Cvent closes acquisition of ON24 to expand webinar and event marketing stack
Cvent finalizes its ON24 acquisition, linking webinars with event marketing workflows and first-party engagement data for revenue measurement.
Cvent has closed its acquisition of ON24, bringing webinar and digital engagement capabilities into Cvent’s broader event marketing and management portfolio. For B2B marketing teams, the deal is a signal that “event-led growth” stacks are converging around one requirement: consistent first-party engagement data across in-person and digital touchpoints.
The practical impact is less about adding “another webinar tool” and more about tightening the connective tissue between webinars, virtual experiences, and physical events, so marketers can measure influence on pipeline with fewer handoffs across systems.
Short on time?
Here’s a quick look at what’s inside:
- What the acquisition adds to Cvent’s event-led growth strategy
- Where ON24 fits in the webinar and digital engagement workflow
- Competitive pressure in event marketing and webinar platforms
- Why first-party data is the real product in event tech right now
- What marketing ops teams should evaluate post-merger
What the acquisition adds to Cvent’s event-led growth strategy
Cvent’s stated direction is to support a “Total Event Program” across internal and external events, spanning in-person, hybrid, virtual events, and webinars. ON24’s core value in that model is its webinar-first engagement layer: interactive experiences, behavioral analytics, and the ability to capture engagement signals that can be used for follow-up and measurement.
Cvent also says it will continue investing in ON24 with a focus on AI and enterprise-grade reliability and compliance. In the near term, that suggests continuity for ON24 customers that depend on it for high-stakes webinar programs, while Cvent expands how those programs connect to broader event planning, registration, and attendee workflows.

Where ON24 fits in the webinar and digital engagement workflow
Webinars are often treated as a demand gen channel that sits adjacent to “events,” with separate workflows, reporting, and sometimes separate owners. ON24’s positioning centers on running digital experiences that generate first-party engagement data for marketing and sales teams, which makes it a natural complement to an event platform trying to cover the full lifecycle.
If the platforms integrate deeply, marketers could see improvements in:
- Attribution consistency across webinar attendance, event attendance, and downstream engagement
- Audience segmentation based on behavioral signals (not just form fills)
- Repurposing webinar content into always-on nurture experiences, without rebuilding tracking from scratch
The caveat is that “unified” experiences depend on operational decisions: identity resolution across properties, shared taxonomy for engagement events, and clean integration with CRM and marketing automation.
Competitive pressure in event marketing and webinar platforms
Event marketing and digital engagement software is crowded, with vendors spanning full event management and webinar-first experiences. Competitors in the broader category include Bizzabo, SpotMe, Webex Events, and Intrado, each with different strengths across production, attendee experience, and enterprise needs.
This acquisition is best read as a consolidation move in a category where buyers increasingly want fewer point solutions. Cvent’s differentiation is breadth across event management plus a marketplace and hospitality-related tooling, while ON24 brings depth in webinar and digital engagement experiences designed for B2B marketing and sales use cases. The combined story is “coverage plus engagement data,” which is a common buying criterion as teams try to simplify stacks while still proving revenue impact.
Why first-party data is the real product in event tech right now
The deal aligns with two macro shifts: first-party data infrastructure and marketing workflow automation. As measurement gets harder and privacy expectations rise, marketers place more value on channels that generate direct, consented engagement signals. Events and webinars are attractive here because they naturally create logged-in, opt-in experiences with rich behavioral trails.
At the same time, automation expectations are rising. Teams want systems that can turn engagement into next-best actions without manual reporting cycles. That is likely why both companies emphasize AI capabilities: not as a headline feature, but as a way to operationalize engagement data across follow-up, scoring, personalization, and content journeys.
What marketing ops teams should evaluate post-merger
For marketing ops and demand gen leaders, the core question is whether the combined platform reduces complexity or adds another layer to govern. Key checks to run:
- Data model alignment: How webinar engagement events map to event engagement events, and how both sync to CRM
- Identity and consent: How identities are reconciled across properties and what consent language covers across formats
- Reporting consistency: Whether pipeline influence and attribution can be measured consistently across webinars and in-person events
- Stack rationalization: Which tools can be retired (or must remain) based on gaps in integrations, workflows, or compliance requirements
- Enterprise readiness: Reliability, security, and compliance posture, especially for global programs
Cvent says it has 30,000 customers worldwide, while ON24 highlights penetration across large enterprise segments. That overlap suggests the integration path will be judged by enterprise marketers on governance and integration quality as much as on feature breadth.

