For the Carolinas Secular Conference in Myrtle Beach, I built and managed the convention website — ticket sales, schedules, and hotel information — and then worked the event itself, running A/V and coordinating speakers on the ground.
The Brief
An annual convention needs one dependable hub: where attendees buy tickets, check the schedule, and plan their stay. It also needs someone at the venue making sure the program actually runs. I handled both sides — the platform before the event, and the production during it.
What I Delivered

Convention website
Built and managed the event hub — schedules, hotel details, and everything attendees needed.

Ticket sales
Online ticketing that carried the convention's registrations from announcement to sell-through.

A/V production
Ran audio-visual on the ground so every session looked and sounded professional.

Speaker logistics
Coordinated speakers and schedules across the weekend — the invisible work that keeps a conference on time.
From the Conference
The Carolinas Secular Conference banner — Myrtle Beach, SC, October 2–4, 2015.
The Organization
Real links from the project — see the work for yourself.
On the Ground
Website work gets you to opening day; event work gets you through it. Between sessions I ran sound and video, kept speakers on schedule, and handled the hundred small problems every live event generates — quietly, so nobody noticed them.
Skills & Tools
The stack behind this build — tap any to see related work.
Digital + Physical, One Job
A conference is a product with a hard launch date. Delivering the platform and the production together — tickets sold, sessions on time, A/V clean — is exactly the end-to-end ownership I bring to technical projects.


