Chobble Tickets vs Pen and Paper

Sometimes a clipboard and a guest list is all you need, but here's when it makes sense to upgrade to software.

Both approaches share some things:

  • Keeping a list of who's coming
  • Checking people in at the door
  • Working without an internet connection (pen and paper always works; Chobble Tickets QR codes work offline once loaded)
  • No mandatory attendee account required

When pen and paper works

For a small gathering where you know everyone, pen and paper is fine. There's no learning curve, no setup time, and no annual fee, so if you're running a dinner party for 20 people you don't need ticketing software.

When software helps

Pen and paper starts to struggle when:

  • You're selling tickets online - You can't take card payments with a clipboard
  • You need to track capacity - Overbooking is easy when multiple people are taking bookings
  • You want confirmation emails - Attendees expect a booking confirmation they can refer back to
  • You need to check people in - QR codes are faster and more reliable than scanning a list of names
  • You're handling refunds - Tracking who paid what and who needs a refund gets messy on paper
  • Multiple people are managing the event - Shared spreadsheets get out of sync

What Chobble Tickets adds over pen and paper

Chobble Tickets supports free events without payment setup, so even if you're not charging you can use it just for the RSVP tracking, capacity management, and check-in features. Here's what you get:

Think of it as a digital alternative to the clipboard that sends confirmation emails and scales when you need it to.