Category hub
Conference Timers
Explore focused conference timers pages for MyStageClock. These guides help visitors find the right timer for their event, class, service, webinar or production workflow.
Conference Timers Guides
Conference Timer
Keep sessions, keynotes and panels running on time with a browser-based conference timer.
Open guide →Speaker Timer
Help speakers see their remaining time clearly on a fullscreen display.
Open guide →Keynote Timer
Use a clean keynote countdown timer for main stage talks and featured sessions.
Open guide →Presentation Timer
Keep presentations, workshops and training sessions focused and on schedule.
Open guide →Event Timer
Manage live event timing from a browser with countdown and count up modes.
Open guide →Webinar Timer
Keep webinars, virtual meetings and online events on schedule.
Open guide →Why Conference Timers Matter
Conference Timers is designed for event organizers, moderators, speakers and production teams who need timing that is easy to see, easy to control and simple to share. Instead of depending on a phone timer or a small clock in a corner of the room, MyStageClock helps you show a clean browser-based timing display on the screen your audience or speaker can actually see. This improves pacing, reduces confusion and makes the session feel more professional.
The most useful timing tools are not complicated. They should work quickly, open in a browser and support the real screens people use at events: laptops, tablets, TVs, projectors and confidence monitors. MyStageClock follows that approach by keeping the timer clear and display-friendly while still leaving room for advanced SaaS features like rooms, QR sharing, speaker messages, billing and team workflows.
For international visitors, a reliable online timer is useful across many environments. A Conference Timers can support business events, schools, churches, fitness sessions, webinars, theatre productions, meetings and workshops. The same basic need appears everywhere: people need to know how much time is left, when a session should finish and how to keep the program moving without distracting the speaker or audience.