Ticket Brew was built by organisers, for organisers.
While organising a university dance, Jaden Stock wanted elegant digital tickets, a page that felt like the event itself, and ticket fees that were affordable for event attendees. The tools he found were either way too expensive, too generic, or unintuitive, so Ticket Brew was built around a different standard.
The product followed the problem, not the other way around.
Ticket Brew did not begin as an abstract startup idea. It was shaped by a very specific use case, which is why the product still feels opinionated about branding, speed, and clarity.
01
The frustration came first
Most of the available tools felt expensive, visually generic, or awkward to use when speed and presentation mattered. None of them felt made for a modern South African event host.
02
The product brief stayed disciplined
Instead of chasing feature bloat, the focus became simple: help organisers launch quickly, keep the event page on-brand, and remove friction from mobile checkout and ticket delivery.
03
The company grew from that brief
That focus became Ticket Brew: a platform for organisers who care about their brand, their margins, and the full attendee experience from first click to ticket in hand.
What makes Ticket Brew feel distinct
A different product philosophy creates a different product.
From the start, the priority was never to be the biggest possible platform with the longest feature list. It was to be the most thoughtful platform for organisers who care how their event looks, how buyers move through checkout, and how fees affect the final ticket price.
Brand-led event pages
Your event page should look like your event, not like borrowed real estate on a marketplace.
Mobile-first buying flow
Checkout should feel quick, clean, and trustworthy on the phones people actually use to buy tickets.
WhatsApp-friendly delivery
Tickets should be easy to access, save, and forward in the channels buyers already use every day.
Transparent pricing control
Organisers should understand their fees before launch and decide how those fees are split.