The origin story
You call it PTA.
We call it SPO.
Let me tell you how I accidentally became responsible for a school carnival.
Three weeks ago, my qualifications for running a school event were exactly zero. I couldn't tell you what grade my kids are in. I couldn't pick their teacher out of a police lineup. I thought "room parent" was a job title.
My wife handles all of that. She's organized. She's responsible. She's the reason our children have shoes.
Then somehow, through what I can only assume was a clerical error, I became Carnival Chairman.
Now it's 10:07 PM on a Tuesday.
I'm sitting at my kitchen table.
There are four spreadsheets open.
Twenty-seven browser tabs.
A Google Drive folder that looks like it was assembled by raccoons.
And a text message from someone named Linda asking where the bounce house invoice is.
I don't know who Linda is. I don't know where the invoice is. I don't even know if we have a bounce house. But apparently I'm in charge of it.
Here's the thing nobody tells you about volunteering for your school's Parent Teacher Association: The person before you doesn't hand you a system. They hand you a hostage situation.
Vendor contacts saved in personal phones. Passwords nobody wrote down. Budgets that look like ancient cave drawings. Random documents named "FINAL_v2_NEW_USE_THIS_ONE.xlsx."
And every year, some poor unsuspecting parent inherits the whole mess and starts from scratch.
Every. Single. Year.
Schools spend months organizing auctions, galas, carnivals, jog-a-thons, golf tournaments, fundraisers, and family events. Then when it's over? All the knowledge disappears into someone's Gmail account forever. The vendors. The pricing. The contracts. The lessons learned. Gone.
Which means next year's volunteer gets the same experience I got: a Google Drive folder and blind optimism.
So I built SPOink.
Not because I'm some tech genius. Not because I had a grand vision. Because I was standing in my driveway at 10 PM searching for a bounce house receipt and questioning every life decision that led me there.
SPOink does something revolutionary: it keeps everything in one place. Your vendors. Your budgets. Your event plans. Your forms. Your contacts. Your notes. Your institutional knowledge. All of it.
So when the next parent gets voluntold into running the carnival, gala, auction, or fundraiser — you don't hand them 47 files, three spreadsheets, and a prayer.
You hand them a login. Everything is already there. Who you used. What you paid. What worked. What didn't. Ready to go.
Because somewhere out there, right now,
a perfectly normal parent is about to become
next year's Carnival Chairman.
They just don't know it yet.
And they deserve better than inheriting a digital crime scene.
That's why we built SPOink. Not to make events easier. To make handoffs effortless.
Because the most valuable thing your school creates isn't the event. It's the knowledge that makes the next one possible.