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Directory Development
CalendarTicketingAlerts

Event Directory Website Development

Your Event Platform Breaks When It Hits 1,000 Listings

1,520/mo
Search Volume
Event keywords
162K+
Listings Built
Our platforms
30
Languages
95+
Lighthouse
Target
What Event Directory Development Actually Fixes — And What It Won't

Your platform goes live with 50 conferences, then 200, then your search queries start crawling. Event discovery platforms combine calendar views, venue maps, ticketing APIs, and speaker management — all under one search interface filtering by date, location, category, and availability. These aren't WordPress installs with a plugin layer. Your architecture needs to handle thousands of events without query lag, preserve historical archives as permanent SEO assets, and let organizers self-submit without flooding your approval queue with spam. We've built 50+ directory platforms. The ones that fail collapse under their own success — slow filters, broken pagination, exhibitor data living in spreadsheets emailed at midnight. Your event platform either scales cleanly from day one, or it becomes the bottleneck killing your growth six months in.

프로젝트가 실패하는 이유

Here's the thing -- most industries are dealing with event information scattered across Facebook groups, LinkedIn posts, individual conference websites, and random Eventbrite pages There's no central hub. Users genuinely can't figure out what's happening in their space without checking five different places every single week. That's a real problem worth solving.
And without proper date filtering or location-based search, finding relevant events becomes basically impossible Can't filter by "this weekend in Denver"? Users bounce immediately. So you're not just losing visitors -- you're failing the core promise of the platform entirely.
No exhibitor management means trade show organizers are living inside Excel spreadsheets, emailing booth assignments back and forth at 11pm It's genuinely painful to watch. A proper system handles booth selection, exhibitor profiles, and contact details -- all without a single spreadsheet.
Past events disappearing is one of the most expensive mistakes I see platforms make That conference from March 2022? It's still got search value. People research speakers, venues, topics from previous years constantly. But most platforms just... delete them. Lost SEO value, gone forever.
No email alerts means users miss events they actually wanted to attend Pretty straightforward problem -- but the fix requires building real notification logic, not just a monthly newsletter. We're talking targeted alerts based on category, location, and user preferences.
Standard WordPress event plugins -- The Events Calendar, Eventin, take your pick -- start breaking down somewhere around 500-1,000 events They're fine for a small community site. But at real scale? Slow queries, broken filters, plugin conflicts. Unreliable when reliability is literally the whole product.

컴플라이언스

Event Listings

Every event gets a rich, properly structured page: dates, times, venue details, speaker lineup, ticket pricing, and category tags. Not a thin stub page -- a genuinely useful destination that gives attendees everything they need and gives Google enough signals to rank it properly.

Calendar and Map

Visual calendar views let users browse by week or month intuitively. And the venue map -- built on Google Maps or Mapbox -- shows geographic clustering instantly. Someone in Philadelphia can see at a glance what's happening within 25 miles next weekend. That's actually useful.

Ticketing

Ticketing runs through Stripe for direct payment processing, or Eventbrite if organizers already have their setup there. Or both -- we build the integration to handle either path. Stripe's pretty straightforward; Eventbrite's API has some quirks but nothing we haven't worked through before.

Speakers

Speaker bios and session details get their own dedicated pages. Full profiles with photos, credentials, social links, and a complete list of which sessions they're running. This turns individual speakers into discoverable content -- and honestly, speakers love having a proper profile page to share.

Exhibitors

Exhibitor profiles include company descriptions, product categories, booth numbers, and contact information. Trade show attendees can research exhibitors before they even walk in the door. That's real value -- and something spreadsheet-based systems simply can't deliver.

Alerts

New event notifications go out when relevant events get added -- based on what each user actually cares about. Someone following "UX design" events in Seattle gets notified when a new one appears. Not a blast to everyone. Targeted, preference-based alerts.

우리가 만드는 것

Scattered event data across Facebook groups, LinkedIn posts, and random Eventbrite pages — no central discovery hub your audience can trust

Organizers submit events through a front-end portal — admin approval keeps quality high without manual editorial review on every submission

Date and location filters that break or don't exist — users can't search 'this weekend in Denver' so they leave immediately

Historical archives stay live with recordings, slide decks, speaker lists — permanent SEO assets your competitors are deleting for no reason

Exhibitor management living in Excel spreadsheets — booth assignments emailed back and forth instead of handled in a real system

Category pages targeting long-tail search — 'Marketing Conferences in New York', 'Healthcare Trade Shows 2026' — traffic compounds year over year

Past events deleted after they end — losing permanent SEO value from speaker profiles, session content, and venue pages that still rank

Featured event placements monetize homepage visibility — sponsors pay for promoted listings without intrusive ads breaking user experience

No email alerts based on category or location — your users miss events they actually wanted to attend because discovery is passive

Organizer dashboards show views, ticket clicks, and interest trends — real numbers they can act on, not vanity metrics no one trusts

WordPress event plugins collapsing at 500–1,000 listings — slow queries, broken filters, plugin conflicts killing reliability at scale

Thirty-language i18n support for international directories — European trade show platforms can't run English-only and expect regional traction

우리의 프로세스

01

Strategy

Scope and monetization strategy both need to be locked down early. Are you charging organizers per listing? Running a freemium model? Taking a ticketing percentage? These decisions affect database structure, user roles, and payment flows -- changing them later is expensive.
Week 1-2
02

Database

Event schema markup -- the structured data that makes Google show rich results with dates, venues, and ticket links -- gets implemented properly from day one. And ticketing integration follows the same principle: built into the core architecture, not bolted on afterward.
Week 3-4
03

Build

Search, calendar view, and map view form the core discovery experience. Users should be able to switch between all three naturally. Someone might search first, then switch to map view to check proximity, then flip to calendar to check their schedule. The navigation has to support all three paths.
Week 5-8
04

Launch

Seeding the platform with real events before launch matters more than most clients expect. An empty directory is a dead directory. We typically seed 50-200 real events -- scraped ethically or entered manually -- so the platform looks alive on day one.
Week 9-10
05

Growth

SEO and acquisition strategy runs parallel to the build. Category pages need content. Google Search Console needs to be configured. And a plan for getting early organizers to claim their listings -- through outreach, partnerships, or just cold email -- has to exist before launch day.
Week 11-12
Next.jsSupabaseVercelStripeMapBox

자주 묻는 질문

What types?

The market here is pretty wide: industry-specific event directories, local city guides, conference platforms for associations, trade show management systems for convention organizers. Each has a slightly different feature priority, but the core architecture is largely the same.

How much?

Projects start around $10,000 for focused builds with standard features. More complex platforms -- multi-organizer setups, custom ticketing logic, advanced exhibitor management, international support -- typically run $15,000 to $25,000. That's an honest range based on what we've actually delivered.

From $10,000
Calendar. Maps. Ticketing.
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Custom Directory

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