Starter
Web-first events needing core attendee tooling and a lighter deployment model.
Key features:
- Branded web app access
- Agenda, speaker, and attendee directories
- Announcements and static content
- Baseline analytics and exports
Pricing guidance
Review pricing shape, likely licensing model, and rollout support before you commit to a full evaluation cycle.
Get an early view of likely pricing, licensing shape, and support options based on your event scope.
Share your event type and attendee range first. We will tailor the pricing conversation before asking you to commit to a live session.
Web-first events needing core attendee tooling and a lighter deployment model.
Events that need native app support, engagement tooling, and stronger attendee experience coverage.
Complex event programs needing integrations, governance, premium support, and commercial flexibility.
USD pricing shown for planning. Final commercial structure depends on event-days, attendee volume, modules selected, and support scope.
Quote drivers
Your event scope, attendee volume, and delivery needs shape the best-fit plan and pricing approach.
Pricing inputs
Capture these inputs first so the pricing conversation reflects your actual rollout.
Expected attendee range and event-days drive the first pricing shape.
Single-event versus recurring programs changes licensing structure quickly.
Registration, engagement, check-in, badging, and integrations shift scope.
Onboarding, enablement, and live-event support all affect final commercial fit.
Included and optional
See what is typically included and which requirements usually change the recommended plan.
Agenda, speaker and attendee directories, document sharing, and consistent branding across every tier.
Push and email announcements, attendee reminders, and operational updates before, during, and after each event.
Track engagement and operational activity without needing to bolt on separate reporting tools.
Pool usage across recurring launches and align commercial structure to the program, not just one event.
Add implementation help, onboarding workshops, and launch support when speed or internal bandwidth matters.
Cover security, SSO, procurement, and approval questions before they slow the rollout.
Live pricing review
The live session is best used once your team wants to review commercial shape, implementation, security, or approval constraints together.
Attendee volume, event-days, modules needed, and the likely support model are usually enough to give a credible direction quickly.
Yes. Multi-event and annual licensing options can be shaped around recurring launches instead of forcing each event to stand alone.
If security, SSO, integrations, or approval requirements are already in play, it is usually better to bring them in early rather than re-run the conversation later.
That depends on scope, but the goal of the pricing review is to map both the commercial path and the rollout path clearly enough to keep momentum.