Finance and review

Finish post-gig review

Post-gig review is the short follow-up after the event. It helps Gigditty understand what happened, whether payment was handled, and which relationships were dependable.

Best forAfter the show
Main topicsPayment and feedback
Helps withTrust and history

Quick path

  1. Open the gig that needs review, usually from the dashboard or past gigs list.
  2. Confirm whether the expected payment happened.
  3. Review the people, group, or host you worked with.
  4. Choose specialties or notes that describe the work, if Gigditty asks.
  5. Mention real issues clearly and fairly.
  6. Submit the review while the gig is still fresh.
  7. Check Finance if the payment status created a pending item or record.

Looking for review tasks? Open past gigs from the dashboard and look for gigs that need follow-up. Open the gig dashboard.

Why review matters

Review is not only a rating. It helps turn a completed event into useful history. That history can support reputation, recommendations, Marketplace matches, and future booking decisions.

Fair review also helps the people you worked with. It gives a clearer picture than old messages or memory alone.

Be honest and specific. Good feedback focuses on what happened, not on guesses about intent.

Confirm what happened with payment

If the gig included pay, Gigditty may ask whether payment happened as expected. This helps keep finance records and follow-up tasks realistic.

Answer based on what actually happened. If money is still expected, the record should not pretend everything is complete.

Payment situationHow to think about it
Paid as expectedThe agreed payment was handled and no follow-up is needed for that part of the gig.
Still pendingPayment is expected but has not happened yet, or still needs confirmation.
Changed or unclearUse notes and follow-up so the record matches the real agreement.

Leave useful feedback

Useful feedback is short, fair, and tied to the work. You do not need to write a public speech. A few clear details are enough.

Think about communication, preparation, reliability, professionalism, and whether the gig matched what was agreed.

  • Review soon enough that you remember the details.
  • Mention what went well.
  • Mention problems in practical language.
  • Avoid adding private information that does not need to be shared.

Understand who you are reviewing

The review questions may feel different depending on your role. A performer may review a host. A host may review an applicant or performer. A group may review work connected to the group.

Before submitting, make sure you are reviewing from the correct perspective. That keeps the feedback attached to the right relationship.

  • Check whether you are acting as yourself, a group, or a host.
  • Review the specific gig experience, not the person's entire history.
  • Use notes when the situation needs context.

Resolve issues and move on

Some gigs have loose ends. Payment might be late, communication may have been messy, or a lineup change may need to be recorded. Post-gig review gives you a place to close the loop.

Once the review and finance follow-up are handled, the gig becomes a cleaner part of your history.

  • Use messages for conversations that still need a response.
  • Use Finance for money records and pending items.
  • Use review notes for feedback about the gig experience.
  • Keep the tone calm and factual when there was a problem.

Close the loop while it is fresh. A two-minute review after the gig can save a lot of guessing months later.