Ticketmaster
Ticketmaster is a major ticketing website and app for concerts, sports, theater, festivals, and other live events, combining primary ticket sales, mobile tickets, fan support, and verified resale tools.
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Ticketmaster is a major ticketing website and app for concerts, sports, theater, festivals, and other live events, combining primary ticket sales, mobile tickets, fan support, and verified resale tools.
Meetup is a popular website and app for finding, joining, and organizing groups built around shared interests, local communities, professional networks, hobbies, classes, and events.
Eventbrite is a popular event discovery and ticketing website where organizers publish event pages, sell or reserve tickets, manage registrations, and help people find live experiences online.
Webflow is a visual web development website and platform for designing, building, managing, hosting, and optimizing professional websites with a CMS, responsive layout tools, interactions, and custom code options.
Zendesk is a customer service software website and platform for support teams, combining ticketing, messaging, live chat, help centers, AI agents, voice, analytics, and customer experience workflows.
HubSpot is a customer platform and CRM website that combines marketing, sales, service, content, operations, commerce, automation, analytics, and AI tools for businesses.
Hulu is a streaming website and app for on-demand television, movies, originals, next-day network programming, and live TV packages, available as a standalone service or in Disney bundle offerings.
Asana is a work management website and app that helps teams organize tasks, projects, goals, workflows, deadlines, approvals, and cross-functional work in one shared system.
Mailchimp is an email and marketing automation platform that helps businesses manage audiences, send campaigns, build customer journeys, create landing pages, analyze results, and connect marketing tools.
Glassdoor is a workplace and job-search website where people research companies, read employee reviews, compare salaries, explore interview experiences, join career conversations, and apply for jobs.
Waze is a navigation website and app that uses community reports, live traffic information, map editing, and route calculation to help drivers choose routes and avoid delays.
Trello is a visual work management website and app where people organize projects with boards, lists, cards, checklists, due dates, comments, attachments, and simple automation.
Product Hunt is a product discovery website where makers launch apps, tools, startups, books, games, and other new products while the community votes, comments, reviews, and compares what is gaining attention.
Hacker News is a social news and discussion website focused on computing, startups, research, engineering, business, and other topics that interest technically curious readers.
Indeed is an employment website and hiring platform where job seekers search listings, post resumes, research companies, and apply for work while employers post jobs, promote openings, and use recruiting tools to find candidates.
Wix is a website-building and online business platform that helps individuals, small businesses, agencies, and enterprises create websites, stores, portfolios, booking pages, blogs, and digital experiences without managing traditional web infrastructure.
Letterboxd is a social website and app for logging films, rating and reviewing movies, building watchlists, following friends, making lists, and discovering what to watch next. Founded by film fans in 2011, it became a central online home for cinephile culture by combining a personal movie diary with social feeds, criticism, memes, lists, festival buzz, and recommendation habits.
Rotten Tomatoes is a movie and television review website best known for the Tomatometer, which summarizes the share of positive reviews from approved critics, and the Popcornmeter, which reflects audience ratings. The site turns criticism, fan response, trailers, editorial guides, and streaming discovery into quick signals that shape how many people decide what to watch.
Craigslist is a local classifieds website where people post and search listings for jobs, housing, goods, services, gigs, community notices, discussion forums, and more. It began in San Francisco in the 1990s and became famous for keeping a sparse, utility-first design while influencing online marketplaces, local commerce, apartment hunting, job searching, and person-to-person internet trust.
Dailymotion is a French video-sharing and streaming platform where people watch news, sports, entertainment, music, creator uploads, publisher clips, and other online video. Founded in 2005, it became one of the early global web-video sites alongside YouTube, then evolved toward curated video, publisher tools, advertising products, and embedded player technology.
Dribbble is a design portfolio and creative community where designers, illustrators, product teams, agencies, and studios share visual work, browse inspiration, build portfolios, and connect with hiring opportunities. Founded in 2009 as a small invite-only space for designers to share work and feedback, it became a major design discovery site known for shots, polished UI previews, portfolio visibility, freelance leads, job posts, and visual design culture.
Behance is a creative portfolio and discovery platform where designers, illustrators, photographers, art directors, motion designers, typographers, architects, and studios publish project case studies, browse visual inspiration, follow creatives, and connect with hiring opportunities. Founded by Scott Belsky and Matias Corea and acquired by Adobe in 2012, it became a major showcase layer for the creative industry and Adobe Creative Cloud ecosystem.
Yelp is a local search and review platform where people find restaurants, shops, home services, nightlife, beauty businesses, healthcare offices, and other local businesses through ratings, written reviews, photos, menus, maps, quotes, and business information. Founded in 2004 by Jeremy Stoppelman and Russel Simmons, it helped make online word-of-mouth a major force in local discovery and small-business reputation.
Goodreads is a book-focused social cataloging website where readers track books, rate and review titles, build shelves, follow authors, join groups, set reading goals, and discover recommendations. Launched in 2007 and acquired by Amazon in 2013, it became one of the webโ€s most influential reader communities, shaping how books are found, compared, marketed, discussed, and remembered online.