I dig the layout. A few minor suggestions:<p>Main page:<p>1) The Twitter and Facebook buttons seem oddly placed. Maybe center them above "Need help?"<p>2) Try putting a transparent gradient over your screenshots. It'll make them look slick and less visually distracting.<p>3) The "From our blog" boxes look a little non-descript. Consider making it a list of "Date / Title", and to the right of them adding 1-3 testimonials.<p>Pricing page:<p>1) There's a 30 day free trial (make "Day" lowercase, imo), and below that, a $0/mo plan. Are they the same thing or different? It isn't clear.<p>2) "Pay as you go features" This also strikes me as unclear, since I associate "Pay as you go" as being a metered service. If it's really just $50 per event, you could come up with a better way to convey that. Consider putting a blue box around those features with a header saying $50/event, and then adding 10-20 pixels of space between the "Conqueror" and "Empire" plans.<p>Best of luck!
1. I think you are shooting yourself in the foot with your pricing, why don't you create a middle plan and limit usage by number of events per week?<p>2. The conquerer/empire thing I just don't get, its confusing why not try something like Promoter / Enterprise? Selling subscriptions is hard enough, I always try to be as simple as possible on my pricing page.
As someone who's owned a night club before, I probably wouldn't pay $400/mo for this. That said, it is really hard to get an idea of what this product is all about from the website. Maybe it has that kind of value, I just can't tell.
The UI is pretty obviously Twitter Bootstrap. While not necessarily a bad thing, it gives off the appearance of being vaporware.<p>Agreed with everyone else, I'm not sure what research you did on the pricing, but this is way off from what a typical club/promoter can afford.<p>$49/month is as high as I'd go for a base plan, and scale accordingly for "enterprise"