Funeral Planning Coordination Kit

Provides a structured logistics guide for coordinating funeral services, covering scheduling, venue selection, notifications, documentation, and day-of event...

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Funeral Planning Coordination Kit

A logistics-only guide for coordinating a funeral, memorial, or celebration of life. This skill covers scheduling, venues, notifications, and documentation. It does not provide religious, cultural, or financial guidance.

When to Use

  • You have been asked to help coordinate services for someone who has died.
  • You need a structured checklist to manage logistics under time pressure.
  • You want to ensure nothing critical is forgotten in the first 72 hours.

What You Get

  1. Immediate first-24-hours checklist
  2. Venue selection criteria
  3. Notification priority list
  4. Scheduling and timeline template
  5. Documentation checklist
  6. Day-of coordination reminders

1. First 24 Hours — Immediate Actions

  • Confirm the death has been pronounced by an authorized person.
  • Contact a funeral home or cremation provider to arrange transfer if not already handled.
  • Secure the deceased’s home, vehicle, and valuables (ask a trusted person to assist).
  • Notify the closest family members before broader announcements.
  • Ask one person to handle phone/social media to avoid conflicting information.
  • Begin gathering documents: ID, Social Security number, military discharge papers (if applicable).

2. Venue Selection Checklist

Evaluate venues against these practical criteria:

  • Capacity: Expected attendance + 20% buffer.
  • Accessibility: Wheelchair access, elevators, hearing loops, close parking.
  • Parking / Transit: Sufficient spaces or nearby public transit.
  • Audio / Visual: Microphones, projectors, screens for slideshows or video tributes.
  • Catering rules: Outside food allowed? Kitchen access? Alcohol policy?
  • Climate control: Heating or air conditioning appropriate for season and attire.
  • Backup plan: Covered alternative in case of weather (for outdoor elements).
  • Cost structure: Deposit, cancellation terms, overtime fees (not financial advice; confirm directly with venue).

3. Notification Priority List

Work outward in rings to control the spread of information:

  1. Ring 1 — Immediate family (spouse, children, parents, siblings)
  2. Ring 2 — Extended family and close friends
  3. Ring 3 — Employer / school / organizations
  4. Ring 4 — Wider community (neighbors, colleagues, clubs)
  5. Ring 5 — Public announcement (obituary, social media, funeral home website)
  • Designate one point person per ring if possible.
  • Keep a shared contact list (name, relationship, phone, email, notified? yes/no).
  • Include service details only when confirmed (date, time, venue, dress code if any).

4. Scheduling and Timeline Template

Adjust to your local customs and provider availability.

WhenTask
0–24hDeath pronounced, body transferred, immediate family notified
24–48hChoose venue and set date/time; begin Ring 2–3 notifications
2–4 daysFinalize program, speakers, music; order printed materials
4–6 daysPublish obituary; send formal invitations or announcements
1 day beforeVenue walkthrough, A/V test, seating layout, catering confirm
Day ofArrive early, sign-in table, guest book, printed programs, ushers
1–3 days afterThank-you notes, final documentation, return rentals

5. Documentation Checklist

  • Death certificates: Order multiple certified copies (institutions will require them).
  • Permits: Burial, cremation, or transit permits from local authorities.
  • Program / Order of service: Printed agenda with names of speakers, readings, music selections.
  • Guest book or digital sign-in: For later thank-you notes.
  • Photo / video release: If you plan to photograph or stream the service, inform attendees.
  • Donation or floral instructions: If the family prefers donations in lieu of flowers, provide clear links or addresses.

6. Day-of Coordination Reminders

  • Arrive at least 90 minutes before start time.
  • Set up sign-in, programs, photo boards, and any memorabilia.
  • Test microphones and slideshow/video playback.
  • Brief ushers or greeters on seating plan and accessibility needs.
  • Have a printed contact list for vendors (caterer, venue manager, florist).
  • Assign someone to collect cards, gifts, and digital media after the service.
  • Keep a small kit: tissues, water, phone chargers, backup printed programs, pens.

Tone

Respectful, pragmatic, and organized. This skill stays in the logistics lane: it will not advise on religious rites, cultural customs, estate distribution, or financial products.