The event operations platform built for first-time hosts and the producers they want to become. An honest assessment of what's been built, what's possible solo, and what it will take to ship the full vision.
Whether it's a 40-person school fundraiser or a 5,000-attendee corporate conference, the operator is stitching together five tools, three spreadsheets, two group chats, and one panicked text from the florist at 4 PM. Every event runs on duct tape.
No single platform covers the lifecycle. Couples use Zola for the website, Joy for invitations, a Google Sheet for guests, and Splash for ticketing. Pros use Aisle Planner, HoneyBook, Planning Pod, and 17 spreadsheets.
Tools don't talk. A guest's "vegan, wheelchair" note updates the registration tab but never reaches the kitchen sheet or the place card. Information dies on its way to the people who need it.
Cvent dropped $700M in December 2025 acquiring ON24, Goldcast, and Prismm — racing to build the end-to-end stack the market wants. Eventbrite went private in March 2026 ($500M) to pivot toward consumer entertainment.
Existing tools force you to pick a side. Consumer tools (Zola, Joy) can't handle BEOs and payouts. Enterprise tools (Cvent, Planning Pod) intimidate a first-time host. Nobody scales gracefully across both.
Hosta is a full-lifecycle event operations platform with a UI that reveals depth as you need it. A first-time host sees five tabs. A producer with 40 events a year gets the full operations stack. One data model underneath both.
Progressive disclosure resolves the consumer-vs-enterprise tension. The first-time host never sees the BEO engine. The pro never has to disable the AI handholding.
Five AI agents as crew, not features. Each agent has a job, a persona, and an autonomy dial you control. As you trust them, you promote them.
One unified data layer. Your guest's dietary note flows automatically to the kitchen sheet, place card, and seating chart. Nothing lives in two systems.
Across consensus research from Fortune Business Insights, Mordor Intelligence, Future Market Insights, and Grand View, the event management software category is somewhere between $11B and $20B in 2026 — with double-digit CAGRs through 2030 and beyond.
Range depending on category definition. All major analysts agree on the order of magnitude.
AI integration and SMB adoption are the two main growth drivers through 2030.
Largest single region. APAC grows fastest at ~11% CAGR — international expansion path exists.
Cvent, Eventbrite, Stova, Bizzabo, Hopin. Long tail of niche players holds the rest.
What this means for Hosta: The market is large enough to support a niche player making $5–50M ARR without ever threatening the top 5. The strategic question is not "is there room" — it's "is there a wedge the incumbents will not serve?" Yes. The dual-persona, AI-native, end-to-end operating model is structurally hard for them to copy.
No single platform competes across the dimensions Hosta does. Each tier has dominant players with structural reasons they cannot pivot to occupy Hosta's position.
The strategic gap: Cvent has Blackstone money but is structurally too enterprise to credibly serve a first-time host. Zola has consumer brand but cannot serve a pro. Planning Pod has pro tools but no consumer onramp. The intersection of all three is empty and that's where Hosta sits.
Most features in the spec are catch-up — necessary to compete but not differentiating. These six are genuinely novel and each compounds on the rest.
One product that scales from a backyard birthday to a 5,000-seat conference. Five visible tabs for the host. Full operations stack for the pro. Cvent can't dumb down. Zola can't level up. We own the middle.
Five specialized agents (Scout, Drafter, Stage Manager, Concierge, Bookkeeper) each with an autonomy dial. Competitors ship "AI copilots." We ship AI staff. More sophisticated mental model, harder to copy because it requires reorganizing the product.
AI reviews vendor and venue contracts, surfaces concession opportunities (comp rooms, waived corkage, F&B credits) and provides language to counter with. No competitor does this. Pro planners will pay for this alone.
Tray-pass, buffet, plated, stations, snacks — each has tested formulas built from 20 years of producing events. Immediately credible. Builds trust that this product was built by someone who actually runs events.
When the florist runs 30 minutes late, every downstream task, staff shift, and vendor call updates automatically. Most platforms have static timelines. This is a stage manager replacement.
