Performers
Musicians, singers, DJs, players, crew, and other live workers can show what they do, receive better offers, track details, and build proof over time.
About Gigditty
Gigditty is a working system for live music and gig-based events. It helps performers, group leaders, bookers, hosts, and venues find each other, send cleaner offers, coordinate the details, track money, and build trust from the work that actually happened.
A good gig is rarely just a date on a calendar. It is a role, a place, a rate, a call time, a lineup, a buyer, a host, a set of expectations, and a follow-up trail after everyone goes home.
Gigditty exists to make that work easier to understand. The goal is not to remove the human side of booking. The goal is to give the human side a better record, so people can say yes with better context and work together with fewer loose ends.
Gigditty is shaped around the full live-gig loop, not only one role inside it. The same gig can matter to a performer, a leader, a venue, and an organizer at the same time.
Musicians, singers, DJs, players, crew, and other live workers can show what they do, receive better offers, track details, and build proof over time.
Band leaders, music directors, bookers, and team admins can manage rosters, fill roles, send invites, and keep show details connected.
Venues, hosts, organizations, and event teams can find talent, publish openings, coordinate events, and remember who delivered.
Profiles and searches are only the start. Gigditty keeps the offer, the people, the details, the money, and the history tied to the same workflow.
Marketplace profiles, specialties, locations, media, openings, and reputation give people more context before the first message.
Gig invites can carry the date, role, pay, location, timing, notes, and response status that usually get scattered across texts.
Lineups, group members, host details, timelines, documents, comments, reminders, and calendar context stay tied to the same gig record.
Pay records, expenses, reviews, rebooks, completed gigs, and reliability signals make future decisions easier to trust.
Gigditty is designed around real booking behavior: changing lineups, different owner roles, public and private profiles, money notes, reputation, and the need to keep sensitive details in the right places.
People should know what is being offered before they accept. Dates, roles, pay, call times, location, and expectations belong in the same place.
Live events change. Gigditty supports private gigs, group gigs, guest invites, openings, substitutions, hosts, organizations, and different levels of access.
Finished gigs, reviews, rebooks, backouts, specialties, and reputation signals help good collaborators become easier to find again.
Pay, pending balances, expenses, net totals, and journal entries should be easy to find when the gig is done and memory gets fuzzy.
Gigditty starts with personal gig management and grows into deeper marketplace, group, and host workflows as the work becomes more collaborative.
Read the guidesGigditty gives people tools and context. It does not replace the judgment, agreements, and responsibilities that come with real gigs.
Gigditty is not a talent agency, employer, payment processor for user-to-user gig pay, tax advisor, insurer, or legal advisor.
Users still control their own agreements, rates, payments, taxes, licenses, permits, safety choices, and professional commitments.
Marketplace results, reviews, and reputation signals are helpful context, not guarantees about identity, safety, payment, availability, or performance.
The product is built for people who need a calmer way to manage live gig work: performers, group leaders, bookers, hosts, venues, and organizers who want the details to be easier to trust.
Contact the Gigditty team at support@gigditty.com.