Zoom Webinars alternative
A Zoom Webinars alternative built to get paid
Most people looking for a Zoom alternative are not unhappy with the call quality. They are hitting two walls. First, Zoom does not sell tickets - to charge for a session you bolt on Eventbrite, PayPal, or a separate registration-and-payment step, and reconcile it all by hand. Second, even when it works, the session looks like a corporate webinar: a join link, a meeting chrome, a panel of presenters. Fine for a company all-hands, off-brand for a paid creator event.
Q&A With Me is built for both. You set a ticket price, people buy a seat on your own branded event page, you go live and answer their questions on screen, and the platform pays out your share about a week after the session ends. The audience questions are the format, not a Q&A box at the end. And it runs from your phone in ten minutes, with a desktop studio when you want slides or guests.
It is not a like-for-like replacement for everything Zoom does (see the honest list below). It is the right swap when the session is the product, you want to be paid for it, and you do not want it to feel like a meeting.
Zoom Webinars vs Q&A With Me at a glance
| Capability | Q&A With Me | Zoom Webinars |
|---|---|---|
| Pricing | Free to host paid events, no monthly fee. Platform earns 10% + a $0.50 buyer fee per ticket. Optional subscription only for higher free-workshop caps. | A paid add-on on top of a Zoom Workplace Pro license. The webinar add-on runs roughly $79/mo for 500 attendees up through higher tiers for larger audiences. No free webinar tier. |
| Sell tickets to the session | Native paid tickets at checkout | Not native - route to Eventbrite, PayPal, or a separate tool |
| Get paid out | Automatic payout ~7 days after the session ends | No creator payouts - handled by whatever billing you bolt on |
| Audience questions as the format | Text + video questions appear on screen live | Q&A box and chat, read out at the host’s discretion |
| Reliability at large scale | Built for live creator sessions | Core strength - proven with very large audiences |
| Screen share + slide presentation | Desktop studio with screen share | Deep, mature screen share and presentation tools |
| Branded event page vs meeting link | Creator-branded event page | Join link with corporate webinar chrome |
| Auto clips for short-form | Each answered question becomes a vertical clip | Record the call, then clip in an external editor |
| Run it from your phone | Phone-first, plus a desktop studio | Hosting is desktop-first |
Pricing and features accurate as of June 2026.
Is Q&A With Me the right swap for you?
Reach for Q&A With Me when
- You want to charge for a live session and get paid - tickets and payouts are native, not a separate Eventbrite or PayPal step.
- The audience’s questions are the show: viewers submit text or video questions and you put them on screen live.
- You want a creator-branded event page, not a meeting link that looks like a corporate webinar.
- You want it to work from your phone in ten minutes, or from a desktop studio when you want slides and guests.
- Every answered question should come back as a vertical clip for TikTok, Reels, and Shorts.
Reach for Zoom Webinars when
- The session is internal or corporate - an all-hands, a training, a town hall - and IT already trusts and manages Zoom.
- You need rock-solid reliability with a very large audience and mature screen share and slide presentation.
- The event is free, or payment and registration are handled by another team or tool, and you have no interest in selling a ticket yourself.
Where Zoom Webinars genuinely wins
- Ubiquity and zero learning curve - everyone already has Zoom and knows exactly how to join.
- Reliability with very large audiences, plus mature screen share and slide presentation.
- Enterprise and IT trust: SSO, admin controls, and procurement-friendly billing that a creator tool will not match.
Switching from Zoom Webinars: common questions
Can I sell tickets to a webinar like I would set up on Zoom?
Zoom Webinars does not sell tickets natively - to charge for a session you route registrants to Eventbrite, PayPal, or a separate checkout, then run the webinar. Q&A With Me sells the ticket at its own checkout, takes a flat 10% plus a $0.50 buyer service fee, and pays your share to your connected account about a week after the session ends.
Is Q&A With Me a full Zoom replacement?
Honestly, no - and for a lot of work you would not want it to be. If you are running an internal all-hands, a corporate training, or a slide-heavy webinar to a very large audience that IT already manages, Zoom is the safer, more familiar tool and we will not pretend otherwise. Q&A With Me is the right tool when the session is something people pay to attend and the audience questions are the show.
When is Zoom Webinars genuinely the better choice?
When ubiquity and reliability matter most. Everyone already has Zoom and knows how to join, it holds up with very large audiences, the screen share and slide tools are mature, and IT trusts it with SSO and admin controls. For a free corporate or internal session at scale, that is hard to beat - reach for Zoom.
Does Zoom do live audience Q&A?
Zoom Webinars has a Q&A panel and chat, and the host reads out or answers questions at their discretion, usually toward the end. Q&A With Me makes the questions the format: viewers submit text or video questions, a smart queue surfaces the most relevant ones, and the one you pick appears on screen for everyone - their question and your answer, together, as the show itself.
My event will not look like a corporate meeting, will it?
That is the point. Zoom sessions arrive as a join link wrapped in meeting chrome, which is right for a work webinar and off-brand for a paid creator event. Q&A With Me gives you a creator-branded event page where the ticket, the stream, the questions, and the replay all live in one place.
I default to Zoom but want to start charging - what changes?
Mostly the box office. Q&A With Me is free to host paid events - there is no monthly fee to run a paid Q&A; the platform earns only when you do (10% + $0.50 per ticket). You skip the Eventbrite or PayPal bolt-on and the manual reconciliation, and the payout lands automatically after the session. Free workshops have an optional subscription if you need higher attendee caps.
How much does Zoom Webinars cost versus Q&A With Me?
Zoom Webinars is a paid add-on, not a standalone product: you need a Zoom Workplace Pro license first, then layer the webinar add-on on top, which starts around $79/month for up to 500 attendees and climbs by attendee tier for larger audiences. There is no free webinar tier, and none of that fee includes selling tickets. Q&A With Me flips the model for paid events: it is free to host, with no monthly fee, and the platform earns only when you sell a ticket (a flat 10% plus a $0.50 buyer service fee). Free workshops have an optional subscription only if you want higher attendee caps. Pricing and feature details can shift, so check both sites before you commit.
What happens to the recording?
Every session records automatically and becomes a replay you control (24 hours to 30 days of access). Viewers who could not attend can still submit questions; if you answer one, they catch it in the replay. Each answered question is also cut into a standalone vertical clip for short-form, instead of you pulling a Zoom recording into an external editor.
Make the switch from Zoom Webinars
Free to host paid events. We earn when you earn - a flat 10% plus a $0.50 buyer fee per ticket, paid out about a week after your session ends.
Prefer a full head-to-head? See Q&A With Me vs Zoom Webinars.