Every event you run should have a landing page that sells it without a phone call.
We build websites for event management companies — ticketed event pages, venue showcases, client inquiry flows, and the backend that handles registrations, waitlists, and payments without Eventbrite taking a cut. Fixed scope, fixed price.
You're building event pages on Eventbrite and letting them take 6.5% + payment fees. Every attendee you acquire becomes Eventbrite's audience, not yours. Your own website is an afterthought.
Event management companies operate two separate businesses simultaneously: selling tickets or registrations to attendees, and selling your services to corporate clients and brands who want you to run their event. Most event websites do neither well.
On the attendee side, events get listed on Eventbrite or Lu.ma because they're easy. And they are easy — until you notice that every attendee you acquire is in Eventbrite's database, not yours. Their email and purchase history belongs to the platform. Eventbrite charges 6.5% + payment processing on every ticket. For a 500-person conference at $299 a ticket — $145k in revenue — you're paying nearly $10k in platform fees. That's before the payment processor's cut. And the people who bought are now getting Eventbrite recommendations for your competitors.
On the B2B side, corporate event clients — brand activations, corporate retreats, product launches — want to see a portfolio that communicates scale and precision. They want to know you've done events like theirs, how you handle the brief, what services you offer, and how to submit an RFQ. A half-finished website or an Eventbrite profile doesn't close a $200k corporate contract.
Your website is both a ticket booth and a business development tool. Build it like both.
A website that owns your event calendar, builds your first-party audience, and takes registrations and payments directly — so the relationship stays with you long after the event ends.
Event landing pages with Stripe-native ticketing
Per-event pages with agenda, speakers, venue, FAQ, and ticketed registration at fixed and tiered pricing — you keep 100% minus payment processing, and attendees are in your list.
Event calendar and series management
A CMS-driven calendar where your team creates events and they auto-publish with the right schema, registration flow, and social sharing cards.
Corporate inquiry and RFQ flow
A structured brief for B2B clients — event type, headcount, dates, budget range, services needed — that pre-qualifies leads before the first consultation.
Portfolio and case study pages
Events you've run, with photos, scale, type, and client testimonials — indexed by event category (corporate, conference, experiential, wedding, pop-up).
Post-event email capture and CRM integration
Attendee data flows to Klaviyo or Mailchimp, with automated post-event follow-up and next-event early access for returning attendees. Built on Next.js, Sanity for calendar and portfolio management, and Stripe for native payment processing.
One honest number to start.
Fixed-scope, fixed-price. The number below is the starting point — final scope is built from your brief.
A website that owns your event calendar, builds your first-party audience, and takes registrations and payments directly — so the relationship stays with you long after the event ends.
Three steps, every time.
The same repeatable engagement on every project. No surprises, no mystery, no billable ambiguity.
Brief & discovery.
We send you questions, then get on a call. Output: a written scope with every step, feature, and integration listed.
Build & ship.
Fixed schedule, weekly reviews. No scope creep unless you change the scope — and if you do, we reprice it transparently.
Warranty & retainer.
30-day warranty on every launch. Most clients stay on a monthly retainer for ongoing features and maintenance.
Why Fixed-Price Matters Here
Event companies work on project budgets and margins, not retainers. You know what a venue costs and what your fee is before you commit. We quote your website the same way — scope written, price fixed, delivery date committed. No billing surprises between now and go-live.
Questions, answered.
No, and you don't have to. Some events benefit from Eventbrite's discovery (their own SEO for "events in [city]"). A hybrid approach — your own website as the primary channel, Eventbrite as a secondary discovery tool — keeps the best of both. Over time, as your email list grows, you depend on Eventbrite less.
Waitlist management is standard — we build a waitlist flow that captures email and notifies on availability. We also handle waitlist-to-ticket conversion with a time-gated purchase link that doesn't expose inventory publicly.
Yes. Stripe Checkout handles tiered ticket types, add-ons (dinner, workshop, VIP table), and group purchasing. We build the checkout flow to match your ticket structure.
A full website with event calendar, ticketing, portfolio, and corporate inquiry flows typically runs $12k–$22k. If you want custom attendee portals, sponsor management, or a white-label event page builder for clients, that scopes into the $25k+ range.
Most event management websites ship in 8 to 10 weeks.
Tell Ryel about your project.
Describe what you’re building and what outcome you need. You’ll have a written, fixed-price scope within the week.