Users can search artists, teams, venues, or cities and move from browsing to ticket intent quickly.
Find tickets before they sell out.
Event Pricing is a mobile first event discovery product built to help people find concerts, sports, theater, festivals, and local events fast, then save favorites, set alerts, and catch sale windows before inventory disappears.
This is not just a landing page. It combines app style UX, event ingestion, normalized records, canonical event pages, search filters, alert logic, admin review workflows, and Google Play app work in one system.
Category, region, city, date, and view filters help narrow down a large pool of event records.
Favorites, notifications, and sale timing make the product useful beyond one time page visits.
Canonical event pages, city pages, and structured data create long tail search reach.
App style visuals that show the product in motion.
This case study leans on the actual app style screens because Event Pricing is a consumer product. The screenshots are the proof of how search, filters, alerts, and discovery are meant to feel.
Find events instantly
Artist, team, venue, and city search connects users with event cards fast while keeping the interface easy to scan.
Narrow exactly what you want
Category, location, and view filters make the product usable even when event volume is high.
Get in before the crowd
New event alerts are positioned as a practical reason to return to the app and act early.
Major tour alerts
Alert screens reinforce the product promise by showing exactly how the mobile experience reaches the user.
Move from interest to purchase
Event detail pages help users track an event, follow updates, and move toward ticket purchase when they are ready.
What was built behind the app style interface.
The product looks like a consumer app, but the real technical work sits behind the scenes in ingestion, normalization, SEO architecture, review workflows, and mobile app packaging.
Product system
Event Pricing is built around searchable event discovery with app style interactions and content structure that can scale across cities, categories, and timeframes.
- Search driven discovery for artists, venues, teams, and cities
- Category, location, and date filtering
- Favorites and alert style user retention features
- Canonical event page structure for individual events
- City and category browsing experiences
Technical foundation
The stack supports event ingestion, record cleanup, public browsing, admin controls, and app store oriented product work without sacrificing SEO structure.
- Next.js App Router for structured page generation
- TypeScript for maintainable frontend and route logic
- Firebase and Firestore for event data and admin workflows
- API routes for ingestion and source processing
- Capacitor for mobile app packaging and release work
Operational logic that matters
The product challenge is not only visual. Event data needs review and cleanup so search, alerts, and public pages remain usable.
- Event ingestion from multiple sources
- Source normalization and document cleanup
- Visibility controls for public and admin review states
- Structured data support for event search visibility
- Public site and mobile app alignment
SEO and admin proof
Event Pricing is also a search infrastructure project. Long tail event queries, category pages, and city pages need clean URLs, metadata, and admin review support.
- Canonical event pages with stable routing
- Structured metadata and event schema support
- Admin review tooling for quality and visibility
- Search focused internal linking across events and hubs
- Product decisions that balance app UX with web discoverability
What this project proves.
Event Pricing shows that Savage Lane can build products that live across consumer UX, search traffic, backend logic, and mobile app packaging at the same time.
It feels like a product, not a brochure site.
The screens are designed around discovery, repeat use, and action, not just one time marketing copy.
Web traffic can still matter in an app style product.
Canonical event pages, structured data, and browseable content create search visibility that supports acquisition.
App, data, and admin layers all connect.
Ingestion, cleanup, public pages, admin controls, and mobile packaging all have to work together for the product to be useful.
Current status
- Live public website at EventPricing.com
- Google Play app launched
- iOS improvement work still in progress
- SEO structure and app style content actively evolving
Public claim boundaries
- Do not claim guaranteed lowest ticket prices
- Do not claim official ticketing platform status
- Do not imply direct affiliation with artists, teams, or venues
- Position alerts and discovery as product utility, not ticket guarantees
Need a mobile first product with search, alerts, admin tools, SEO structure, and app launch support?
Savage Lane can help turn an idea into a working system with frontend polish, backend infrastructure, content architecture, review workflows, and app store ready execution.