A modern, controlled workspace
for preparing technical riders.
Built for FOH, monitor engineers, and production teams who need a rider that actually stays in sync.
Technical riders treated like real production documents.
Most rider workflows live across scattered PDFs, Word files, and old email threads. Input lists, stage plots, and backline notes drift out of sync, and every venue ends up with a slightly different version of the truth.
Riderduck is a technical rider builder that brings stage plot, input/output lists, monitoring, patch, backline, and production notes into one project. Your team prepares faster, and venues get one consistent, readable document.
From an empty project to a venue-ready rider, in five clear steps.
- 01Create a project
Start from scratch or a template — pop, rock, DJ, festival.
- 02Build the stage plot
Place risers, backline, and monitors on a scaled stage.
- 03Define the audio setup
Inputs, outputs, FX, RF, and digital patch — all in one place.
- 04Add backline
Drums, amps, keys, and DI boxes — with quantities and notes.
- 05Review and export
Generate a clean PDF rider for venues, production teams, and suppliers.
Make technical preparation faster, more consistent, and easier to read.
Templates and reusable blocks remove hours of repeated typing.
Stage, audio, and backline stay in sync — no mismatched versions.
Channel counts, patches, and notes stay aligned across sections.
Send one clear document instead of three contradicting files.
Clean, structured PDFs your production partners can actually read.
Reuse projects across tours, festivals, and one-off shows.
Built with feedback from live production teams.
"It made our input/output planning noticeably faster. We finally stopped emailing three different versions of the same list."
"Finally, an organised way to prepare riders. The stage plot and patch sit next to each other, exactly where they should."
"Much clearer communication with local production teams. The exported PDF is structured and easy to read."
"Our artists travel with one clean technical document now. Venues stop asking the same questions over and over."