Creators need a calendar to match their ambitions, not just another link in bio tool.
3min read
Does this sound familiar? You imagine a pretty great event, collab, or digital drop. You put the details out there on social: a post, a story, a clip, a pinned announcement. You drop the date in a caption, mention it on live, add it to your link in bio. People like it, save it, reply “pulling up” or “need this.” In that moment, they mean it. But they’re not planning or adding events to their calendar. They’re just scrolling.
So, folks don’t show up. By the time they’re figuring out what to do this weekend, your post is buried under a hundred new things. They’re not ignoring you. They just don’t have an easy way to find your event again when it actually matters.
The problem isn’t your event. It’s what happens between social and actually showing up. This is why creators need a calendar.
Social is great for attention. It was never really built for helping people remember where to be and when. If you’re making your followers “scroll back through my posts” or “watch my stories and hope you catch it,” you’re giving them homework. Most people won’t do that, even if they genuinely like you and your work.
Creators feel this: it looks like low turnout, last‑minute DMs, or “the algorithm hates me.” Underneath, it’s simpler: there’s no single place where your event details live.
If you’re going to be a creator, you need a calendar that is open and can live in your bio, so your followers always know how to show up. It's why we built Daisy, an open calendar, free by design.
You probably already have a whole stack of tools. Maybe you started with Linktree. Now you’ve added things like Beacons.ai or Stan.Store to sell, collect emails, and manage your community. Those tools matter. They help you run the business side of being a creator.
But when someone just wants to know, “What are you doing this week?”, that stack doesn’t give them a simple answer. A link page tells them where to click. A store tells them what to buy. They're missing a calendar to tell them where to be and when.
And it has to be easy. The fewer steps between seeing your event and adding it to their calendar, the more likely they are to actually show up. That’s the whole point of a creator calendar: one tap from your bio to your events, one tap from your events to their calendar. One tap to have those events added to their personal calendar so your event is integrated into their daily life.
Let’s also say it: creators don’t want another tool to manage. That’s fair. But a calendar isn’t another surface to feed; it’s the one thing your followers actually want if they’re going to keep showing up. A useful calendar shouldn’t feel like another widget to maintain. It should feel like an extension of how you show up online.
So, what is a calendar for creators? At minimum, it needs to be public, so it’s as easy to find as your handle. It needs to stay current when you update it once, without tracking down old posts or links. It should drop cleanly into your link in bio, your email footer, your QR codes, your website—wherever your people already look for you. In a few seconds, someone should be able to see what’s happening this week, what’s coming up next, and what they missed. And the people who really care should be able to follow it once and stop worrying they’ll miss something.
There is no creator tool that solves this problem today. Ticketing platforms handle payments and RSVPs. Social handles hype and discovery. Email and communities go deeper with your core people. The calendar’s job is different. Its whole purpose is simple: here’s everything you’re doing, in one place, in time.
Daisy gives you that calendar. It's free, can live right in your bio, and it’s built so your events can move from your feed to your followers’ calendars without you doing anything extra. Daisy is a community-first, open events calendar designed to make local life easier to see and easier to join - for you and for the people who don’t want to miss what you’re doing next.
A calendar breaks the loop creators are stuck in: announce the thing, post about it a few times, hope the algorithm is kind, watch turnout be more unpredictable than it should be, repeat. With a calendar in bio, the post becomes the spark. The bio becomes the backbone.
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