The problem

Six tabs at 11pm is no way to buy a ticket.

Resale prices in the UK are volatile, opaque, and built to wear you down. Buyers either overpay early or refresh until they miss out. There's no public signal for when to act.

3

signals Seatnudge checks before a useful reminder: current public price, listing depth and buy-link safety.

1

chosen channel per request — email or WhatsApp — so the nudge goes where the user asked for it.

0

ticket purchases, payment details, queue-bypass attempts, or messages when a safe useful price cannot be verified.

STOP

opt-out copy belongs in every real delivery template before production sends are enabled.

What we verify before a nudge: current public price, listing depth and buy-link safety. No peer-reviewed forecast, no guarantee. Seatnudge does not tell you to buy; it gives you a timely signal and a safe link to check yourself.

The refresh-or-request dilemma

Two ways to lose — until a nudge request narrows the decision.

Every resale buyer faces the same forked road. A useful nudge request turns it into an event, budget, timing and channel choice.

FORK 01

Buy now with no signal.

You're stressed. The act is hot. Listings are climbing. So you buy days out, even though you only needed one trusted price check closer to the event.

Cost: paying before you know whether the current public price is useful for your real budget.

FORK 02

Wait, hope, refresh.

Nudge requests change the job: tell Seatnudge the event, budget, timing window and email or WhatsApp channel, then let the worker decide whether the price and buy link are safe enough to message.

Cost: spending the week babysitting resale tabs, then missing the moment a useful listing appears.