How does your audience response system work?
Meridia Audience Response provides the ability to let a meeting presenter pose a question to the audience, then let the audience respond to the question using a keypad. Each person in the audience holds a keypad and presses the button that corresponds to his or her desired answer.
Since the questions are formatted as multiple choice, true/false, yes/no, rating, etc., any answer can be chosen by pressing one of the keypad buttons.
The typical sequence of events is as follows:
The question is shown on a display screen.
This usually happens on a large display screen in the front of the audience, although for smaller groups a television monitor is often used.
The audience answers the question by pressing a button on their keypads.
Each member of the audience answers independently by pressing the button that corresponds to their answer. An on-screen timer can be used to show the audience how long they have to answer.
The result is shown on the display screen.
This usually takes the form of a bar graph or pie chart, showing the breakdown of how everyone answered the question.
This sequence repeats through your series of questions. And, at any time, you can add impromptu questions, review the results of any previous question, compare the results of two questions, change the order of your sequence or skip questions, prohibit showing the results, track the responses of individual audience members or key demographic groups, and much more.
The service we provide is completely customized to meet your needs and solve your problems. It is designed to be as flexible as possible, so you have as much control as you need during your presentation. |
The Basic Sequence of Events

Step 1
Ask the Question

Step 2
Vote Using Keypads

Step 3
Show the Results
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