Most event tech is built by SaaS engineers who've never run an event. Hosta is built by a 20-year event producer with the SaaS team coming second. That ordering is rare and shows up in every product decision.
Each agent has a job, a persona, and a dial. You promote them as you learn to trust them. None of them get to use your credit card without permission.
Finds venues and vendors that fit the brief. Maps distances. Drafts the transport plan. Drafts contracts for review.
Generates floor plans from headcount. Renders AI mockups of the finished room. Flags fire-code and flow issues.
Watches the timeline. Recalculates dependencies when something slips. Pings only the people who need to know.
Lives in the event app. Answers questions, builds personal agendas, surfaces who's worth meeting.
Chases invoices, queues vendor payouts, reconciles auction winnings, flags budget drift.
Three tiers cover the spread from a host running their first event to a producer with a portfolio. Unit economics still being modeled — including a possible hybrid with per-event fees on top of subscription, the way Eventbrite monetizes (3.7% per ticket).
For your first event
Fundraisers · weddings · one-offs
Producers · planners · venues
Pre-product, pre-revenue, but not pre-investment. Significant strategic work has been completed before a single line of production code. The shape of the product, the wedge, and the market position are all defined.
Name (Hosta), palette (Sunset Coral on cream paper), wordmark (Inter Black), H Tile mark, three taglines, full visual language. Round 4 of exploration; locked. Distinct from every competitor in the category.
Hosta-Logo-Round4.htmlFull-page React-free build with cream-forward design, sunset coral signal color, GSAP-driven animations, live AI demo section, AI agent illustrations, animated counters, confetti finale. Ready to ship.
index.html — 52KB80+ feature spec across five lifecycle phases with progressive disclosure model, AI agent autonomy framework, pricing structure, and architectural notes. Detailed enough to brief a CTO or hand to Replit Agent.
Hosta-Product-Blueprint.mdFull competitive landscape with 2026 data, 15-capability feature matrix, positioning map, eight gaps in strategic planning, marketability scorecard (43/70 composite), six prioritized recommendations.
Hosta-Market-Analysis.htmlOriginal name (ShowRunner) blocked by existing trademark; Hosta selected after weighted analysis vs. Callsheet and Soir. Etymology check, domain check, trademark class shortlist (009 + 042).
Name-Showdown.html · Brand-Analysis.htmlCustom-generated editorial brand photograph — vibrant sunset coral balloons against warm cream paper — for use across the landing page, investor brief, social ads, and future product surfaces. Color-matched directly to the brand palette.
images/balloons-hero.png — 1.5MBMost event tech is built by SaaS engineers who've never run a live event. Hosta is the opposite. The product judgment, the F&B formulas, the Contract Studio playbook, the brand voice — all of it traces back to two decades of producing events for real clients.
"The reason every event runs on duct tape is that no one who builds the software has ever stood at the back of a ballroom at 4 PM watching a florist not show up. I have. I'm building the product I needed thirty events ago."
— Micaela, on the betWith Claude (strategy, copy, code review), Replit Agent 4 (full-stack scaffolding, Stripe integration, deployment), and Cursor (refactoring, harder logic) — and zero outside engineering help — these are realistically shippable in 4–6 months.
Validation MVP for one narrow ICP — enough to put Hosta in front of 20 real events and learn what the product actually needs.
Each of these is real engineering work — multiple weeks of focused senior-developer time. Replit Agent will write drafts; production-grade requires human judgment, security, and testing.
This isn't a single ask. The investment level determines which version of Hosta gets built, on what timeline, and with what defensibility. All three are viable. Only one is recommended.
All three timelines assume an honest founder working 30–50 hours a week on the product. No magical thinking. No "we'll ship the full vision in 8 weeks." These are the timelines after watching dozens of comparable SaaS teams.
