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	<title>Charles Hudson&#039;s Weblog &#187; interviews</title>
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		<title>Interview Post #1 &#8211; Eventbrite and &#8220;The Long Tail of Events&#8221;</title>
		<link>http://www.charleshudson.net/interview-post-1-eventbrite-and-the-long-tail-of-events?utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=interview-post-1-eventbrite-and-the-long-tail-of-events</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 19 Jan 2007 02:37:23 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>charles</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Earlier today I had the pleasure of speaking with Kevin Hartz, the head of Eventbrite, a very cool company that&#8217;s making it easier for long tail event organizers to organize, manage, and promote their events. Awhile back I wrote another post about whether online invitations are broken or stale. Eventbrite is the first company that [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img align="top" title="eventbrite_tagline_little.gif" alt="eventbrite_tagline_little.gif" id="image237" src="http://blog.charleshudson.net/wp-content/uploads/2007/01/eventbrite_tagline_little.thumbnail.gif" /></p>
<p>Earlier today I had the pleasure of speaking with <a href="http://www.kevinhartz.com/">Kevin Hartz</a>, the head of Eventbrite, a very cool company that&#8217;s making it easier for long tail event organizers to organize, manage, and promote their events. Awhile back I wrote another <a href="http://blog.charleshudson.net/?p=186">post</a> about whether online invitations are broken or stale.  Eventbrite is the first company that I have seen that is really doing something cool in the event space and solving an important problem for event organizers.</p>
<p>Kevin and the team started Eventbrite several years ago to meet the needs of event organizers. In talking about the &#8220;long tail of events&#8221;, the Eventbrite is not targeting the StubHubs and Ticketmasters of the world &#8211; there are plenty of good solutions for large, professional organizations who do large volumes of transactions in the primary and secondary ticket market. However, it has been a very long time since anyone has launched a credible solution for smaller event organizers who want to project a professional image but don&#8217;t have the resources to pay for expensive web development or manage complicated solutions. Aside from Eventbrite, the most commonly-used event organization tools for small groups that need to collect money and manage registration are Acteva and 123signup. Having used both tools, I can say that both are functional but feel very old &#8212; the interfaces haven&#8217;t been updated in quite some time and neither tool allows the event organizers to customize the look and feel or presentation of their events to the degree that Eventbrite does.<br />
Eventbrite has most of the core features you would want as an event organizer &#8211; the ability to create an event, manage attendee information, promote an event, communicate with attendees, and collect payment. They offer a free and a premium service, with a lot of the core useful features being available in the free version. In talking with the team and browsing the directory of events that are using the Eventbrite platform, it&#8217;s clear that it is a very horizontal service. I found everything from chess tournaments to social networking conferences using the service.<br />
However, the main reason I chose to speak with the team at Eventbrite about their service is what I will call the inbox text. I actually started seeing invitations from Eventbrite-powered events, which is not something I can say for any of the other services that have set out to attack the personal/social arena dominated by Evite. I think the reason for this is simple &#8212; for an event organizer, publishing an event via Eventbrite does not require any fundamentally different behavior when received by guests.<br />
I like the Eventbrite service and hope to get the opportunity to use it in the future. I&#8217;m glad to see some real innovation in this space.</p>
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