What Should You Actually Use to Build an Event Page?
You need somewhere to put the schedule, speaker bios, and a sign-up link — and it has to look decent. You also needed it done yesterday. Here's the fastest way to get there.
No design experience needed · AI layout · Multilingual friendly
One page. Three things to get right.
Your event page needs to do exactly this:
The Schedule
What time does it start, who’s speaking, when are the breaks. People decide whether to show up based on this. Make it skimmable in ten seconds.
Speaker Info
Title, background, why this person is worth an hour of someone’s time. Help people quickly understand why this speaker matters.
Sign-Up
One button. One form. One link. Every extra step between “I’m interested” and “I’m registered” is a drop-off point.
When you’re short on time, fast and good enough beats perfect and late
The only real job of an event page is getting someone from “maybe” to “I’m in” as quickly as possible. That’s exactly the kind of situation Gamma is good at.
Start with a draft instead of a blank page
Type in your event topic and a rough outline. Gamma builds out a full page from that — layout, sections, structure — so you’re not staring at a blank screen trying to figure out where to start.
It already looks presentable
Built-in color schemes, type choices, and card layouts mean the page comes out looking like someone actually thought about it. Everything ends up easy to scan. It doesn’t look like it was thrown together at midnight — even if it was.
No need to maintain it afterward
You publish it, the event happens, you move on. No ongoing maintenance, no keeping a site updated for something that’s already done. That’s the right fit for anything with a hard end date.
Your event isn’t waiting. Neither should your page.
Get a first draft online, then spend your time on the event itself. Let Gamma put together a first draft, then spend your remaining time on the things that actually need your attention.