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What is CueProX?
A clearer picture of the product, the problems it solves, and how it's used in practice.
What is CueProX?
The problem with live shows
Live events are organized chaos. Dozens of people need to be in sync, and the moment something changes — a song drops, a speaker runs long, the tech breaks — the information has to get to everyone fast.
Most teams handle this with a mix of printed running orders, group chats, walkie-talkies, and a lot of shouting across the room. It works until something shifts. Then someone has the old version, someone missed the message, and the show is held together by memory and goodwill.
A structured alternative
CueProX gives one person — the director — a structured running order and a control surface. From there, every team sees their relevant slice of information on their own screen, updated in real time. When the director advances a cue, the outputs update instantly. There's no "can everyone refresh?" There's no second version of the running order floating around. There's one source of truth, and everyone is looking at it simultaneously.
What it looks like in practice
Sunday morning service. The worship band needs song keys and tempo. The sound team needs notes about IEM mixes and channel ducking. The lights team needs timing for transitions. The host needs a confidence monitor with the order of service. During the message, the congregation can submit questions through a public Q&A page, and a moderator approves them before they appear on stage. All of that runs through one director, one interface.
Theater production. A stage manager calls the show from the director view — lighting cues, sound cues, video playback, scene transitions. Each department sees their cues on their own screen, in the right order, at the right time. No headset calls for routine cues. No separate cue sheets to maintain.
What's included out of the box
CueProX ships with everything a typical production team needs:
- Q&A pipeline — a public submission page, a moderation queue, and an on-stage display
- Stage roster with solo tracking — who's on stage, with one-tap solo alerts for the sound team
- Team outputs — customizable per-team screens accessible on any device with a browser
- Presentor view — a confidence monitor for hosts and speakers
- Multi-room support — run multiple rooms independently from the same account
You don't need to use all of it. Start with what solves your immediate problem and build from there.
If you're new, the next page gives you a quick tour of the interface. If you already have an account, jump to your dashboard and follow along.