No software feature is defensible alone — Cvent could clone any Hosta feature in two quarters with their budget. What's defensible is what compounds with usage. From day one, every Hosta event adds to four flywheels that incumbents cannot retroactively build.
"A 200-person fundraiser gala in Austin costs $X with vendor breakdown of Y." Six months of real events = a data asset competitors cannot retroactively build. Powers AI accuracy, drives the save-money agent, and is itself a free-tool acquisition lever.
Every event onboards a venue and 3–8 vendors. Those vendors get faster reorders if they accept Hosta payouts. By customer 500, Hosta has a vendor marketplace bigger than Planning Pod's. By 5,000, it's competitive with The Knot.
Year 2 of using Hosta: every past event is a template, every past vendor relationship is one click, every past budget is a benchmark for the new one. Migration to a competitor means abandoning years of compounding context.
The visual brand was designed for memorability — bold coral, ownable wordmark, the H Tile as a standalone avatar. Eventbrite's "Eb" pattern, applied to event operations. With paid acquisition and PR, Hosta has the brand kit to become a recognized consumer-facing name in 18 months.
Every pitch should have this slide. Most don't. These are the real risks — they are not deal-breakers, but the right partner needs to know them upfront.
"Built for hosts. Trusted by pros." is the wedge. It is also a positioning risk. If we fail to graduate hosts into pros, or pros into the platform, we fall between two stools. Mitigation: launch with one ICP first (recommendation: nonprofit fundraisers), expand from validated traction.
Every major platform shipped generative AI in 2025–2026. CventIQ, Bizzabo Event OS Copilot, Zola's AI thank-yous. "We have AI" sells nothing. The differentiation is in workflow design and the five-agent architecture — but it requires execution to land.
Blackstone gave Cvent $4.6B in 2023. Bending Spoons paid $500M for Eventbrite in 2026. Hosta has Replit credits. The execution-risk gap is real. Mitigation: this slide is exactly why a technical partner or seed round matters — and why bootstrapping is path A, not the recommendation.
Five AI agents × monthly usage × Anthropic API rates can erode the $29/month subscription's gross margin. Unit economics need to be tested with real users before pricing is locked. Worst case: pricing rises to $39, or per-event success fees are added. Survivable, but real.
Hosta is at the inflection point where strategy and design have done their job and the next move is execution. We're open to several shapes of partnership. Each requires a different commitment from you.
A senior full-stack engineer who wants to own product engineering. Equity split negotiable based on stage joined. We share the bet, the upside, and the risk. We can begin Path B immediately.
$75–150K to fund a fractional CTO or contract dev, plus 9-month runway. SAFE or convertible at $4–6M cap. Hosta executes Path B with founder retaining majority ownership.
An event industry operator (catering platform, venue chain, vendor marketplace) who'd benefit from the data Hosta generates. Trade access, distribution, or early customers for equity or a revenue share.
Three forces just aligned. Each one independently makes Hosta more buildable. Together they create a window that closes within 18 months — once Cvent finishes integrating its $700M acquisition spree and the consolidated PE-owned platforms reorient toward the lifecycle problem.
Replit Agent 4 + Claude Opus 4.8 can scaffold a full-stack event platform in months, not years. This makes a non-technical founder + small team viable in a way that was impossible two years ago.
Cvent is digesting $700M of acquisitions. Eventbrite is being remade by new PE ownership. Bizzabo dropped from Leaders to Visionaries. None of them will ship a "Hosta competitor" in the next 12 months — they're busy integrating.
The 2026 event registration shift is toward conversational, AI-native setup. Cvent is retrofitting; we can be native. First mover advantage on the dual-persona conversational platform is real.
Bending Spoons signaled a pivot toward consumer entertainment and secondary ticketing. That leaves consumer event operations partially abandoned at the top of the market — exactly the territory Hosta's brand is positioned to claim.
Hosta is built by someone who's stood at the back of a ballroom watching the florist not show up at 4 PM. That ordering matters. Brand is locked. Site is live. Strategy is mapped. Now it's a question of who builds it with us.