case study
a website for the day that matters
weddings, birthdays, meetups, launch parties — a beautiful event page without the wedding-industry markup
event websites are absurdly overpriced
you're getting married. or throwing a milestone birthday. or organizing a community meetup. you need a page — a place where guests can see the date, the venue, the schedule, and RSVP. simple, right?
the wedding website industry doesn't think so. platforms charge $30–$100+ for a site you'll use for six months. they give you a template with floral borders and a countdown timer, lock RSVP management behind a paywall, and slap their branding on the footer of one of the most personal pages you'll ever share.
for a birthday or a meetup, the options are worse — you either send a group chat message that gets buried, create a Facebook event that half your friends never see, or paste all the details into a Google Doc and hope for the best.
a real page for a real occasion
bb.bi gives you a multi-page website for $9.99/year. describe your event, and the AI generates pages that match your taste — not a template catalog's idea of what "elegant" or "rustic" means. your wedding page can look like a magazine editorial, a handwritten letter, a minimalist poster, or something entirely unexpected. because you described it, not selected it from option B of 12.
jun-and-mia.bb.bi → welcome & story jun-and-mia.bb.bi/schedule → ceremony, reception, after-party jun-and-mia.bb.bi/venue → address, map, travel & parking jun-and-mia.bb.bi/rsvp → RSVP form with meal choice jun-and-mia.bb.bi/faq → dress code, gifts, accommodation
what you need
$9.99 for the year. that's it. not $9.99/month. not $35 for "premium." not $80 for the "RSVP tier." one price, everything included. after the event, downgrade to free or let it expire — your call.
building the site
1. the welcome page
this is the first thing guests see when they open your link. describe the mood you want:
"wedding page for Jun & Mia, October 18, 2025. elegant and warm — ivory background, dark green accents, a serif font that feels timeless but not stuffy. our names large at the top, the date below. a short paragraph about how we met. at the bottom, links to schedule, venue, RSVP. no countdown timer. no stock photos of rings."
the AI generates a complete page. refine until it feels right — make the green deeper, use a lighter serif, add more whitespace between our names and the date. this page sets the tone for everything else.
2. schedule & venue
create subpages from the dashboard. for the schedule page, describe the timeline — ceremony at 3pm, cocktails at 4:30, reception at 6. the AI lays it out. for the venue page, describe what guests need — address, directions, parking, nearby hotels.
use style reference to point at your welcome page, and the AI matches the typography, colors, and spacing automatically. every page feels cohesive without you designing each one from scratch.
3. the RSVP form
enable the contact form plugin. configure your fields — guest name, number attending, meal preference (or dietary restrictions, or song request, or whatever matters to you). then generate the RSVP page with the AI — it knows the plugin is active and wires the form into the page automatically.
"RSVP page matching our wedding style. form fields: full name, email, number of guests (1-4), meal choice (beef/fish/vegetarian), any dietary notes. a warm message above the form. below the form: deadline to RSVP is September 15."
responses appear in your dashboard in real time. no spreadsheet, no email forwarding, no third-party service. export when you need to share with the caterer.
4. FAQ & details
a FAQ page answers the questions you'd otherwise answer fifty times — dress code, gift registry, accommodation, parking, kids welcome? describe the questions and answers, and the AI formats them cleanly.
not just weddings
the same structure works for any event. the AI adapts to whatever you describe:
birthday / milestone party
a page with the date, venue, and a photo collage or message from the host. RSVP form with a "what should we know?" field. share the link in a group chat instead of flooding it with logistics.
community meetup / conference
a landing page with the event name and description. subpages for the speaker lineup, schedule, venue, and registration form. counter plugin to show how many people have registered. posts plugin for updates and announcements.
product launch / release party
a teaser page with the product name, launch date, and a signup form for early access. one page on the free plan is all you need — no subpages, no subscription. upgrade later if you want a full launch site.
reunion / annual gathering
reuse the same handle every year. update the page with new dates and details. the URL stays the same — everyone who bookmarked it last year finds this year's info automatically.
why this makes sense
the price is honest
wedding website platforms charge a premium because they know you're emotionally invested. bb.bi charges $9.99/year because that's what a website costs. same features, fraction of the price, no emotional markup.
it actually looks like your event
a garden wedding and a rooftop cocktail party should not have the same website. template platforms give you "theme: botanical" or "theme: modern." bb.bi gives you a blank page and asks: what does your event feel like? the answer is always different, so the page is always different.
guests actually use it
a clean, fast page with clear information and a simple RSVP form. no app to download, no account to create, no cookie banners. guests open the link, see the details, fill out the form. the way it should work.
you can update it in seconds
venue changed? timeline shifted? need to add parking instructions last-minute? open the AI assistant, describe the change, done. no drag-and-drop editor to wrestle with the night before your event.
example: a wedding
Jun and Mia are getting married in October. they claim jun-and-mia as their handle and upgrade to pro.
they describe their welcome page — ivory and dark green, serif typography, their story told in a few short paragraphs. the AI generates it. Mia adjusts the spacing. Jun changes the green to something darker. two refinements, done.
they create four subpages: schedule, venue, RSVP, and FAQ. each generated with the AI using the welcome page as a style reference — consistent typography and colors across every page without any manual design work.
the RSVP form collects name, guest count, meal choice, and dietary notes. responses arrive in the dashboard. they export a spreadsheet for the caterer. 68 guests RSVP in the first week.
the URL — jun-and-mia.bb.bi — goes on the printed invitations, in the group chat, in the email to the extended family. one link, everything in one place.
total cost: $9.99. total time: one evening.
after the event
the event is over. your page doesn't have to be. keep it as a memory — a snapshot of the day, with photos added later. or update it into something new — Jun and Mia could turn their wedding site into a personal page, a travel blog, or a family page. the handle is theirs. the URL is theirs. they decide what it becomes next.
or do nothing. downgrade to free, keep the single welcome page as an archive. $0/year to preserve a moment.
your event deserves its own page
claim a handle, describe the occasion, and let the AI build a site that feels like yours. RSVP, schedule, venue — everything guests need, in one link. $9.99/year.