Planning an event sounds great right up until you’re neck-deep in spreadsheets, juggling emails, and dealing with last-minute chaos.
Be it a business seminar, product launch, or even a small local workshop, the to-do list piles up quickly. Guest lists, registrations, timelines, venues, vendors, you’ve got the entirety of everything on your plate.
But here’s the thing: you don’t need to make it harder than it has to be. With the right digital platforms, planning, promoting, and managing your event gets a whole lot easier. You might actually get your weekends back, too.
In this guide, we’ll walk through how to simplify the entire process using easy-to-use digital tools with no stress, no faff.
Must-Have Digital Tools for Planning Events
1. Event Websites and Landing Pages
First impressions count, and your event needs a proper home online.
A simple landing page or event website is where people get all the info they need: what the event is, why it matters, where it’s happening, and how to join. For this, instead of using a complex full-fledged CMS, consider an event management system software.
What to include:
- Key details (time, date, location)
- Speaker or schedule highlights
- Registration/ticket links
- FAQs, contact info, and maybe even a countdown timer for a bit of urgency
If you’re targeting a wider audience, consider using video translation tools to make the content accessible in multiple languages, especially for hybrid or international events.
2. Registration and Ticketing
This bit can either run smoothly or drive you completely mad.
The right tool handles sign-ups, sends out confirmations, tracks guest numbers, and takes payments if needed.
Tools to try:
- Eventbrite
- Ticket Tailor
Why it matters:
- Attendees get a smooth experience
- You stay in control of capacity and comms
- Built-in analytics help track what’s working (and what’s not)
Bonus: Most of these tools integrate nicely with your website and email system, so it’s all connected behind the scenes.
3. Project Management & Team Collaboration
Even a small event has a million moving parts. Without a proper system, things fall through the cracks fast.
Whether you’re working solo, with a small team, or managing outside vendors, these tools keep everyone on the same page.
Tools to try:
- Trello
- Asana
- ClickUp
What they help with:
- Assigning tasks
- Setting deadlines
- Keeping track of what’s done (and what’s overdue)
- Avoiding those “Wait… who was meant to do that?” moments
You can even build shared timelines, upload checklists, or use templates from past events so you’re not starting from scratch every time.
Automate the Boring Stuff
You know those repetitive tasks that eat up time but can’t be skipped. Sending reminders. Confirming RSVPs. Chasing deadlines. Following up after the event.
They’re important, yes, but they’re also the perfect candidates for automation.
If you’re using Mailchimp, Brevo (formerly Sendinblue), or ConvertKit, you’ve already got access to simple but powerful automation workflows. Set them up once, and let them run:
- Confirmation emails fire off the moment someone registers
- Reminder emails go out 24-48 hours before your event
- Follow-ups (thank-yous, feedback surveys, replays) land automatically after the event wraps
Many ticketing tools (like Eventbrite and Ticket Tailor) can:
- Auto-create digital tickets with QR codes
- Update guest lists in real time
- Trigger messages when someone cancels or changes their booking
Even better? Tools like Zapier or Make can link your platforms together. So a new registration in Eventbrite can instantly trigger a welcome email in Mailchimp or create a Trello task for the team.
In fact, you can connect your tools without writing a single line of code:
- New ticket = new calendar event
- Form response = new checklist item
- RSVP = automated email
Set it. Forget it. Let it work for you.
Centralise Communication
If there’s one thing that can quietly derail even the best-planned event, it’s communication chaos.
You know the drill: scattered WhatsApp messages, missed emails, five different versions of the agenda floating around, and no one quite sure who’s doing what.
It doesn’t have to be that way. Digital platforms make it easy to keep your team and even external vendors on the same page without the painful back-and-forth.
Pick a single platform and stick to it. Whether it’s:
- Slack for quick chats and channel-based discussions
- Microsoft Teams, if you’re already on Office 365
- Or even WhatsApp for smaller teams or fast-moving events
The point is: everyone should know where to go when something needs attention. No hopping between inboxes and group chats, wondering where that message went.
Plus, as we mentioned, tools like Notion, Trello, or Asana let you centralise everything: timelines, task lists, contact info, event briefs, and venue details in one shared space.
Need to loop in a supplier or client? Give them limited access. Now everyone sees the same thing, and updates happen in real time.
Wrapping Up
Event planning doesn’t have to be a last-minute scramble. With the right digital platforms in your corner, you can save time, cut the stress, and actually enjoy the process.
From building a clean event website and automating registrations to keeping your team aligned, every piece becomes easier when it’s handled by tools that just work.
And we’re not talking about enterprise-level software or massive learning curves. Most of the platforms we’ve mentioned are affordable, easy to use, and play nicely together.
And if you need help building a custom event site, setting up your digital stack, or just want someone else to take the tech bit off your plate, DCP Web Designers can help. Contact us and let’s make your next event your smoothest one yet.