A wedding website should reduce communication noise, not add another channel to manage. The right structure gives guests answers quickly and gives couples cleaner data for final planning decisions.
The pages every wedding website needs
- Home: date, location, and clear event context.
- Our Story: optional, but useful for personal tone.
- Schedule: ceremony, reception, and timing details.
- Travel and FAQ: hotels, parking, dress code, children policy.
- RSVP: one clear path to confirm attendance.
How this improves execution
When key information is centralized, guests ask fewer repetitive questions and RSVP completion improves. This directly supports seating, catering, and budget accuracy.
Common mistakes to avoid
Do not bury the RSVP button. Do not publish incomplete timing details. Do not leave FAQ blank if logistics are complex. Missing details create day-of confusion.
Connect website and planning data
Your website should not be separate from your planning system. When website responses feed guest management directly, updates stay accurate and your team moves faster.
Couples can start building with a free account, then connect RSVP workflows to Guest Management.
