Tabbed sessions per day.
One file, one event. Day 1, Day 2, breakouts, rehearsals — each on its own tab. No more “v17_FINAL_use-this-one.xlsx”.
Run of Show Manager
Overture replaces the brittle Excel run-of-show with a real tool. Built for the producers, stage managers, and crew who keep general sessions on time.
If this sounds familiar
Every cell time references the cell above it. Insert a row, add three minutes — and the sound check at 6:00 pm now starts at 11 pm. Half your timing is wrong and you don’t know which half.
Print at 11. Update the deck at 11:30. Hand a stale rundown to lighting, audio, and video — three teams running three different versions of your show. Welcome to merge conflicts in real life.
“Need captions confirmed,” written in a yellow comment in cell K47. Found by no one. Caught by the client. The kind of detail that sinks an otherwise tight show.
What Overture does
One file, one event. Day 1, Day 2, breakouts, rehearsals — each on its own tab. No more “v17_FINAL_use-this-one.xlsx”.
Move a segment, push everything down. Times re-flow automatically. The 09:00 keynote stays 09:00 even when the 08:30 walk-in grows by two minutes.
Flag any row — captions, mic check, talent confirm. They surface on a single follow-up view and stay flagged until you clear them.
One PDF per discipline — audio, lighting, video, comms. Reads at the FOH table, prints at the door, stays consistent across roles.
Durations, breaks, and segments compute themselves. The end-of-day clock is always correct. So is “how long is the lunch I just ate”.
Producers, stage managers, ATL, content, AV. Invite by email — they sign in, everyone sees the same source of truth.
Who it’s for
Overture is for corporate event producers running general sessions for 700 to 7,000 people. The folks behind annual sales kickoffs, customer summits, all-hands, partner conferences, and product launches.
Pricing
Every plan includes the full Run of Show Manager, unlimited team members per event, PDF crew sheets, and email-driven invites. Price scales with how many events you run, not how many people are on your crew.
For one-off productions
1 event
For working producers
5 events / year
For agencies & broadcasters
50 events / year
All plans billed annually. Events count permanently on creation. Got a promo code? Apply it at checkout. Not sure which plan fits? Email us.
Why teams switch
Specific, opinionated, and built from the spreadsheets that almost ruined our weekends.
Move anything, push anything, and locked anchor times don’t drift. The show calls itself.
One URL, one source of truth. Everyone sees what you see — including the typo you fixed three minutes ago.
Crew sheets are landscape, paginated, and time-stamped. The 10:00 doors open with paper in hand.
See an issue on row 47? Flag it, it surfaces on the follow-up tab. No sticky notes, no ‘whose mic was it?’
You can stop doing time math in your head between vendor calls.
Drop your client’s logo, render a PDF that looks like their agency made it. They’ll think you hired a designer.
Type and width are designed for the FOH table at arm’s reach. Pages don’t compress, columns don’t shrink.
Audio, lighting, video, comms — each crew gets the rows they care about. One source. Multiple views.
Insert a row between cue 12 and 13? Cue 13 doesn’t suddenly become 14. Sanity preserved.
Three names with credentials? Fits. One person with a 200-word bio? Still fits. The design absorbs it.
They get a link, they sign in, they’re editing. No license activations, no IT tickets.
Read-only role. Your AVP can show their CMO the run of show. The CMO cannot ‘fix’ anything.
Your stage manager in rehearsal and you at the production table see the same thing, the same second.
No per-seat math, no ‘who has the file open’. Per-event pricing means the whole team gets in for free.
Who changed what, when, with one click. Useful for ‘why is doors at 9:15 now?’ — not performance reviews.
Your senior trained on Excel for years. The new hire trains on Overture by lunch. Less hand-holding, fewer mistakes.
Per-event credits. Use them when you have a show. Don’t pay when you don’t.
Open in any browser, print on any printer. The lighting director’s 2015 ThinkPad will be fine.
Export every event to JSON or CSV anytime. Your data is your data — even if you never come back.
Built and run by event producers. Not a ‘we’ve received your ticket’ bot. Replies usually inside the day.
Forty-seven edits in fifteen minutes, all autosaved, all undoable. No file corruption, no crash on Ctrl+S.
Switch organizations, switch events, switch tabs. The mental load doesn’t multiply with the workload.
Hosting an event in Dallas from your couch in Seattle? Times stay anchored to the venue. Always.
Notes, links, references — they live with the segment, not in a separate doc you’ll lose by Tuesday.
The hardest part of an event becomes 20 minutes on Sunday afternoon. Your weekend comes back.
Still on Excel? Try Overture.
FAQ
No. Overture is a purpose-built run-of-show editor — drag-and-drop rows, automatic time math, tabbed sessions per day, follow-up flags, and PDF crew sheets. The only thing it shares with Excel is the muscle memory you walked in with.
One conference, summit, kickoff, or production. Multi-day shows count as one event. You build it, run it, archive it. Events count permanently on creation, so the Basic plan is one event total.
Yes — every plan includes unlimited team members per event. Invite by email; they sign in and see the same source of truth. There is no per-seat charge.
Yes. If you have a launch code, partner code, or industry rate, drop it in at Stripe Checkout. The price updates before you pay.
Overture is built by working corporate event producers, in collaboration with Digital Face Media. We make this because we needed it. The roadmap is shaped by producers who run general sessions for a living.
Pick a plan. Run your next show on something built for it.
Buy a license