Show your sponsors they got their money's worth
Jul 17, 2026
Sponsors don't pay to have their logo tucked away somewhere. They pay to be seen. The hard part has always been proving it. When the event wraps up and you go to ask for next year's cheque, "lots of people saw your banner" is a tough sell. Squabbit fixes that by counting every impression and every click for you, automatically, so you can hand each sponsor real numbers instead of a shrug.
There is nothing to set up and no tags to place. The moment a sponsor logo appears anywhere in your event, Squabbit starts logging it: the leaderboard carousel, the home-page carousel, sponsored holes on the scorecard, and your public event website. As players and spectators use the app throughout the day, the numbers just accumulate on their own.
See the whole event at a glance
Open the Sponsors page and tap the Analytics tab to see everything rolled up together. At the top you get the event totals: total impressions, total clicks, and the click rate across every sponsor combined, plus an over-time chart so you can watch the activity build. Below that is a per-sponsor summary list, ranked so your biggest earners sit at the top. Each row shows the sponsor's logo and a quick line like "12,400 impressions, 310 clicks, 2.5% click rate."

Want to dig deeper on any one of them? Just tap the sponsor to drill in.
Drill into a single sponsor
Every sponsor has their own Analytics tab, and this is where the detail lives. You'll see impressions and unique impressions, clicks and unique clicks, and the click rate. There is an over-time chart you can flip between last 7 days, last 30 days, and all time to show how interest moved over the run of the event.
It also breaks the activity down two ways. By source tells you where the views came from: home, leaderboard, scorecard, or web. By viewer type splits participants from spectators, so a sponsor can see they reached the golfers on the course and the folks following along from home.

Turn numbers into renewals
Here's the payoff. After the event, send each sponsor their exact figures: how many times they were seen, how many people tapped through, where it happened, and who was watching. That turns a polite "thanks for sponsoring" into a concrete conversation about next year, backed by numbers they can take to their own boss.
You didn't lift a finger to gather any of it. Squabbit was counting the whole time, so when renewal season comes around, the case makes itself.