When a guest scans in, opens a confirmation, or walks up to a kiosk, they are still at your event. The software underneath should not break that spell. That is why brand control in CheckInHub is not a settings page you have to go looking for — it is built into every surface from the start.
One console, every surface
Logo, colours, fonts and copy are editable from a single place. Change them once and the change flows through the door view, the kiosk, the attendee-facing confirmations and the reports. The platform reads as part of your event, not as our product wearing your name in the corner.
We made this the default rather than an upgrade because we think it is the honest way to build an events platform. The night belongs to the organiser. Our job is to disappear into it.
Tokens, not guesswork
Underneath, the whole interface is driven by design tokens — a single source for colour, spacing, radius and motion. When you set a brand colour, you are not painting individual buttons; you are moving one value that every component already references. That is what keeps a white-labelled instance feeling coherent rather than patched together.
It also means accessibility holds up. Because the system knows how colours relate, contrast and focus states stay legible when you change the palette, instead of quietly breaking on a screen you never checked.
Why it matters at the door
Branding is often treated as decoration. At an event it is infrastructure. A confirmation that looks like your event reassures the guest it is real. A kiosk in your colours tells staff which queue is theirs. Consistency is a small thing that does a lot of quiet work.
Set it once, and let the platform carry it the rest of the way.