Zuddl’s Q&A module provides a dedicated space for questions from the participants. This allows a structured workflow for collection questions instead of the familiar “type your question in chat” pattern, thereby keeping sessions on-topic, and feeds a clean dataset back to marketing and product teams. Because the tool is native to every Zuddl venue—main stage, breakout, webinar, or expo booth—it inherits global branding, analytics, and role-based permissions automatically.
Unlike chat, questions live in their own pane, separated from emoji chatter and side conversations. This single-purpose space prevents valuable queries from getting buried and helps presenters scan for patterns at a glance. A SaaS keynote with 3,000 viewers saw an 11-second median question response time once moderators stopped scrolling through general chat noise.
Attendees can vote questions up, bringing the most relevant issues to the top. Up-voting curates content organically, so moderators spend less time deciding which question to pick and more time facilitating meaningful discussion. At a healthcare summit, the top-voted question—about data privacy—earned twice the session’s average engagement when the speaker acknowledged it, validating that peer-selected topics resonate more strongly.
Enable Moderator Approval to route every question submission to a hidden queue. Moderators review for relevance, compliance, or tone, then publish or discard. This safeguard is critical for regulated industries—pharma, finance—where off-label claims or insider questions must never hit the public stream.
Speakers access a streamlined interface—unpublished queue, live list sorted by votes, and status filters (Open, Answered, Dismissed). Keyboard shortcuts let them mark a question “Answered” the moment they address it on the mic, automatically archiving it and shifting focus to the next item. This workflow keeps the on-screen list tidy and signals attendees that their question was acknowledged.
Questions support UTF-8 and right-to-left scripts, and screen-reader labels expose button functions. For global audiences, auto-translate displays the question in the viewer’s browser language, lowering language barriers and expanding participation without requiring multiple interpreters.