---
title: Events Page — Placeholder Removal and Messaging
type: article
created: '2026-04-05'
updated: '2026-04-05'
source_docs:
- raw/2025-12-02-vcedc-website-meeting-105716500.md
tags:
- website
- events
- content-strategy
- placeholder
- launch-prep
layer: 2
client_source: null
industry_context: null
transferable: true
---

# Events Page — Placeholder Removal and Messaging

## Overview

When launching a new website before any real events are scheduled, placeholder events create a poor first impression — they signal incompleteness and can confuse visitors. The VCEDC pre-launch review surfaced this issue directly: the events page contained three placeholder events that were already past their listed dates. The team aligned on a clean, actionable approach for launch day.

This pattern applies broadly to any client launching a website with an events section before their programming calendar is set.

## The Problem

Placeholder events on a live (or near-live) site create two issues:

1. **Credibility gap** — Visitors see stale or obviously fake events and lose trust in the site's currency.
2. **Confusion** — It's unclear whether the organization is active or the site is abandoned.

In the VCEDC case, the events page also had a secondary issue: the email signup form ("Get news from Vilas County EDC") appeared twice on the page, and a "Built with Kit" footer attribution was visible — both of which needed removal before launch.

## The Solution

### 1. Remove Placeholder Events

Hide or delete all placeholder/past events from the upcoming events section. Do not leave empty event cards or broken date entries.

### 2. Add a Holding Message

Replace the empty event list with a brief, action-oriented message. The copy agreed upon for VCEDC:

> *"Check back for upcoming events or sign up for email notifications."*

This accomplishes two things simultaneously:
- Sets honest expectations (events are coming)
- Drives a conversion action (email signup)

The message works especially well when an email signup form is already present on the page — as it was in VCEDC's case — because the call-to-action is immediately actionable.

### 3. Clean Up Page Cruft

Before launch, audit the events page for:
- **Duplicate form blocks** — Remove any repeated signup forms (e.g., the duplicate "Get news from Vilas County EDC" block on VCEDC's page)
- **Platform attribution footers** — Remove "Built with [Platform]" branding that the client hasn't opted into displaying (e.g., "Built with Kit")

## Implementation Notes

- The holding message should be styled consistently with the rest of the page — not as an error state or warning, but as a normal content element.
- If the CMS supports it, the placeholder message can be set up so the client can self-serve swap it out once real events are added.
- Coordinate with the client on when their programming calendar will be ready. For VCEDC, Kathy noted that event planning for 2026 would begin after their annual meeting (mid-December), so the placeholder message was the right call for the Dec 15 launch.

## Client Example

**VCEDC Website Launch (Dec 2025)** — Discussed in the [[clients/vcedc/meetings/2025-12-02-vcedc-pre-launch-review|Dec 2 pre-launch review meeting]]. The events page had three past-dated placeholder events. Decision: remove all placeholders, add the "check back / sign up" message, remove the duplicate signup form, and strip the "Built with Kit" footer attribution. Changes were scoped for implementation before the Dec 12 board preview link delivery.

## Related

- [[clients/vcedc/meetings/2025-12-02-vcedc-pre-launch-review|VCEDC Pre-Launch Review Meeting (2025-12-02)]]
- [[knowledge/website/pre-launch-checklist|Website Pre-Launch Checklist]]