If you’re listening to this in January 2026, happy new year. I hope inquiries are rolling in and that you’re feeling that “okay… we’re back” energy that tends to show up right after the holidays.
And if you’re not feeling that yet, I want you to know you’re not alone.
This time of year can be such a weird mix, especially in the wedding and event world. You might be seeing inquiries (which is exciting), but you might also be coming off a slower cash-flow season. It can feel like downtime… but not the fun kind. Not vacation downtime. Not holiday downtime. The other kind that makes you stare at your to-do list like, “Okay, so what do I do with this space?”
This episode is for that season.
🎧Listen to this episode on Spotify or Apple Podcasts or play it directly below.
I’m calling these off-season tasks, but I also want to acknowledge something important: off-season and slow season aren’t the same thing. And understanding the difference will help you choose the right work to focus on.
Off-season is more predictable. It’s the seasonal rhythm of your industry. If you’re a wedding pro, you probably have a general sense of when you’re busiest and when things naturally lighten up.
Slow season is more urgent. It’s when business slows down unexpectedly (or longer than expected), and you need actions that bring in leads and revenue more quickly.
Today’s post is not a “get clients this week” kind of list.
This is about elevating your processes so your business feels stronger, smoother, and easier to run before the next busy season hits. These are the foundation moves. The seed-planting tasks. The “future you will thank you” work.
And yes, ideally, you’re keeping up with some of these year-round. But I also know the reality: you’re running a business, managing clients, maybe managing a team, and trying to have a life. So if these things tend to get pushed to off-season, that’s normal.
Let’s get into it.
Most people think updating a website means adding a new gallery to the portfolio page. But here’s the thing: not everyone makes it to your galleries page.
Some people land on your homepage, click “About,” skim your contact page, and decide whether or not to reach out based on what they see in those first 30 seconds.
So yes, update your portfolio.
But also audit the photos on:
Ask yourself:
And while you’re doing this, make it an actual SEO upgrade:
This is one of those tasks that feels small… but impacts everything.

I’m a huge fan of doing a brand session annually.
Not because it’s trendy, but because it keeps your marketing current without needing a full rebrand every year.
A yearly brand shoot gives you:
Even a one- to two-hour session can give you 25–50 photos that carry your marketing for months.
A simple tip: bring your brand colors into the shoot. That doesn’t mean you need to wear your exact palette head-to-toe, but coordinating your outfits and props with your brand tones helps everything look cohesive and intentional.
And if you’ve recently added a team member? Even better. Off-season is the easiest time to get everyone into updated photos.

Blogging is still one of the most underrated long-game strategies for wedding pros.
But the key is this: don’t write what you think people are searching for. Write what they’re actually searching for.
Before you batch content, do keyword research so your time is spent on topics with real demand.
Then batch a few posts in one sitting:
Even 3–5 strong posts can create momentum that supports you for months, especially when those posts are tied to high-intent search terms (the kind of searches that come from clients actively planning and ready to book).
I’m not going to tell you that you have to raise your prices every January.
You don’t.
But you do need to make sure your pricing still makes sense for:
Sometimes updating your pricing looks like a raise.
Other times, it’s about clarifying exactly what’s included.
And in some cases, it means restructuring your packages so you’re not over-delivering.
This is a great off-season task because it gives you the clarity and confidence you need before inquiries ramp up again.
If you don’t have FAQs on your site, I want you to add them.
Not because they’re cute, but because they:
If you already have FAQs, update them:
FAQs are one of the easiest ways to elevate your client experience without adding more meetings or emails to your week.

This is a newer strategy I learned from Sarah Does SEO, and it’s worth considering.
The idea is simple: create a hidden page (not in your navigation) that’s designed to be extremely clear for AI tools and search engines to understand your business.
This page is not meant to be pretty. It’s meant to be readable.
Think:
You can even test this by searching for your vendor type in ChatGPT the way a client would and noticing what information comes up, then making sure your site clearly communicates the same level of detail.
Off-season is the perfect time to look at what actually happened last year.
Check:
Ask:
This is how you stop guessing, and start making smarter marketing decisions. Because more leads isn’t the goal. Better leads is.
If you want to grow in a new direction this year, your website should support that.
Examples:
A niche page helps you:
Important note: don’t copy/paste content from another page and swap city names. These pages need to be unique, strategic, and aligned with real search intent.

I know. This sounds like a lot. But I’m not telling you to create 12 months of posts right now. I’m telling you to brainstorm your ideas so you’re not reinventing the wheel every week. If you want to post 4x/week, that’s 208 posts a year. That sounds overwhelming… until you remember you can repurpose.
One topic can become:
Now you only need ~70 core ideas to build from.
Off-season is the best time to do this because your brain isn’t as overloaded with client execution. Open a doc and write down:
And yes, use AI to expand ideas once you have a foundation.
This is the one that gets overlooked, and it’s the one that can cost you the most. Because you can have amazing marketing… and still lose leads if your process is broken.
Here’s what to test:
Then take it one level deeper:
This is elevating your processes in the most direct way, because a better workflow improves booking season before you ever post another Reel.
You don’t need to do all 10 in one week.
Pick 2–3 that feel most supportive right now.
Do them well.
Then move on.
And if you read this list and thought, “I don’t have time for any of this,” that’s information too.
Because that likely means it’s time to:
The goal isn’t to do more forever. The goal is to build a business that feels easier to run over time, because the backend is strong, and the foundation is set.
If you want help with this kind of off-season cleanup, this is exactly the kind of work we support inside website maintenance, audits, and ongoing brand/website strategy.
And if you’re doing it yourself this year: screenshot this list, choose your top three, and start there.
Your future busy-season self will be so grateful.
Off-season work isn’t about doing more for the sake of staying busy. It’s about being intentional with the time and space you do have, so your business feels stronger when things pick back up.
Elevating your processes now means fewer fires later. It means smoother inquiries, clearer communication, stronger marketing foundations, and a brand that continues working for you even when you’re in the middle of a packed wedding weekend or a full client roster.
You don’t need to tackle everything on this list at once. Choose one or two areas that feel most supportive right now and start there. Small, strategic updates compound over time — and they’re often the difference between a business that feels reactive and one that feels grounded.
If you’d like support implementing any of these updates, this is exactly the kind of work we help with at Emily Foster Creative. From website audits and ongoing website maintenance to full brand and website strategy, we’re here to help you refine what’s already working and build systems that support your next season of growth.
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Brand photography by Lena Crocker Photo, Ciara Corin Photo, Moon & Honey Photography and Enliven Photography
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