Manage event website

Overview

In the Manage pages area you manage the page structure of the event website. You can create new pages, rename existing ones, change the order in the navigation and define which pages should be visible.

Features

Edit website pages

  1. Open the event whose website you want to edit.
  2. In the left menu, navigate to the Website area.
  3. Select an existing page from the list.
  4. Change the information you want to update.
  5. Click Save (bottom right, blue).

Create new page

  1. Open the event and go to the Website area.
  2. Click the plus icon at the bottom left of the content block.
  3. Fill in the required fields (e.g. page title, URL slug).
  4. Optionally add further settings, e.g. whether the page should appear in the navigation.
  5. Click Save (bottom right, blue).

Delete page

  1. Open the website management for the event.
  2. Select the page you want to delete.
  3. Click the trash icon (top centre for each page).
  4. Confirm deletion in the dialog.

Fields

Page type and settings

  1. Page type: Two different page types are currently available (standard page or redirect).
  2. Order: The order of pages (shown in the public site menu) can be adjusted using the arrow keys.

General page information

  1. Path: Technical path of the page in the event website URL (e.g. about, so you get a link like eradiant.eu/organisation/events/eventshortname/about).
  2. Title in navigation: Name of the page shown in the navigation and headings (required field).
  3. Status: Indicates whether the page is published, only prepared internally (Staging) or Archived.
  4. SEO title (optional): Shown as the blue headline in search results (SERPs) and in the browser tab. It is a critical factor for SEO ranking and click‑through rate (CTR); it should be concise (55–60 characters) and include the main keyword. It is often pre-filled and does not have to be changed.
  5. SEO description (optional): An SEO description (meta description) is a short HTML text (approx. 140–156 characters) that appears under the title in search results to encourage clicks. It increases CTR, improves visibility and should be concise, relevant and include a keyword.
  6. Protected: Indicates whether the page should be protected with an access code. The access code is the individual ticket code for this event.
  7. Allow search engine indexing: Indicates whether the page should be findable via web search. Normal pages should enable this; for some ticket pages, not indexing can make sense.
  8. Hide in navigation: Controls whether the page is visible in the website navigation menu.

Clickable icons

  • Arrows: Move the order of pages
  • Trash: Delete page (cannot be undone)
  • Pencil icon: Edit page – adjust the page content
  • Eye icon: Show the page in preview

Usage

Via website management you define the structure of your event website. Clear naming and a sensible order of pages help visitors find their way around the site quickly.