environments. The platform targets the operational complexity of on-site event management—real-time logistics, crew coordination, and production workflows.
Brella's New Features
Brella expanded its platform with two significant additions: Pitch Reels, which allow attendees to create short-form video introductions for networking, and an integration with ExpoFP for interactive floor plans. These features address the growing demand for richer attendee engagement before and during events.
Accelevents Hosted Buyer Programs
Accelevents introduced support for Hosted Buyer Programs, enabling organizers to create structured buyer-seller matching programs within their event platform. This is particularly relevant for trade shows and B2B events where facilitating qualified meetings is a core value proposition.
Strategic Partnerships Reshaping the Landscape
Beyond product launches, strategic partnerships are reshaping how event technology platforms work together:
- Cvent signed a 3-year deal as the official event technology partner for SITE (Society for Incentive Travel Excellence), extending through 2028. This kind of exclusive partnership gives Cvent preferred access to SITE's global membership of incentive travel professionals, according to Conference & Meetings World.
- BoomPop partnered with Navan to integrate business travel and expense management into the event planning workflow. For corporate event planners, this means attendee travel bookings and expense reconciliation can happen within a unified platform.
These partnerships reflect a broader trend: event technology is moving toward interconnected ecosystems rather than standalone tools. Planners benefit when their registration system talks to their travel management tool, which connects to their expense platform.
The Corporate Events Market Driving Investment
The investment surge in event technology is backed by hard numbers on the corporate events market itself. The corporate events sub-market is worth an estimated USD 369.65 billion in 2026, growing at 13.18% CAGR to reach USD 686.49 billion by 2031, according to Business Research Insights.
Other market indicators fueling investor confidence:
- The global MICE market is valued at approximately USD 1.1–1.3 trillion in 2026, depending on the research firm, with growth rates between 7% and 11% CAGR through the next decade
- In-person event attendance is expected to increase by 69% compared to pre-pandemic levels, according to Bizzabo
- 54% of attendees plan to attend more in-person events than they did last year
These numbers explain why venture capital and strategic investors are pouring money into event technology: the underlying market is large, growing fast, and increasingly dependent on technology to manage its complexity.
Experience Over Extravagance: A New Priority
An important shift accompanying the technology investment wave is a change in what event organizers prioritize. According to the FCM Meetings & Events 2026 Global Trends Report, 80% of ANZ businesses now rank attendee experience as their top priority—above venue prestige or lavish spending, as reported by Conference & Meetings World.
This "experience over extravagance" mindset aligns directly with technology adoption. Planners are investing in tools that enhance how attendees connect, learn, and engage rather than simply spending more on physical production. Smart matchmaking, personalized content delivery, and real-time feedback loops are the new markers of a well-executed event.
What This Means for Event Planners
The 2026 event tech investment surge creates both opportunities and challenges for planners:
Opportunities:
- More specialized tools for every stage of the event lifecycle, from venue sourcing to post-event ROI measurement
- AI-powered features that reduce manual workload and improve attendee outcomes
- Better integration between platforms, reducing data silos and manual data transfer
Challenges:
- An increasingly crowded vendor landscape that makes tool selection more complex
- Rapid feature evolution that requires planners to continuously evaluate their technology stack
- Potential for vendor lock-in as platforms expand through acquisition and partnerships
The most practical approach for planners is to focus on platforms that solve their specific pain points while maintaining flexibility. Tools that offer open integrations, standard data exports, and modular architectures provide the best balance between capability and independence.
The Road Ahead
The event technology investment wave of 2026 is not a bubble—it's backed by fundamental market growth and a genuine shift in how events are planned, executed, and measured. With the global MICE market exceeding $1 trillion and corporate events growing at double-digit rates, technology companies see a massive opportunity to modernize an industry that has historically relied on manual processes.
For planners, the message is clear: the tools available today are significantly more powerful than what existed even two years ago. The question isn't whether to adopt new technology—it's which investments will deliver the most value for your specific event portfolio.
Data sources: BizBash — New Event Tech Tools March 2026, Skift Meetings — Event Tech News Roundup March 2026, Bizzabo — Event Marketing Statistics 2026, Business Research Insights — Meeting and Events Market, Precedence Research — MICE Market 2026–2035, Conference & Meetings World — SITE Incentive Summit 2026, Conference & Meetings World — ANZ Event Trends 2026.
Daniel Schaurich
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