Eventbone is a bet:
Events don't need more people on walkie-talkies.
They need a backbone.
01
The schedule is never finished.
It changes at 6 AM, at 9:41, at half-past noon. A team forfeits, an official calls out, a wave shifts. Software that treats the schedule as a document misses the entire point — it's a living system, and it has to move at the speed of the floor.
02
Paper is stale the moment it prints.
Every printed grid taped to a wall is a small lie about the present. The truth lives in one place, updates in real time, and follows people onto the floor in their pocket.
03
"Where am I next?" shouldn't be a phone call.
Multiply one confused official by a hundred, by every wave change, by every venue — that's the operations desk's whole day, gone. The answer belongs on every official's phone, before they think to ask.
04
People who work the event should be paid before they leave the lot.
Pay should calculate itself from the work as it happens — every match, every role, every rate — and land with a notification, not with a spreadsheet three weeks later.
05
The desk deserves to see trouble coming.
A double-booking is trivial at 9:41 and a disaster at 10:00. Conflicts, callouts, and gaps should announce themselves the moment they exist — to the person who can fix them.
06
Event software should be built by people who run events.
Eventbone wasn't designed in a conference room. It was built weekend after weekend on live tournament floors — multi-venue national events, hundreds of officials, four-day 500-match schedules — by the operator running them.
We built Eventbone to win this bet.
Officials scheduling. Admissions. Payroll. Real-time communication. One backbone.
We're onboarding a small number of pilot partners for the upcoming season — hands-on setup included.