A wedding timeline stores the plan. A live run sheet helps run the day.
The real test is not whether the schedule looks organized before the wedding. It is whether the person running the day can protect anchors, update the right people, and recover when timing changes.
A static wedding timeline is useful. It tells the team what was supposed to happen. The problem is that wedding days move. A ceremony runs long, a vendor checks in late, portraits need more time, or a room turn takes longer than expected.
That is when the timeline needs to become a live run sheet. The person running the day needs to know what changed, which moments are protected, who owns the next handoff, and what update should be sent after approval.
A timeline lists events. A live run sheet connects timing, owners, roles, vendors, and recovery decisions while the wedding is happening.
What belongs in a live wedding run sheet?
Protected anchors
Ceremony, portraits, dinner, speeches, first dance, and other moments that should not drift without a conscious decision.
Clear owners
The planner, venue lead, photographer, DJ, caterer, and helpers need role-specific next steps instead of one overloaded group thread.
Vendor check-ins
Arrival status matters before a delay spreads. The run sheet should show who is here, who is late, and what depends on them.
Recovery decisions
When the day slips, the coordinator needs options: protect fixed moments, use buffer, trim flexible blocks, and approve the update.
Where EventSync fits
EventSync is built around this handoff from planning to execution. EventSync Workspace gives teams room to plan, while mobile Day-Of Command keeps the live wedding day connected to the same timeline, roles, vendors, and updates.
Wedding Day Assistant and SmartRipple are designed to support planner-approved recovery. They help surface the timing problem and the recovery path, but the public change still belongs with the person running the day.
What to review before publishing a run sheet
- Which timeline moments are fixed, flexible, buffer, or cuttable.
- Who owns each role handoff and vendor check-in.
- Which updates should stay internal until the planner approves them.
- How the couple stays informed without becoming the message relay.
Preview Day-Of Command
See how EventSync connects the timeline, team, vendor check-ins, and recovery decisions for the real wedding day.
Open the product demo