Calendar
Centralize your events and sync with Google Calendar.
The calendar brings ceremonies, meetings, and scheduled posts into one agenda. This is the planning view where you can see client work and your publishing calendar together, without jumping between separate areas.
When you open an item from here, Verbum takes you to the right context. You plan from the calendar, then continue the work inside the ceremony workspace or the social area.
1.Create new events
You have two quick ways to add something to the calendar:
- Use New Event at the top of the page when you want to create something without choosing a day first.
- Click a specific day to open that date menu and create the event with the date already prefilled.
From there you can create three kinds of entries:
- New Ceremony
- Schedule Meeting
- Schedule Post
Meetings always need an associated ceremony. When you choose Schedule Meeting, Verbum first asks you to select the ceremony the meeting belongs to. If it does not exist yet, you can create the ceremony from there and continue without losing the chosen date.
2.Event types and colour cues
The calendar uses colour to make the agenda readable at a glance:
- Ceremonies appear in pink
- Meetings appear in blue
- Posts appear in purple
The same distinction shows up in creation shortcuts and filters, so it is easy to see whether a week is heavy on client prep, ceremony days, or brand communication.
3.Filters and views
At the top of the calendar you can switch between two reading modes:
- Month to understand distribution, overlaps, and workload rhythm
- List to review everything in chronological order
You can also filter by event type. Show everything together or isolate only ceremonies, only meetings, or only posts when you want to focus on a specific part of the workload.
4.Google Calendar integration
- Go to Settings → Integrations.
- Connect your Google account.
- Use sync to keep Verbum aligned with your external calendar.
This is especially useful when you manage commitments in more than one place and want fewer missed dates or scheduling conflicts.
5.When this view is most useful
Use the calendar when you want to plan the week, confirm what is already booked, or spot gaps between meetings, ceremonies, and scheduled posts. Instead of checking each area separately, you start here and then jump into the right context to keep working.