TicketLeap

Ticketleap Inc.
Industry Ticketing
Founded 2003
Founder Christopher Stanchak
Headquarters Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
Area served
North America, Australia, Europe
Key people
Tim Raybould (President & CEO), Christopher Stanchak (Chairman)
Website ticketleap.com

Ticketleap[1][2][3][4] is an online ticket sales and event marketing company based in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in the United States. Founded in 2003 by Wharton graduate Christopher Stanchak, Ticketleap differentiates itself from large ticket vendors by catering its e-ticketing services to small companies and events, as well as larger events. The company started out as just Chris and his mother Connie as the first employee, but has since expanded across the United States, and now Canada, Australia, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Mexico, New Zealand, Spain and the United Kingdom. CEO, Chris Stanchak, was nominated as a finalist for the 2011 Greater Philadelphia Region Ernst & Young Entrepreneur of The Year Award in May, 2011.[5] In July 2012, Ticketleap was recognized as one of the “2012 Hottest Pennsylvania Companies” by Lead411.[6]

Features

On August 2, 2010, Ticketleap launched a new platform, integrated into the social media sites Facebook and Twitter[7]

In January 10, 2011 the company announced an Android ticket scanning application, allowing event organizers to scan tickets for Ticketleap events with an Android phone and ensure that all tickets are authentic.[8]

On May 13, 2011 Ticketleap launched Ticketleap Box Office Ticket Sales, allowing event organizers to sell tickets anywhere there is an Internet connection, such as selling tickets at the door. The product keeps online and onsite sales all in one system.[9]

On April 30, 2012 Ticketleap released a "self-service seating" feature, an industry first. This feature enables event organizers to build and control custom seating for event attendees and allows event goers to choose their own seats at a specific price point.[10]

On June 25, 2012, Ticketleap ditched the frog and rebranded themselves.[11]

See also

References

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