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5 Things Wedding Planners Should Do After a Busy Season
Mahi Pasha·

5 Things Wedding Planners Should Do After a Busy Season

You did it. You survived the timelines, the rain plans, the last-minute linen swaps, and the epic dance floors. Now comes the most overlooked (and most profitable) part of the year for wedding planners: the fall reset. The following are 5 things wedding planners should do after a busy season. These five smart, doable moves to make in the first two weeks after your last big event, so you roll into engagement season focused and ahead.

Key Highlights

Do a 60-Minute Season Debrief (No spreadsheets required)

Before you sprint into “fixing,” take one focused hour to capture what actually happened this season while it’s still fresh.

Grab a notebook (or Notes app) and answer:

What were the top 3 wins from this season?

What created the most stress? (Look for patterns: communication gaps, late vendor payments, timeline approvals, décor sourcing bottlenecks, etc.)

Where did we surprise & delight clients? Where did we drop the ball?

Which venues and vendors were your best collaborators and why?

Which marketing channels drove inquiries that actually

booked

?

Quick Wins (30–60 minutes):

Pull 5–10 client emails or texts with compliments and drop them into a “Testimonials” doc.

Skim your calendar and list your top 3 venue partners and top 5 vendor partners you want to deepen relationships with.

Screenshot 5 photos from IG or your photographers’ sneak peeks that you’ll refresh your portfolio with later.

Refresh Your Marketing Foundations (so your next inquiries are better)

You don’t need a full rebrand, just a strategic refresh that aligns your marketing with the clients you want next year.

Start with these high-impact updates:

Portfolio:

Add 6–12 on-brand images (3–4 recent weddings). Aim for variety: one outdoor, one ballroom, one intimate.

Services/Packages:

Tighten descriptions, clarify who each package is for, and update starting prices if needed.

Testimonials:

Add 2–3 fresh ones that highlight planning process, communication, and results—not just “everything was perfect.”

Google Business Profile:

Upload new photos, request 3–5 reviews (send a script), and update holiday hours.

About Page:

Add your 2025 focus (e.g., “PNW garden weddings,” “black-tie ballrooms,” “logistics-first partial planning”).

Create a 4-Week Content Plan (30 minutes):

Week 1: A recap post (“Our favorite ceremony details from summer 2025”).

Week 2: A testimonial spotlight carousel + CTA to inquire.

Week 3: A venue feature from a top partner.

Week 4: A behind-the-scenes “how we manage timelines” reel.

Toolbox to make it easy:

Social Media Marketing Toolbox

for plug-and-play captions and content ideas.

Blogging for Wedding Planners

to turn this season’s stories into traffic-building blog posts (and Pinterest pins) without staring at a blank page.

Nurture Vendor Relationships (your referral engine for 2026)

Strong vendor relationships carry you through slow seasons and uncertain economies. A little intention now = more referrals later.

Simple, effective touchpoints:

Thank-You Notes:

Send 10 quick emails to your favorite partners: “What I loved about working with you this season + a photo.”

Shareable Files:

Make a small Google Drive folder with a few labeled photos (with credits) from shared weddings. Vendors adore easy assets.

Referral Coffee (virtual or local):

Book 3 chats over the next three weeks with key partners. Ask: “What kind of clients do you want next year? Here’s who I’m aiming for.”

Build a referral habit:

Create a 1-page “How to Refer Us” PDF (ideal client, services, process, and a short script they can use).

Add a calendar reminder to do 2 vendor spotlights per month on IG stories (tag and save them as a highlight).

Resource to streamline the whole thing:

Building Relationships with Other Wedding Vendors

gives you scripts, outreach templates, and low-lift ways to stay top-of-mind all year.

Tighten Your Client Experience & Systems (work smarter, not longer)

Your fall tweak list should be short and powerful. Focus on the steps that save time, reduce errors, and elevate the

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For the complete article and more inspiration, visit Planners Lounge.


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