- STAGE:
- Development
Jifflenow: IRP Customizations
The Inbound Request Page (IRP) is the first touchpoint external attendees have with the meetings — yet today, Meeting Managers have almost no control over how it looks or what it says. Branding is limited to a single banner image, and system-generated text like confirmation messages, field labels, and the post-close message cannot be changed without raising an App Support ticket. Coming soon, Jifflenow is giving Meeting Managers full self-serve control over IRP branding and content — from custom colors, fonts, and layout to every piece of text attendees see. This eliminates CSM dependency for routine IRP setup and makes the page a genuine extension of your brand.
Key Highlights
Color & Font: Meeting Managers can set a custom brand color via hex picker and choose from a curated list of web-safe fonts — no App Support ticket required.
Rich Media: Add multiple images and embed a YouTube or Vimeo video directly on the IRP to bring your event messaging to life.
Layout Control: Choose between two IRP layouts — form on the left or right — and control whether attendee details appear as the first or last step in the request flow.
Text Management: A dedicated text panel gives Meeting Managers self-serve control over every system-generated IRP string: confirmation messages, post-close messages, field labels, session count text, and privacy policy link text.
Live Preview: All branding and text changes can be previewed in real time before publishing, so nothing goes live unexpectedly.
Why Does It Matter
Self-serve: Meeting Managers can brand and configure the IRP entirely on their own
Brand Native: The IRP can now look and feel like the customer's own website, reducing attendee friction and making the meeting request experience feel native to the event.
Faster Setup: With live preview and reset-to-default options, the IRP setup that previously required days of back-and-forth now happens in minutes.
Consistent Scale: Changes apply across all IRP entry points — direct URL or iframe embed — so large, multi-event programs stay on-brand without extra effort.