
CalendarJet
AI scheduling with branded booking page your own domain
102 followers
AI scheduling with branded booking page your own domain
102 followers
CalendarJet is the AI powered scheduling platform that gives you what Calendly charges $15,000/year for. Custom domains (book.yourbrand.com) for just $27. One time. Forever. Normally $497. Zero branding. Your logo only. Full customization like WeTransfer. AI that schedules by voice. Built for coaches, agencies, and founders tired of the subscription trap.












CalendarJet
Hey PH! 👋
After calculating that Calendly Enterprise would cost my team $15,000+ over 5 years, I built the scheduling tool I actually wanted.
I did the math. Per-seat pricing adds up fast. So I built CalendarJet.
$27 lifetime. Unlimited everything.
What you get:
✅ One-click Calendly import (60-second switch)
✅ Custom domain (book.yourcompany.com)
✅ 100% customizable - video backgrounds, drag-and-drop editor
✅ AI scheduling assistant
✅ White-label (zero "powered by" badges)
✅ Unlimited team members, events, bookings
✅ Webhook and API access
✅ 36+ Pro features included + free lifetime updates
Use code CJ27DEAL → $27 lifetime access
That's 500x cheaper than what Calendly charges teams. Same features. Your brand. Forever yours.
AMA! 🚀
Congratulations for the launch and the great app!
It would be great if you could share some words on how you achieved that level of quality in scheduling. I've tried to create an app as a course project in an AI Evals Course and found out that conversational AI scheduling is surprisingly difficult, due to many potential edge cases.
CalendarJet
@mitja_martini Thank you! The secret is obsessive edge-case handling, we've documented 50+ failure scenarios, built timezone-aware slot validation with multi-layer checks (frontend → backend → database), and spent months testing real-world booking conflicts until the AI gets it right every time. Happy to share more details if you're interested!
@aamirmursleen thank you, that confirms my assumption that it's good old hard work :)
Everyessay
Congrats! The lifetime model is bold 👀 What part of the stack or business model makes this sustainable long-term compared to subscription-based schedulers?
CalendarJet
@iamnabilazra Great question!
The lifetime model is actually quite sustainable for several reasons:
1. Low Infrastructure Costs. Scheduling software has minimal server load. Users aren't streaming video or processing heavy data – they're just booking time slots. Our costs per user are extremely low.
2. Usage Patterns. Most users aren't active 24/7. They set up their availability once and receive occasional bookings. This means server resources are used efficiently. It's hosted on Hetzer.
3. Proven Market. Calendly generates $250M+/year with a subscription model. Even capturing a small fraction of that market with lifetime deals creates a sustainable business.
4. Evolving Pricing. We're transitioning to a $497 lifetime plan from $27, which significantly improves unit economics while still being a great deal compared to $144+/year subscriptions.
5. Open Source Commitment. As mentioned in our FAQ, if the business ever becomes unsustainable, we'll open-source the entire platform so users can self-host. Your investment is protected either way.
Hope it helps!
Congratulations on the launch! Sounds promising.
Incredible launch, Aamir! Congrats on hitting #7!
The one-time pricing with your own domain setup really stood out to me.
I'm a Video Strategist (6M+ views on my own TikTok content) and l've mapped out a high-retention POV concept specifically for CalendarJet to turn this launch momentum into active users.
Not trying to pitch here, but I'd love to send the storyboard over if you're open to it. Where is the best place to reach you?
Looks solid. Does the plan allow us to use multiple domains? For example, I'd like to have Calendar 1 on 'abc' company and Calendar 2 on 'xyz' company. Is it possible? Great job by the way.
CalendarJet
@damu_vaishak Thanks so much for the kind words! Glad you're liking it. 🙌
Regarding the domains: Since 'abc' and 'xyz' are separate businesses, you would actually need a separate license for each domain. Our current structure requires one license per business entity to keep everything running smoothly.
@aamirmursleen Alright, thanks for your prompt response!