Event ticketing

Humanitix Virtual Assistant: a VA who builds the event so you can run the room

For workshop-running clinicians, coaches, trainers and community organisations who sell every seat through Humanitix and build every event page at 10pm.

30 minutes with Jenn, the founder. No card, no lock-in.

What your VA actually does inside Humanitix

Event build-out

Each new event built from your run sheet, or duplicated from the last one so your branding, checkout questions and ticket structure carry over. Dates, venue or online link, images, accessibility info and the event description all in before tickets go live, with a draft preview link sent to you for sign-off.

Ticket types and pricing tiers

Early bird, general and concession tickets set up with the right quantities, sale windows and scheduled price changes, so early bird actually closes when it should instead of when you remember. Group and member pricing configured the same way every time.

Discount codes and tracking links

Promo codes created per partner or campaign with usage caps and expiry dates, plus Humanitix tracking links for each channel, so when the event sells out you can see whether it was the newsletter, the Instagram post or the partner org that did it.

Attendee questions and order admin

The inbox that fills the week before an event, dietary changes, name swaps, 'can I move to the March date', handled from the Manage attendees and Orders screens: ticket transfers, detail edits and resent confirmations done same day, with anything unusual escalated to you.

Waitlist and refunds

When a paid order is refunded or you release held seats, your VA works the Humanitix waitlist and offers the spots in order, faster than the built-in auto-offer, which drips to one guest every 30 minutes on a timer you cannot change and only kicks in once a minimum number of tickets frees up. Refunds processed inside Humanitix strictly to the policy you have written down.

Reminder and follow-up emails

Pre-event reminder emails scheduled through Humanitix's attendee messaging with parking, what to bring and the online link, then the post-event follow-up with slides, the feedback form and the next event date, drafted for your approval before anything sends.

Check-in prep

Comp tickets issued to speakers and volunteers, the attendee list groomed for duplicates, and the Humanitix for Hosts scanning app set up and tested before the day, so whoever is on the door scans tickets instead of scrolling a spreadsheet.

Post-event reporting

The attendee report, sales summary and discount code performance pulled into one pack within 48 hours, reconciled against the Humanitix payout, so you know what the event actually made before you plan the next one.

Nobody searches “humanitix virtual assistant” the week after a quiet month. You search it in event week, when the ticket page needed a price change yesterday, three attendees want to swap to the next date, the reminder email is still a draft, and you are also the person delivering the workshop. Humanitix made ticketing easy. It did not make event admin disappear, it just moved all of it into one login that somebody still has to sit in.

The weekly rhythm a VA runs in your Humanitix

Event admin is not a flat daily routine like an inbox, it moves in a cycle, so this is the honest shape of the work across one event.

Build week. You send a run sheet: the date, the venue or Zoom link, the ticket structure, the copy or the bones of it. Your VA duplicates your last comparable event so the checkout questions, images and refund policy carry across, then rebuilds the details: ticket types with quantities, an early bird tier with a scheduled price change so it closes automatically on the date you chose, concession and group pricing if you run them, and any new checkout questions, dietary needs, referral source, CPD number if your attendees are clinicians. You get a preview link and nothing goes on sale until you have clicked through it.

The sale window. Discount codes go out per partner, each with a usage cap and an expiry so a code shared in a Facebook group cannot quietly discount forty tickets. Tracking links get created for the newsletter, the socials and each partner organisation, so when the event fills you know which channel actually filled it, rather than guessing. Through this stretch the VA also watches sales pace and flags it to you plainly: eighteen sold at the two-week mark against thirty last time is a fact you want on a Tuesday, not a surprise on the day.

Attendee traffic. This is the part that eats your evenings now. Name changes, ticket transfers to a later date, “I never got my confirmation”, “can my colleague come instead”, refund requests. Your VA works these from the Manage attendees and Orders screens: transfers done, details edited, confirmations resent, refunds processed strictly to the written policy on your event page, and the genuinely odd ones, a dispute, a complaint, anything with heat in it, escalated to you with the order history attached. Most of it clears same day because it is somebody’s actual job now instead of your leftover hour.

The waitlist, worked properly. When an event sells out, Humanitix collects waitlist names, and its auto-offer can release freed seats, but only to one guest every 30 minutes, on a timer you cannot speed up, and only after a minimum number of tickets opens up. Fine three weeks out, useless the night before. Your VA sends manual offers instead: seat opens, top of the list gets the offer, a reasonable window to take it, then down to the next name. Sold-out events stay actually full instead of going out with two empty chairs that somebody paid to be told they could not have.

Event week. Reminder emails scheduled through Humanitix’s attendee messaging, one a few days out with logistics and one the morning of with the address or the join link. Comp tickets issued to speakers, helpers and anyone you owe a seat. The attendee list groomed, duplicates merged, and the Humanitix for Hosts app set up and tested so the person on the door scans QR codes off a phone. If you feed data onward, the Mailchimp sync or Zapier connection pushing new attendees into your list or CRM gets checked before the rush, not after it breaks.

After. Within 48 hours: the attendee report, the sales summary, discount code performance and a reconciliation against the Humanitix payout, in one pack. Then the follow-up email, slides, recording, feedback form, the date and link for the next one, drafted for your sign-off. That follow-up is where the next event’s first ten tickets come from, and it is precisely the email that never gets sent when the organiser is also the presenter.

