Aurentex. We build the tech. You run the event.
White-label

Why white-label isn't a feature, it's the whole point

When attendees see another company's logo on your registration page, your badges, and your emails, whose event is it really?

The Aurentex Team
16 June 2026 · 6 min read
yourbrand.com/register Register LIVE SNAPSHOT Checked in 1,338 of 1,500 registered · 98% on-time
Your domain, your colours, your wording. The attendee never meets the software.

Open the confirmation email from the last conference you attended. Scroll to the footer. Whose name is in the small print: the organizer's, or the software vendor's?

For most events, it's the vendor's. The registration page lived on a subdomain that wasn't theirs. The badge had a "powered by" line. The attendee app showed a splash screen for a company the guest had never heard of. None of it was catastrophic. All of it quietly told every attendee the same thing: this event was assembled, not built.

White-label is usually sold as a checkbox, a tier you upgrade to so you can swap a logo. We think that framing gets it backwards. The branding isn't the point. The point is who the experience belongs to.

An event is a promise about who you are

People decide how they feel about your organization in dozens of small moments: the email that lands the morning of, the page where they pick a session, the screen they stare at while the queue moves, the badge clipped to their lanyard for eight hours. Each one is a chance to feel considered, or processed.

When a third-party brand keeps surfacing in those moments, it splits the attendee's attention. They're no longer simply at your event. They're at your event, hosted on a tool, and the tool keeps reminding them it's there. It's the difference between a venue dressed for the occasion and a conference room with the rental company's banner still up.

"Powered by" is a small line of text. It's also a small admission that the most important night of your year runs on someone else's rails.

What real white-label actually covers

Swapping a logo is the easy 20%. The parts that matter are the ones attendees never consciously notice, until they're wrong.

The domainRegistration lives on your URL, not yourbrand.somevendor.com. The address bar is the first thing a cautious attendee checks.
The emailsConfirmations, reminders and receipts come from your domain, with your sender name, not a no-reply address that trips spam filters and trust at the same time.
The badges and ticketsYour typeface, your colours, your layout. No vendor watermark hiding in the corner of the QR code.
The interfaceCheck-in screens and the attendee view carry your identity, so staff and guests both feel like they're inside something you made.

Get all four right and something interesting happens: attendees stop thinking about the software entirely. Which is exactly the goal. The best event tech is the tech nobody remembers using.

Why most platforms stop at the logo

It's not an accident that genuine white-label is rare. Every "powered by" line is free distribution. Every shared subdomain is an SEO signal pointing home. Every vendor-branded email is another impression. For a platform monetizing reach, your event is also a billboard, and turning the billboard off costs them something.

That's the real tension. A platform built to grow on your audience has a structural reason to keep its name in front of your guests. A platform built to disappear behind your brand has to make its money another way, usually by charging you fairly and openly instead of mining the people who show up.

The test we'd apply

If you're evaluating tools, skip the feature grid for a minute and ask one question: could an attendee go through your entire event (register, get reminded, check in, look up a session, leave) and never once see a name that isn't yours?

If the honest answer is no, you don't have a white-label platform. You have a logo slot on someone else's product. The difference is invisible on a sales page and obvious to every person who walks through your doors.

That's the bet Aurentex is built around: the platform should vanish, and the event should be unmistakably yours. Same idea from a few other angles in how per-attendee pricing quietly works against you and who actually owns your guest list.

Want to see it fully yours?

We'll build your first event on your domain, your branding, your wording, and you can run two of them free before deciding anything.

Talk to us
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