Scout is a single-column activity marketplace landing page built for local guides who list cliff rappels, night kayaks, and forest foraging walks. Curated mood-based collections, a macro close-up header, and a blaze-orange registration drawer make it easy for weekend adventurers to find a session and save their spot before it fills up.
by Rocket studio
Scout is a focused, single-column landing page for an activity marketplace. It connects restless office workers, adventurous couples, and active families with local guides running offbeat outdoor sessions. The page flows from a gripping header photograph through editorially curated activity collections, ending with a lightweight registration drawer that turns browsers into confirmed participants.
This template suits anyone building or promoting an activity marketplace where local guides list hands-on outdoor experiences. It is especially useful when the goal is to drive event registrations directly from the landing page rather than routing visitors through a multi-step site.
Most activity booking pages look like filtered search results. They feel transactional and cold, which pushes potential guests to hesitate rather than commit. Scout solves the gap between browsing and booking by making every scroll feel like a personal recommendation from someone who actually knows the trail.
You get a complete single-column landing page layout designed around outdoor activity discovery and event registration. Every section is purposeful, from the full-viewport header photograph to the floating registration bar that appears once a visitor scrolls past the first collection.




Theme
Adventure Terrain
Creative direction
Curated Collection
Color system
Alpine Fresh
Style
Single Column Flow
Direction
Event Registration
Page Sections
Macro Close-up Hero with Headline Overlay
Mood-based Curated Collections
Activity Cards with Scarcity Signals
Lightweight Registration Drawer
Floating Bottom Registration Bar
Surprise Me Secondary Opt-in
Can I use this template for multiple types of outdoor activities?
How does the scarcity messaging work on the activity cards?
Is the registration drawer included in the template layout?
What does the floating registration bar do?
What happens when a visitor taps Surprise Me?
This template combines editorial design with conversion-focused layout decisions. Each component earns its place by serving either the visitor's desire to explore or the operator's need to capture registrations.
The header fills the entire viewport with a tight photograph of a hand gripping wet limestone, chalk dust caught in side-light, and a blurred canyon floor below. A single line of snowmelt-white type reads "Find what pulls you off the couch." Nothing competes with the image.
Activities are grouped into editorial collections like "Before the city wakes" and "Get your hands dirty" rather than sorted by type or price. Each group feels hand-picked, giving the scroll the rhythm of flipping through a field journal.
Every card shows one arresting photograph, the guide's first name, a difficulty tag, and the next available date. Scarcity copy such as "3 spots left, Saturday 7am" appears directly on the card so visitors feel the weight of a real decision.
The primary call to action is a blaze-orange "Save Your Spot" button that opens a lightweight drawer. The drawer collects name, email, a date preference from the next three available sessions, and a group-size stepper. It stays friction-free by design.
Once a visitor scrolls past the first activity collection, a persistent bottom bar pins the "Save Your Spot" call to action to the screen. The bar keeps the registration path visible without interrupting the browsing experience.
Visitors who are not ready to commit can tap "Surprise Me" to receive a weekly email of curated activity drops. This secondary path captures browsers who need more time without losing them entirely.
| Section | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Full-Viewport Header | Establishes mood and anchors the primary call to action |
| Dawn Activity Collection | Groups early-morning outdoor sessions editorially |
| Hands-On Activity Collection | Clusters tactile, ground-level experiences for browsers |
| Activity Cards Grid | Displays guide name, difficulty, date, and scarcity signal |
| Floating Registration Bar | Keeps the booking path visible throughout the scroll |
| Registration Drawer | Captures name, email, date preference, and group size |
| Surprise Me Opt-In | Offers a low-commitment path for undecided visitors |
The Alpine Fresh color system grounds every visual decision in terrain rather than trend. Deep trail green, exposed granite, snowmelt white, and blaze-marker orange each carry a specific role across the layout, making the page feel like a topographic map unfolded on a picnic table.
The single-column flow naturally adapts to smaller screens without requiring complex grid rearrangements. The layout stacks cleanly, and the floating bottom bar was designed with thumb-reach in mind so the registration path stays accessible at any scroll depth.
Scout earns registrations by creating the feeling that a good session will sell out before a visitor finishes lunch. Every layout choice is aimed at shortening the distance between "this looks interesting" and "I just saved my spot."
Scout sits at the intersection of the Travel and Hospitality category and the Activity Marketplace niche, making it a strong fit for experience-led booking platforms in the travel tech and booking platform space.