Calendar Flow
Plan meaningful delivery across days, weeks, and milestones.
QC calendar keeps emotional scheduling organized so multiple moments stay visible, intentional, and easy to adjust.
How scheduling works
Each moment is attached to a specific date and time with timezone-aware delivery behavior built into the planning flow.
Why it matters: You avoid accidental late-night sends, off-by-one-day mistakes, and delivery that lands at the wrong local moment.
Example: A birthday moment can be set to arrive at 8:00 AM in the recipient's city even if you created it while traveling.
Day structure
Calendar days reflect real activity instead of decorative filler, so busy dates and open dates are easy to read at a glance.
Why it matters: You can spread meaningful moments intentionally instead of stacking too many on one day and flattening their impact.
Example: If Friday already carries several deliveries, you can move one check-in to Saturday to give it more room to breathe.
Managing multiple moments
Monthly and daily views keep upcoming deliveries, sent moments, and edits visible in one organized timeline.
Why it matters: You do not have to remember what is scheduled where. QC keeps the emotional calendar readable and controlled.
Example: Anniversaries, encouragement notes, and check-ins can all live in the same week without becoming hard to track.
Editing and rescheduling
Before a moment goes live, timing and message details can be adjusted without rebuilding the whole experience from scratch.
Why it matters: QC stays flexible when real life changes and the right moment shifts.
Example: A delivery can be moved by a day when travel plans change, while keeping the message and structure intact.
Calendar behavior
The calendar should feel practical first and expressive second. Motion, density indicators, and navigation need to support planning without turning the interface into a dashboard.
- Month transitions should feel smooth, not jumpy.
- Density signals should appear only when real moments exist.
- Day views should open quickly and keep editing actions close to context.
Next step
If you want access before the full public rollout, early access is the next layer to understand.