Skip to main content
That’s Me’s recommendation engine reads your event description and extracts skills, keywords, level, and audience automatically. Better descriptions = better matches.

How the AI reads your event

When you create or update an event, the platform automatically:
  1. Extracts skills (e.g. “inglês”, “liderança”, “corrida de rua”)
  2. Extracts keywords (e.g. “certificação”, “maratona”, “B2”)
  3. Determines level (beginner / intermediate / advanced)
  4. Determines step_type (theory / practice / experience)
These are used to match your event with users whose Goals align.

Writing a good event name

"English Level 2 — Intermediate Conversation"
"42km Marathon Training Program — Advanced"
"Agile Project Management Certification"

Writing a good description

Include:
  • What the participant will learn or achieve (“After completing this course, participants will…”)
  • Skills developed (name them explicitly)
  • Audience (“Designed for intermediate English speakers…”)
  • Format (online / in-person / hybrid)
The AI re-reads your description every time you emit certificates — keep it updated.

Connecting events in a Skill Tree

Structure your events at Event → Edit → Skill Tree. The visual editor lets you organize events into stage columns and connect them with different relation types. When a user completes Event A, Event B appears as their “Next Step” on their certificate page and in recommendation emails — driving upsell automatically.
                    ┌─ English Level 2 ──→ English Level 3
English Level 1 ──→ │
                    └─ Intermediate Conv. ──→ [TOEFL — curated by That's Me]
The Intelligence tab in the editor automatically suggests connections and warns about level gaps. The more complete the Skill Tree, the more precise the recommendation engine becomes.