The Technology Behind a Vote That Counts

A clean result looks effortless from the audience. Behind it is dedicated hardware, a private radio channel, and someone running it who has done it a thousand times. This is how Padgett’s audience response system actually works — and why it holds up in rooms where app-based polling quietly falls apart.


Why Not Just Use Phones?

It’s the first question people ask now, so here’s the honest answer. App-based polling is fine for a casual show-of-hands. It fails exactly when the stakes rise:

  • A dead phone can’t vote
  • Hotel Wi-Fi crawls when a thousand people hit it at once
  • Someone can’t find the link, or loses it mid-session
  • Two devices means two votes from one person

For a casual poll, those are annoyances. For a formal count, any one of them is disqualifying. Dedicated keypads collapse all of it to a single rule — one person, one device, one channel, every time.


The Hardware

Participants vote on handheld Padgett keypads — rugged, single-purpose devices with physical buttons, not touchscreens, so they work the same in any hands and any lighting. The keypads transmit to Padgett receivers positioned around the room, which feed the response software running at the control table. Everything is preconfigured and bench-tested before it ships, then tested again on-site before doors open.


Radio Frequency, Not Wi-Fi — and Why That Matters

This is the core of the whole system. Keypads communicate with receivers over a dedicated radio-frequency link that Padgett controls — not the venue’s Wi-Fi, not cellular. Public networks are shared, congested, and entirely outside your control; the moment a few thousand attendees pull out their phones, that network is fighting itself.

A private RF channel doesn’t have that problem. Response times stay consistent, the system keeps working when venue internet is throttled or restricted, and there’s no single point of failure sitting in an IT closet you can’t get into.


Simple for Everyone in the Room

For everything happening underneath, the participant experience is one step: press a number. No download, no login, no QR code. It’s identical for every age and comfort level in the room, and it never depends on someone’s personal device.


Results the Moment the Vote Closes

Responses are captured and tallied live, so the outcome is on screen the instant the poll closes. No export, no waiting. For formal sessions, results display in the format your bylaws or procedures require — weighted voting, thresholds, and quorum rules included where they apply.


One System, Many Jobs

The same deployment that runs a formal election at 9 a.m. can run a training quiz at 11 and an audience poll after lunch:

  • Formal votes and elections
  • Motions and resolutions
  • Opinion polling
  • Knowledge checks during training
  • Live audience engagement
  • Anonymous feedback

Official business and general participation, same room, same day, reconfigured between sessions in minutes.


Engineered to Scale

From a twelve-person board to a twelve-thousand-seat hall, coverage is a function of receiver placement and density. We map both to your specific venue and audience size so every seat has a reliable path back to the control table — no dead zones, no dropped votes in the back row.


A Padgett Team in the Room

Hardware this good still needs an operator who knows it cold. Every event includes an experienced Padgett project manager who handles setup, monitors transmission live, and coordinates with your meeting leadership from start to finish. Small issues get caught at the control table before the room ever notices.


Records You Can Defend

Every response is captured electronically and delivered in a format built for official minutes, internal documentation, or a defensible audit trail.


Dependable Technology, Run by People Who Know It

Tell us about your meeting and we’ll figure out the right setup with you — keypads, receivers, and a Padgett project manager in the room to run it.