Professional Audio Desk
QSC project coordination for global commercial and performance venues.
Send the venue type, audience size, preferred loudspeaker format, and timeline. The response can focus on the correct next decision instead of a broad catalog list.
QSC project coordination for global commercial and performance venues.
Use the form for dealer routing, technical product questions, and loudspeaker package discussions.
Briefs are triaged by venue type, urgency, and the information needed to make the recommendation useful. A complete brief is acknowledged within one business day, with the first technical reply targeted inside 48 hours; live-event timelines with a fixed show date are flagged for same-day routing.
A QSC inquiry is most productive when it carries the same data an integrator would put on a coverage sketch: room dimensions and ceiling height, audience layout and farthest seat, target SPL and speech-versus-music priority, rigging or trim-height limits, subwoofer expectations, and the technical skill level of the staff who will run events. With that context, the response can name a specific loudspeaker format, a processing-amplifier and network plan, and a realistic commissioning path — and route the project to the dealer or application engineer best placed to deliver it.
A plain caveat on scope: this desk handles professional and installed venue audio, not consumer, automotive, or headphone products. It also cannot promise that hardware overcomes a difficult room — where architecture, not the equipment list, sets the ceiling, the brief will say so before any quote is prepared.
What happens after you send: the brief is matched to a venue pattern, an outline format and processing-amplifier and network plan are sketched, and — when the project warrants it — a dealer arranges a demonstration system or an application-engineer call so you can verify coverage and SPL in your own room before committing. That hands-on check, not a spec sheet alone, is how the recommendation is confirmed.
Useful notes include desired SPL, coverage concerns, subwoofer expectations, rigging limits, room drawings, and operator skill level.
If you already know the tension in the project, name it: portable point-source convenience versus a fixed line-array install, networked control versus a simpler analog path, or factory-voiced active cabinets versus a centralized passive amp room. Stating the trade-off you care about lets the first reply weigh both sides instead of defaulting to a catalog.