Case Study: The Gideons International
How The Gideons International unifies multi-state conventions — and prepares for a global rollout — with one platform built for relationships, not just registration.
When thousands of people show up to celebrate, everything has to work. Here's how KC Oktoberfest keeps lines moving, operations smooth, and guests happy year after year.
KC Oktoberfest has become one of the region’s biggest cultural celebrations—16,000+ attendees, multiple days, and a reputation for creating an experience people come back to year after year.
But at that scale, the smallest inefficiency becomes a bottleneck. Long lines at entry. Slow transactions. Volunteers trying to learn the system an hour before their shift starts.
And as the KC Bier team knows: “When you have 16,000 people come to your event, they don’t care why the ticket system’s not working. They only know I need in the gate.”
KC Bier Co. needed a partner who could handle the behind-the-scenes complexity so they could focus on what they do best: putting on a celebration of German culture that brings the community together.
We worked with KC Oktoberfest to streamline ticketing, speed up entry, integrate seamless onsite payments through Square, and provide real-time reporting so organizers could see what was happening as it happened.
The Brushfire team was available throughout the event, troubleshooting on the fly and handling questions so the KC Bier team could focus on the actual event.
Faster entry. Smoother operations. Volunteers who could get up to speed in minutes, not hours. A system that worked for everyone, from 90-year-old attendees to first-time festival-goers.
Great events aren’t just about what people see; they’re about how everything works behind the scenes.
And when it all comes together, you get to enjoy the show.
How The Gideons International unifies multi-state conventions — and prepares for a global rollout — with one platform built for relationships, not just registration.
How LifeFamily Church Found Big Results, Short Ramp, & One Platform to Run it All
How a volunteer-run fall festival welcomed 21,000 attendees in one weekend — and kept its small-town soul.