The calendar is the interface — and the record
Chat logs bury information; dashboards abstract it away. A calendar shows what happened, when, and what happens next — the way people actually think.
Every event, visible
Calls, emails, messages and bookings all land as calendar events. Click any one to see the source message, how it was processed, and what was written.
Handling you can replay
Each event carries its full workflow: what the agent understood, which slot it checked, what it wrote, what it scheduled next. Nothing is a black box.
Deeply bound to your schedule
Callender books around your real availability — working hours, buffers, holidays, personal blocks. It guards against double-booking, and reshuffles politely when you change plans.
Future triggers, on the timeline
Reminders, confirmation call-backs and follow-ups live on the same calendar as everything else — visible in advance, editable like any event.
Read your whole day at a glance
Open tomorrow on Callender and you see more than appointments — you see the whole story of each one:
'14:00 — Follow-up, Mrs. Chan.' Booked yesterday at 16:32 from an inbound call, confirmed by SMS at 16:35.
One click opens the call summary, the transcript excerpt that triggered the booking, and every step the agent took.
A 9:00 reminder call is already on the timeline. If Mrs. Chan reschedules tonight, the calendar — and the reminder — move together.
Frequently asked questions
Does it work with my existing calendar?
Yes. Callender binds two-way to mainstream calendars — your existing events shape its availability, and its bookings appear in the calendars you already use.
Can I see how an event was created?
Always. Every event links back to its source (call, email, message), the processing steps, and the audit trail of any later changes.
What happens when my own schedule changes?
Callender reacts in real time: freed slots reopen, conflicts are flagged, affected bookings can be rescheduled automatically with the customer notified.