Here's the full Meetings market picture. 427 launches indexed, broken down by year, quarter, and engagement metrics. Use this to understand where the category has been and where it's heading.
Five years of Meetings launch data. Volume, engagement, and the products that stood out.
Here's the full Meetings market picture. 427 launches indexed, broken down by year, quarter, and engagement metrics. Use this to understand where the category has been and where it's heading.
| Quarter | Launches | Avg Interest Score | Top Product |
|---|---|---|---|
| Q1 2026 | 22 | 129 | Littlebird |
| Q1 2025 | 17 | 194 | Talo |
| Q2 2025 | 22 | 161 | Tabl 1.0 |
| Q3 2025 | 17 | 139 | Hyprnote |
| Q4 2025 | 24 | 193 | Lyra |
| Q1 2024 | 15 | 124 | Bloks |
| Q2 2024 | 13 | 283 | Boom |
| Q3 2024 | 18 | 256 | mgmate |
| Q4 2024 | 8 | 240 | TwinMind |
| Q1 2023 | 35 | 176 | Live Video Calling SDK by Dyte |
| Q2 2023 | 42 | 178 | Async |
| Q3 2023 | 29 | 168 | Kyugo |
| Q4 2023 | 28 | 139 | Gloww |
| Q1 2022 | 14 | 176 | Listener for Zoom |
| Q2 2022 | 16 | 231 | Switchboard |
| Q3 2022 | 14 | 155 | Zoom to Beautiful Summary Converter |
The Meetings category has been cooling over the past 6 years of tracked data. Total launches went from 71 in 2021 to 22 in 2026.
Average engagement ratio across all Meetings launches: 0.29. Products above that line tend to solve a specific, painful problem. Products below it often entered a crowded space without clear differentiation.
Meetings peaked in 2023 with 134 launches. That was 3 years ago. The decline since then could signal market consolidation, saturation, or attention shifting to adjacent categories.
Average engagement per product has held steady around 0.29 across the full dataset. The audience for Meetings tools is consistent. Engagement doesn't rise or fall with volume, which suggests a stable base of interested users.
The highest-performing quarter was Q2 2024, with an average interest score of 283 across 13 launches. Boom led that quarter.
We report what happened. We don't predict. Five years of data shows patterns, but markets surprise people for a living.
Three common reasons. The market consolidated around winners. The technology matured and stopped generating new startups. Or builder attention shifted to adjacent categories. Usually it's a combination.
Volume without engagement is saturation. Engagement without volume is opportunity. Check which one you're looking at.
Sum of all interest scores in the quarter divided by number of products. Simple average. We don't weight by category or product age.
Depends on what's declining. If volume drops but engagement rises, the market is maturing. That's often good for existing players. If both drop, the category may be dying. The quarterly breakdown on each page tells you which pattern you're seeing.
At least three. Two data points is a line, not a trend. We have five years of data for most categories, which is enough to distinguish real shifts from noise.
Current year launches compared to the same period last year. Positive means more products launching. Negative means the category cooled. Neither is inherently good or bad. A mature category with fewer but better launches is often healthier than one flooding the market with clones.