Exploring

Peer Learning Circle Formation

We're exploring recurring peer-learning-circle formation built on EventIntro's matching engine. If your L&D program runs learning circles, help us shape it.

EventIntro's matching engine powers event and cohort networking today. We're exploring recurring peer learning circles as a next step — if this is your problem, tell us about it below and help shape what we build.

Who this is for

  • L&D teams running recurring peer learning or study circles.
  • Programs that re-form small learning groups every cohort or term.
  • Anyone assembling learning circles by hand and wishing they didn't.

A circle is not a breakout

EventIntro forms balanced small groups for events today. A peer learning circle asks for something more: a standing group that meets again and again, builds trust across sessions, and moves through material together. The formation logic overlaps heavily with what we already do — the recurring, curriculum-linked life of a circle is the part we're exploring rather than shipping.

What recurring formation would need

A one-off breakout can afford to be imperfect; a circle that meets for eight weeks cannot. Getting the initial composition right matters more, and so does deciding when to keep a circle stable versus reshuffle it. Those are judgment calls best made with L&D teams who run circles now, not guessed at from a whiteboard.

Shape it with us

If your program runs learning circles or study pods, tell us how you form them and what you wish were automatic. Demand from real programs is what would move this from an idea to a build — and early respondents get first access if it lands.

Frequently asked questions

Can EventIntro form learning circles now?
It forms balanced small groups today for events and cohorts, which is most of what a learning circle needs. What we're exploring is the recurring, curriculum-linked version — circles that persist and evolve across a program — and whether that deserves its own product shape.
How is a learning circle different from a breakout group?
A breakout is a moment; a learning circle is a standing group that meets repeatedly and builds trust over time. The formation logic overlaps, but the recurring cadence and progression are the parts we'd want to get right with real programs.
What's the ask?
Tell us how your circles work today. Early respondents shape the feature and get first access if it ships.
Thanks — we've got it.
We read every one of these. We'll be in touch at the address you gave us.

Help shape this

We're exploring this. If it's your problem, tell us about it and help decide what we build.