Demo interest
Best for owners evaluating fit, pricing, switching, setup, or whether Ballroom Booking understands their studio.
Contact
Demo interest, general questions, and current-studio support should not feel like the same doorway. Start with the path that matches what you need, and include enough studio context for a useful reply.
Studio Operating View
Ballroom Booking
Routing clarity
Studio owners evaluating software should use the demo form. General questions can go by email. Current studio users should stay on the active account/contact path tied to their studio.
Best for owners evaluating fit, pricing, switching, setup, or whether Ballroom Booking understands their studio.
Use email for referrals, partnerships, existing conversations, or a question that does not need a product walkthrough yet.
Studios already using Ballroom Booking should use the active account contact path so support stays connected to the studio record.
Demo or general contact
A studio owner should not have to guess whether to email or book a demo. Use the demo form for software evaluation. Use email for general questions, referrals, or existing conversations.
Use the route that gives your question the right context.
Email opens to dance@foxballroom.com with a short prompt for useful context.
Support and setup expectations
Ballroom Booking support and setup conversations should feel specific to the way your studio actually runs: private lessons, packages, couples, staff roles, public sales, payments, and the first workflows your team needs to trust.

Studio-specific
The useful conversation is not a generic ticket exchange. It is about whether your owner, front desk, instructors, and students can rely on the same operating picture.
What this screenshot shows
Request a demo so the conversation can focus on your real setup, switching questions, packages, payments, staff workflows, and the path your team would need to trust first.