Live medals. Confetti when somebody books. A flame next to whoever’s on a streak. Throw it on the office TV — or pull it up on the mobile app — and watch the activity climb on its own.
Everything below is already in the widget you’re scrolling past. Hover anything to see it pop.
Set a bounty in seconds: “$200 to whoever books the most demos today.” Every rep gets a push to their phone. Progress shows up live on the board and in the CRM — nobody’s wondering where they stand.
The leader gets a glowing gold medal that pulses on screen. Second and third get silver and bronze. The medal moves in real time as the rankings shuffle.
Dial. Connect. Pitch. Booked. Each event lights up the feed with a soft amber flash, then settles. Reps can’t fake what they don’t do — it’s right there on the screen.
Daily spiff hit? The whole screen erupts. Confetti drop, a giant boom in amber, optional sound cue. Tiny dopamine hit, big behavioral lever.
3 connects in 10 minutes? Reps light up with a flame icon. Their bar turns amber. Now everyone in the room can see who’s cooking — and who isn’t.
15 minutes of zero dials? A rose stripe shows up next to their name. The whole floor sees it. Self-correcting peer pressure — nobody wants to be the red bar.
Every row shows connects, connect rate, talk time, and appointments set. Numbers tick up live with a tabular roll-over animation. Top performer’s appointment count gets the crown.
Reps see their rank, their stats, today’s bounty progress, and the live feed — right on their phone. Walk the showroom floor and still know exactly where you stand.
One URL, one Chromecast, one TV in the corner of the BDC. Auto-fullscreens, auto-refreshes, auto-celebrates. Every rep sees their name and rank all day.
The board does the same job a great GSM does — just on a flatscreen, all day, never sleeps, never plays favorites. Here’s a typical Tuesday.
GSM pulls up yesterday’s leaderboard. Top dog gets a high five. Bottom rep gets a quiet word. No spreadsheet, no “hold on, let me check.”
First demo booked of the day. The TV erupts. Three other reps look up, lean in, dial harder. The rest of the morning is downhill from there.
Two reps haven’t dialed in 18 minutes. The idle warning is on the screen. Without anyone saying anything, dials start back up.
Last 30 minutes are a sprint. The 1st-place medal changes hands twice. Whoever ends the day on top — everyone in the building knows.