Events that families actually follow

Details, discussion, and RSVPs in one place — not spread across three different tools.

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The problem

Troops typically manage events across a patchwork of tools: Google Calendar for dates, a shared doc for details, email threads for RSVPs, and group texts for last-minute changes. Parents miss updates because they're not checking the right app at the right time.

Leaders spend more time chasing responses and re-sharing information than actually planning the event.

Everything in one place

A Troop Channel event has everything attached to it: the details, the discussion, and the RSVP list. Parents see one place to check, and leaders see one place to manage. When something changes, it updates in the same spot where everyone is already looking.

RSVPs that actually work

No more counting replies across email threads or tallying a spreadsheet. RSVPs are built into the event itself, so leaders always have a current headcount. Parents can respond directly — and change their response if plans shift — without anyone having to reconcile a list.

Household-aware notifications

When an event is relevant to a scout, the notification reaches their household adults automatically. For younger scouts who don't have their own devices, parents see what's coming up and can RSVP on behalf of their family — no extra forwarding or "did you see the email?" required.

Connected to the conversation

Events aren't isolated calendar entries — they're connected to the broader context of the troop. The discussion thread for a camping trip lives right alongside the event details, so when someone asks "what do we need to bring?" the answer is in the same place as the date and location.