Let’s get one thing straight: if you’re still editing your Dubsado scheduler templates every week to reflect your changing availability, you’re doing it the hard way.
I get why people think that’s the move. You want to make sure people only book during windows you know you’re free. You want tight control. But here’s the truth:
Your scheduler template was never meant to be a day planner.
It’s a structure—your default rules of engagement. It’s supposed to reflect general availability for each type of appointment, not your exact week-by-week life.
So when you’re going into each scheduler and adding/removing time slots to match your current calendar, you’re not just wasting time—you’re setting yourself up for chaos.
Your Scheduler Template Isn’t a Daily Planner
Here’s the mistake I see business owners making all the time: they open their Dubsado scheduler template and manually block out only the hours they know they’re available this week or month or <insert your timeframe here>. Then they wonder why the scheduler still lets people book them at weird times or why changes don’t seem to stick or realize they forgot to update every single scheduler which means some people still have access to the WRONG availability.
So now you’ve wasted time and you’re risking being booked during your kid’s soccer game. No thanks.
How Scheduler Availability Actually Works
Your scheduler should define:
- What days/times you’re typically available for this type of appointment
- The rules around how soon someone can book or how far in advance
What it shouldn’t be used for:
- Blocking off individual days you’re unavailable
- Editing time slots based on week-to-week fluctuations
- Micromanaging your schedule in real time
That’s what your calendar is for.
Here’s the Smart Way to Manage It
1. Set Up General Availability in Your Scheduler Template
For example:
- Discovery Calls: M/W 1–4pm
- Design Reviews: T/Th mornings
- Strategy Sessions: Fridays only
That becomes the framework. You set your normal working hours for that appointment. Then, you let your calendar—not the scheduler—handle all the fluctuations in your schedule.
2. Sync Your Calendar(s)
Connect Google, Outlook, or iCal—whichever calendar actually reflects your life.
Dubsado pulls in both Busy and Free events—but it will only block off time marked as Busy. That means:
- Doctor’s appointment = Busy ✅
- “Monthly admin review” = Free ✅ (won’t block time but still shows on your calendar)
3. Use Calendar Events to Block Off Time
- Want to take a day off? Block it on your calendar.
- Need to reserve the first week of the month for existing client work? Set a recurring “Busy” event.
- Don’t want Friday calls anymore? Update your scheduler template once, then let your calendar control the daily flow.
Why It Has to Work This Way
There’s another layer to this that most people don’t realize:
💥 Once you apply a scheduler to a project, any changes you make to the template do not retroactively update.
So if you edited the availability thinking it would fix an old link? Nope. That scheduler is frozen in time.
The only thing that does update dynamically is your calendar.
So if your kid’s field trip gets added? Block the time.
If you’re taking a long weekend? Block the time.
It will automatically reflect in all schedulers connected to that calendar—no extra steps, no missed appointments, no panicked reschedules.
This is how you create a real system that scales.
If You’re Still Not Convinced…
Let’s talk through the things I hear every week from business owners who are wrestling with their scheduler:
“But I want more control.”
You get more control by letting your calendar block time dynamically. It’s easier to trust a synced, up-to-date calendar than to manually edit availability in a dozen places.
“I change my availability a lot.”
Great—then stop making yourself go into every scheduler to reflect that! Your calendar was built for that. Drop a Busy event and you’re done.
“I want different rules for different weeks.”
Then use recurring calendar events or create multiple scheduler templates with different availability rules. But again—the real-time changes come from your calendar, not your scheduler.
“Calendly seems better at syncing and confirmations.”
Calendly does have that slick auto-confirmation email, sure. But Dubsado is your workflow hub. Your client journey, your proposals, your emails, your invoices—they all live here. Why bolt on another tool just because you’re misusing this one?
You can make Dubsado work beautifully, if you set it up correctly.
Let Your Calendar Do the Heavy Lifting
You shouldn’t be spending an hour every Sunday editing scheduler templates. That’s not sustainable—and it’s not smart.
Instead:
✅ Set your general availability once
✅ Sync your real-life calendar
✅ Mark time off as Busy
✅ Let the system update itself in real time
This is how you stop micromanaging and start trusting your tools.
Ready to Build a Scheduler That Actually Works?
If you’ve been patchworking your availability and stressing over every calendar change, I can help you fix that—fast. I build systems that scale with your business, not ones you have to babysit.
Let’s build a setup that works for your real life. Book a strategy session 💻✨