HalyardCo · Discovery Brief

Youth Group Platform

Planning Center orientation, plus the consulting questions that turn a conversation with the church into a build.

Prepared for Luke's church · scope: a branded hub for announcements, events, and the communication around those events — not a full church-management or social platform.

Part 1 — Planning Center, the reference point

Planning Center is a modular church-management suite. A church turns on the pieces it needs and pays per module. It is built for the whole church, not a youth group specifically, so it is powerful but broad. Three of its modules are what your sister's church is really leaning on for youth:

Church Center
The member-facing app and website. This is where people actually see announcements, browse the calendar, register for events, find groups, give, and manage their household profile. It is the "front door" a student or parent opens.
Registrations
Event sign-ups: capacity limits and waitlists, role/grade-based options, attachable forms (medical release, parental consent), payments with deposits and scholarships, and automated emails for confirmations, balance-due, and event details.
Groups
Organizes the group itself: students find and join a group (QR code / app), leaders post group-wide announcements and chat, share curriculum, schedule meetings, take RSVPs, and track attendance.

What Planning Center does well

It is comprehensive and mature: it handles minor-consent forms, payments, family check-in, and attendance out of the box, and it ties youth activity into the church's broader membership data.

Where a lean custom build wins for this church

Luke's church described a focused need: a clean, branded landing page for announcements, events, and the back-and-forth around them — not giving, not check-in kiosks, not a whole-church database. Planning Center is a per-module SaaS with a generic app skin; the more you want, the more you turn on and pay for, and the youth ministry lives inside a much larger system. A custom build gives them exactly their workflow, their branding, a simpler experience for students and parents, and a platform they own rather than rent. Honest read: if they eventually want full church management, giving, and check-in, Planning Center is the safer bet; if they want a sharp youth events-and-comms hub, a custom build fits better and is cleaner to own.

Part 2 — The loop we're actually building

Strip it to the core and the whole platform is one repeating loop. Every design decision serves it:

Announcement Event posted Sign-up / RSVP Confirmation Reminders Day-of details Attendance / follow-up

The "reciprocating communication" Luke's church is asking for is the right half of that loop. Nail the loop and the build is 80% defined.

Part 3 — The consulting question bank

These are the discovery questions to walk the church (ideally the youth pastor plus whoever will run it day-to-day) through. The answers scope the build.

01 Audience & roles
  1. Who are the users — students only, or students and parents? Do parents need their own view of what their kids signed up for?
  2. What age range, and roughly how many students? (Middle + high school combined, or separate?)
  3. Who are the leaders — youth pastor, volunteer leaders, an admin? Who needs to post vs just view?
  4. Is this only for current members, or also a "come check us out" front door for new families?
02 Announcements
  1. Who posts announcements, and how often? One person, or several leaders?
  2. Should announcements just appear on the page, or also push out (email / text / notification) so students actually see them?
  3. Do you want categories (e.g. weekly, urgent, this-week-at-a-glance) or one simple feed?
  4. Should older announcements archive automatically, or stay up?
03 Events & calendar
  1. What kinds of events — weekly meetings, one-off nights, retreats/camps, service projects, fundraisers? Which need sign-ups vs just a heads-up?
  2. Recurring weekly meeting, or all distinct events?
  3. Do you want a full calendar view, a simple upcoming list, or both?
  4. Should events sync to a family's own phone calendar (Google/Apple)?
04 Sign-ups & registration (the reciprocation)
  1. For events, is it a simple free RSVP ("I'm coming"), or real registration with forms and payment?
  2. Do any events cost money (camps, trips)? If so, do you need to collect it online, take deposits, or offer scholarships?
  3. Do events have capacity limits or waitlists (e.g. a bus with 40 seats)?
  4. What information do you collect at sign-up — dietary, medical, emergency contact, permission slip?
05 The communication loop
  1. After someone signs up, what should happen — instant confirmation, reminder a few days out, day-of details (what to bring, where to meet)?
  2. What channel do students actually respond to — text, email, or an app notification? (Be honest about what teens ignore.)
  3. Do you want two-way messaging (students can reply/ask questions), or one-way broadcast only?
  4. Should there be a post-event follow-up (photos, "thanks for coming," next event)?
  5. Do parents get their own thread of communication separate from students?
06 Minor safety & privacy (non-negotiable for youth)
  1. What are the church's rules on adults messaging minors directly? (Most require messages to be visible/logged, never private 1:1.)
  2. Should student-to-student direct messaging exist at all, or is that a liability you'd rather not carry?
  3. Who is allowed to see a student's contact info or which events they signed up for?
  4. Do you need photo/media consent tracked per student?
  5. Are leaders background-checked, and should the platform reflect leader roles/permissions accordingly?
07 Branding & content
  1. Does the youth ministry have its own name, logo, colors — or should it match the main church brand?
  2. Is there an existing church website this should link to or live under (a subdomain, a page)?
  3. Who owns keeping content fresh, and how tech-comfortable are they?
08 Existing systems & data
  1. Does the church already use Planning Center (or another system) for the broader congregation? If so, should this coexist with it or replace part of it?
  2. Where does the student roster live today — a spreadsheet, an existing database? Can we import it?
  3. Any existing giving or payment processor they'd want event payments to route through?
09 Scope, success & the champion
  1. If we launched a v1 in a few weeks with just announcements + events + RSVPs + reminders, would that be a win? What's must-have vs nice-to-have?
  2. What does "this is working" look like six months in — more attendance, less texting chaos, parents in the loop?
  3. Who's the decision-maker and who's the day-to-day champion who'll actually use it?
  4. Any timeline pressure — a fall kickoff, a specific event, a budget cycle?
One thing to raise gently in the meeting: youth platforms live or die on the safety model. Getting the church's stance on adult-to-minor and student-to-student messaging early shapes the whole build — it's easier to design around than to bolt on later. Lead with it and it signals we take their duty of care seriously.
Prepared by HalyardCo · Planning Center details sourced from planningcenter.com (Church Center, Registrations, Groups). A discovery tool, not a proposal — the answers here scope the build and the quote.