Museum operator with advanced AV and ticketing infrastructure
Museum of the Bible runs a 430,000-square-foot venue with a tech stack weighted toward live event production (grandMA2, Crestron, ProPresenter, Blackmagic Design) and visitor operations (Tessitura ticketing, Cloudbeds venue management, Salesforce CRM). Active hiring across ops, education, and development—with stated pain around high-volume recruitment and HR systemization—suggests operational scaling rather than product innovation. Projects center on revenue events, speaker series, and social media strategy, indicating a shift toward generating earned revenue beyond admission.
Museum of the Bible is a nonprofit museum in Washington, DC, opened to the public in November 2017. The 430,000-square-foot building, located three blocks from the U.S. Capitol, houses rare artifacts spanning 3,500 years of history and operates with a staff of 201–500 employees. The organization uses Tessitura for ticketing and visitor management, Salesforce for donor and member relations, Cloudbeds for venue operations, and a professional-grade AV stack (Crestron, ProPresenter, grandMA2) to deliver immersive exhibitions. Current priorities include maximizing event space revenue, expanding program participation, and systematizing internal HR operations.
Tessitura for ticketing and visitor management, Cloudbeds for venue operations, and Salesforce for CRM. The venue also operates with Cvent for event management and Paycor for payroll and HR.
grandMA2 (lighting control), Crestron (AV automation), ProPresenter (presentation/display), Blackmagic Design (video production), and Behringer X32 (audio mixing). Art-Net and sACN protocols enable networked control across systems.
Museum of the Bible's technology stack, projects, and hiring signals are inferred from public hiring and company data — career pages, public listings, and company web presence — then clustered and de-duplicated. Figures are estimates that refresh over time. Read our full methodology →
This is not an official vendor or customer list. It is a technology-adoption signal inferred from public data, intended for B2B research.