The honest bit

Things Humanitix will not do, whoever you hire.

The waitlist will auto-offer freed seats, but on its own terms: one guest every 30 minutes, a cadence you cannot change, and only after a minimum number of tickets opens up. Filling the last seats close to event day takes manual offers, which is exactly why it works as a VA task and fails as a “we’ll get to it” task.

Humanitix is not a CRM and not an email marketing platform. Its attendee messaging is excellent for people who hold a ticket to a specific event; it is not the tool for nurturing your whole audience between events. Humanitix does have a native Mailchimp sync for ticket buyers, and Zapier covers most CRMs, but someone still has to set the connection up, decide who gets synced, and check it keeps firing.

Booking fees are real money even when they do good. Humanitix donates its booking fee profits to charity, which is a genuine reason people choose it, but the fee still exists on paid tickets and you still decide whether to absorb it or pass it to buyers at checkout. That decision changes your margin per seat. A VA applies your choice consistently; the choice itself is yours.

And the obvious one: your VA is in Manila, working your business hours, and cannot stand at a door in Brunswick scanning tickets. What they can do is make door duty a ten-minute job for whoever is physically there.

What stays with you

Plenty of Humanitix clients are clinicians, allied health educators and coaches running paid training, so the line matters. Your VA does the operational work: pages, tickets, codes, comms, reports. What they never touch: your event content and any clinical or professional claims in it, CPD or accreditation wording, ticket pricing and the fee absorb-or-pass decision, the refund policy itself (they execute it, you write it), final approval on any email that goes to attendees under your name, and the banking and payout settings, which the scoped user access we set up keeps out of reach by design rather than by promise. If an attendee email contains anything that needs a professional’s answer, it comes to you under a written escalation rule, not a best guess.

What it costs and where to start

Humanitix admin sits on our admin tier, $12-17 AUD an hour excl GST. Most event clients run 10-15 hours a week, roughly $500-1,100 a month, with the Humanitix work flexing heavier in build week and event week and lighter between, alongside whatever else fills the role, inbox, socials, attendee and customer replies. Placement takes 7-10 business days from your discovery call, then 5-7 days supervised inside your Humanitix account, starting on a draft duplicate event, before anything goes live solo. A $500 refundable deposit credits against your first month, there is a 30-day recalibrate-or-replace guarantee, and no lock-in beyond 14 days notice, so a bad fit costs you a fortnight, not a contract.

If events are the whole business, the wedding and event planners page covers the wider role; if you run training and courses, the education page is the better read. The VA cost guide breaks down the full pricing model, and when you are ready, book a discovery call with Jenn, who takes every one herself, and bring your next event’s run sheet with you.

Humanitix VA questions

Will the VA actually know Humanitix, or am I training someone from scratch?

Humanitix is straightforward enough that a capable admin VA becomes fluent inside a week, and because it is one of the most widely used ticketing platforms in Australia, candidates who have run events on it do exist and we look for them first. Either way the ramp is 5-7 days supervised inside your account, starting with a duplicated draft event you check line by line before anything goes on sale.

Can the VA see our bank details or move our payout money?

No. Payout and banking settings sit with the host account owner, and the additional user access we set up for the VA is scoped to event management, orders, attendee messaging and reporting. The VA reconciles reports against payouts you can see; they never touch where the money lands.

The VA is in Manila. Who scans tickets at the door?

Not the VA, and we will not pretend otherwise. What they do is make the door trivial: comp tickets issued, the attendee list clean, the Humanitix for Hosts app configured and tested, and a one-page door sheet for whichever volunteer or team member is standing there. Scanning takes a phone and ten minutes of instructions they prepare.

We only run six or eight events a year. Is a VA overkill?

Possibly, if that is genuinely all the admin you have. Most of our event clients put Humanitix work inside a broader 10-15 hour week that also covers inbox, socials and follow-up, with hours flexing up in event week. If your only pain is two events a year, honestly, keep doing it yourself and come back when the calendar fills.

Who decides whether we absorb the booking fee or pass it to buyers?

You do, once, in writing. Humanitix lets the host absorb fees or add them at checkout, and it changes your ticket maths either way, so it is a pricing decision that stays with the owner. Your VA applies whatever you have chosen to every ticket type and never quietly flips it.

A placement like this in practice

Composite case studies built from real DotVA placements. Identifying details anonymised; numbers are real outcomes.

Ready to hand it over?

Book a free discovery call

30 minutes with Jenn, the founder. Tell her you run Humanitix and what's eating your week; she'll tell you honestly what a VA can own inside it, what it costs, and whether it makes sense.

87+ Australian placements since 2024, a 30-day replacement guarantee and no lock-in beyond 14 days notice. Audit the 5-stage vetting process and how VA access is secured before you book.

No obligation. No credit card. Jenn, the founder, reads every enquiry herself and replies inside one business day. Prefer to talk first? Call (03) 9961 6076, Melbourne line, business hours. DotVA is Boring Ventures Pty Ltd, ABN 67 671 943 758, Melbourne. How to verify us.

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