Who We Are

About Gigplan

DJ management, rethought - simple, structured, made for real DJ life

Gigplan is a modern DJ management app that brings structure into a world that's usually chaotic. We help DJs organize gigs, tasks, payments, contacts and insights - all in one place.

No spreadsheets.
No scattered notes.
No missed gigs.
The Challenge

Why Gigplan Exists

Too Many Tools

For years, DJs and musicians have been managing their careers with Excel sheets, notes apps, WhatsApp chats and half-broken reminders. Important information gets lost, payments are forgotten, contacts disappear and there's never a clear overview of what actually matters.

One Clear System

Gigplan was created because we were tired of juggling tools that were never built for DJs in the first place. We wanted one simple system that understands DJ life - gigs, promoters, payments, deadlines and priorities.

Our Mission

We make DJ life easier, clearer and more professional. Gigplan gives DJs a single place to manage their entire business - from upcoming gigs and tasks to finances, analytics and contacts. Less chaos, more control.

Our Vision

We believe DJs deserve the same quality of tools as any other business. Our vision is to become the go-to DJ management platform worldwide - the standard tool DJs rely on to organize, grow and run their careers professionally.

Our Values

What We Stand For

Built for DJs

Every feature is designed around real DJ workflows - not generic business assumptions.

Clarity over Chaos

We focus on what's relevant: upcoming gigs, important contacts, open payments and meaningful insights.

Simplicity

Powerful features don't need to be complicated. Gigplan stays clean, intuitive and easy to use.

Transparency

Clear overviews, honest analytics and full control over your data - no hidden complexity.

Gigplan team - DJs building DJ management software in Berlin
Our Story

From DJs, For DJs

Gigplan wasn't created in a boardroom. It was built from real DJ experience - long nights, forgotten details, unpaid gigs and too many tools that didn't talk to each other.