Event planning coordinator
Built for fast coordination and status tracking
[terminal mode] live ops shell

Plan the event. Route the team. Keep every signal in view.

A command-console inspired event-planning app for internal teams managing venues, vendors, schedules, guests, and budgets in one place. Launch an event quickly, then coordinate every lane through a clean operational feed.

Venue coordination
Vendor routing
Run-of-show tracking
Budget visibility
Workflow preview

Your first useful slice

online

Public landing, admin access, quick event intake, and a real coordination workspace wired into your existing CRUD. Enough structure to feel operational on day one.

Command every moving part

Track venues, vendors, schedules, guests, budgets, and action items from one shared coordination surface.

Move fast with status visibility

Surface what is confirmed, blocked, or slipping so ops teams can react before the event day gets noisy.

Launch with the admin built in

The full admin CRUD already exists, so your team can dive straight into records, permissions, and reporting.

Upcoming events feed

Public events, shown like an ops log

Only events marked public appear here. It is safe for the landing page, but still gives visitors a live sense of what your planning team is running next.

How the MVP now flows

A thin slice that already feels like a console product

Instead of stopping at landing-page polish, this iteration gives you a usable path from intake to coordination: create the event, select it, and route follow-up work into the right lanes.

01

Create the event shell

Capture the basics: event name, timing, location, owner, and budget target.

02

Route work into lanes

Add venue bookings, vendor coverage, guest lists, schedule items, and budget lines with owners and statuses.

03

Run the live command center

Keep blockers visible and review readiness across every event without leaving the workflow.

Next click

Go straight into the admin and start coordinating.

You already have authentication, CRUD, and permissions. The terminal-style landing just makes the app feel like an operations console from the first screen.