Competitive Positioning
What makes Komo different from the tools prospects will compare it to — and how to frame those conversations.
Komo's Three Differentiators
Richer Content
55+ interactive content card types — and the library keeps growing. This isn't polls and surveys. It's immersive gameplay: trivia with timed rounds, spin-to-win, scavenger hunts, prediction games, personality quizzes, instant-win mechanics, and more.
In conversation: "How many interactive content types does your current tool offer? Komo has 55+ and adds new ones regularly. That means you never run the same activation twice — every event, every campaign feels fresh."
Deeper Engagement
Komo creates destination hubs, not disposable microsites. Leaderboards, loyalty points, badges, user profiles, and persistent progress turn a single interaction into an ongoing engagement relationship. Attendees come back because there's always something new and their status carries over.
In conversation: "Does your current solution give attendees a reason to come back after the first interaction? Komo's leaderboards and loyalty mechanics create ongoing competition and engagement — not just a one-and-done poll."
Complete Integration
Komo is built to live inside the client's existing ecosystem, not alongside it. CRM integrations (Salesforce, HubSpot, etc.), a visual workflow builder, REST API, JWT-based SSO, embed SDK for web and React Native, webhooks, and omnichannel distribution (web, mobile, QR, email, social).
In conversation: "Can your current tool embed natively in your event app with SSO? Can it push lead data to your CRM in real-time via webhooks? Komo isn't a standalone tool — it's a platform designed to integrate."
Common Competitor Categories
You won't usually compete against a single named tool. Instead, prospects compare Komo to a category of tools they've used before. Here's how to frame each comparison.
Basic Poll & Q&A Tools
Examples: Slido, Mentimeter, Poll Everywhere, Pigeonhole
What they do well: Live session interaction — polls, Q&A, word clouds. Simple, focused, and often already bundled with video conferencing tools.
Where Komo is different:
- Polls and Q&A are 2 of 55+ content types — Komo does everything they do plus gamification, scavenger hunts, loyalty, and more
- Poll tools are session-scoped; Komo is event-scoped with persistent hubs, leaderboards, and profiles
- No sponsor branding, no per-sponsor analytics, no lead capture in basic poll tools
- Komo doesn't replace the poll tool — it adds the engagement layer on top
Event Apps with Built-In Engagement
Examples: Swapcard, Grip, Brella, Bizzabo, RainFocus (engagement modules)
What they do well: Agenda management, networking, registration, and logistics. Some offer basic engagement features (polls, surveys, simple gamification) as add-on modules.
Where Komo is different:
- Event app engagement features are an afterthought — Komo's entire platform is purpose-built for interactive engagement
- Komo embeds inside event apps via SDK — it's additive, not competitive. The event app handles logistics; Komo handles engagement
- Depth of content variety is incomparable — 55+ card types vs. basic polls and a leaderboard
- Sponsor-branded experiences with individual analytics aren't available in event app engagement modules
Generic Gamification Platforms
Examples: Qualifio, Brame, Drimify, BeeLiked
What they do well: Campaign-level gamification — individual games and contests that can be embedded on websites or shared via links.
Where Komo is different:
- Komo is a hub-based system — multiple experiences in a single destination with leaderboards, profiles, and loyalty that connect them
- Generic gamification tools create standalone games; Komo creates interconnected engagement ecosystems
- Workflow builder, webhooks, API, and SSO make Komo an integration-grade platform, not just a content creation tool
- Multi-sponsor support with individual analytics and branding isn't available on campaign-focused gamification tools
The Key Framing
Komo isn't a poll tool, an event app, or a gamification widget. It's an Engagement Engine — a platform-level system that creates interactive experiences, captures zero-party data, and proves ROI across any channel. It works alongside existing tools (embeds into event apps, pushes data to CRMs, authenticates via SSO) rather than replacing them.
The closest comparison isn't another tool in the stack — it's the engagement layer that the stack has been missing.