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Publishing

Preview and publish your event page

Use preview to catch trust issues, choose the right visibility setting, and publish an event page that is ready to share.

7 min readUpdated Jun 18, 2026
Audience

Curators who have an event draft and are preparing to share it.

User need

I want to know what to check before publishing my event page.

Preview is your final trust check

Preview shows how the public event page will feel to someone who has never met you. Read it as an attendee, not as the person who already knows the plan.

The most common publishing problems are not beautiful-design problems. They are missing date, unclear location, confusing audience fit, no capacity expectation, or a registration form that asks for too much too early.

Publish the page

1

Open preview

Check the cover, title, host identity, date, location, registration button, description, agenda, and form fields.

2

Fix required details

Add missing schedule, timezone, location, or capacity details. If paid tickets are active, complete payment setup before expecting checkout to work.

3

Choose visibility

Use Public when you want the page to be discoverable and indexable. Use Unlisted when you only want people with the link to access it.

4

Confirm publish

The publish modal checks key page details and may show blockers. Resolve blockers, then publish and copy the share link.

5

Test the public link

Open the event link in a private window or a different browser profile. Confirm the page loads and the registration button is visible.

Public vs. unlisted visibility

Visibility
Best use
Public
Use for events that should be discoverable, shareable, and eligible for search indexing when safety and content checks pass.
Unlisted
Use for invite-only links, soft launches, partner previews, private cohorts, or events that should not appear in public discovery.

SEO note

A public event page can generate Event structured data, canonical metadata, Open Graph previews, and sitemap coverage. Unlisted or private events should not be treated as SEO landing pages.

Publishing checklist

The first screen shows title, time, location, host, and registration action.

The description explains who should attend and what they will experience.

The agenda fits the event duration.

Registration capacity, approval, and waitlist settings are intentional.

Public or unlisted visibility matches your promotion plan.

The share preview image and description are accurate.

For paid events, Pro subscription and Stripe payouts are ready before checkout launch.

What happens after publishing

After publishing, the event has a shareable URL. Use that link in email, social posts, community chats, newsletters, or partner pages.

If the page is public, keep the title and description stable once promotion starts. You can still edit details, but avoid changing the core promise after attendees have registered unless you also notify them clearly.

FAQ

Can I edit an event after publishing?

Yes. You can update the event, but changes that affect attendee expectations should be communicated clearly.

Will every public event be indexed by Google?

Public pages are eligible for indexing when they pass visibility, safety, and technical checks. Search engines decide whether and when to index.

When should I use unlisted visibility?

Use unlisted for private cohorts, invite-only events, drafts shared with collaborators, or soft launches before public promotion.

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