The HoneyBook onboarding process, that builds trust early.
Onboarding sets the tone for the entire client relationship. Here’s how to use HoneyBook to make a newly-booked client feel taken care of, while quietly gathering every detail you’ll need later.
Written by Sydney Young, HoneyBook Pro & Template Partner.
Where this sits in the client journey
New to HoneyBook?
This guide assumes you've already got a HoneyBook account with the basics in place. Starting from zero? Walk through the full setup guide first — brand, services, your first Smart File and payments — then come back here to layer on this stage's playbook.
Jargon, decoded
{ in any text block to insert one.The five steps
From signed client to fully briefed.
Send a warm welcome packet
Within a day of signing, send a short welcome file that thanks them, sets expectations for what happens next, and introduces the client portal they’ll use for everything going forward.
Why it matters: This is the client’s first impression after booking, and it’s the moment that turns "I hired a vendor" into "I made the right choice."
Send a detailed planning questionnaire
Build one thorough questionnaire covering everything you’ll need: timeline details, key contacts, style preferences, logistics, and any special requests, sent automatically once the contract is signed.
Why it matters: Gathering everything up front in one document beats a slow trickle of details over dozens of email threads later.
Give them one home base: the client portal
Point clients to their HoneyBook client portal for their contract, invoices, questionnaire, and any files, so they always know where to look instead of searching old emails.
Why it matters: A single, branded hub feels more professional and reduces the "can you resend that" messages that eat your time.
Set expectations for communication
Use the welcome packet to explain how and when you’ll be in touch, planning call cadence, response times, and what’s still to come, so clients aren’t left guessing.
Why it matters: Clear expectations up front prevent the anxious check-in messages that come from uncertainty.
Schedule the planning call
Use HoneyBook’s built-in scheduler to let clients book a planning or design call directly off your welcome packet, no email back-and-forth to find a time.
Why it matters: Removing scheduling friction means the call actually gets booked instead of stalling in a "let’s find a time" loop.
Once the details are gathered and the plan is set, move to the fulfillment stage to run the event or service itself.
Beyond the five steps
Where this stage actually goes wrong.
Mistake: Sending the welcome packet and the full questionnaire in one heavy file.
Instead: Split them, a light welcome first, the detailed questionnaire a day later once they've had a moment to enjoy being booked.
Mistake: Leaving the questionnaire's due date vague.
Instead: Set a soft two-week deadline, or it quietly drifts to the week before the event.
Mistake: Skipping the client portal introduction.
Instead: Point to it clearly in the welcome email, or you'll spend months fielding "can you resend that" messages.
Mistake: No scheduler link for the planning call.
Instead: Embed HoneyBook's scheduler in the welcome packet so a time gets picked without six emails.
When the playbook needs to flex
A few situations that don't fit the template.
A slow-to-respond client: Automate a friendly nudge around day 10 instead of manually chasing them down.
Multiple decision-makers: Planner, couple and parents all weighing in. Clarify in the welcome email who has final say on the details that matter.
A rush timeline: Event under eight weeks out? Compress the sequence, send the welcome and questionnaire the same day and skip the usual one-day buffer.
Steal the framework
The exact welcome kit & prompts I use.
The same onboarding framework from my private client setup, built here for wedding and event pros — ready to copy straight into HoneyBook.
Quick primer on the automation language below: a Trigger is the event that starts things off, a Wait adds a delay, a Condition branches the path, and an Action — like sending an email — is what actually happens. That's the whole of HoneyBook's Automations 2.0.
Welcome email
Sent the moment they sign and pay.
Planning questionnaire
One document instead of a dozen threads.
Client portal invite
Their home base for everything going forward.
The welcome email
Sent the moment a client officially signs and pays.
Smart file completedyour Booking Smart File
Payment madedeposit or retainer cleared
Send emailthis template
This is the same automation you'll extend below to send the questionnaire right after.
Pro tip: This is the one email clients screenshot and forward to their family. Make it feel like a moment, not a receipt.
The planning questionnaire
The single document that replaces a dozen scattered email threads.
Payment madedeposit cleared
1 daylet the welcome email land first
Send file via emailyour questionnaire Smart File
Pro tip: Keep it to one sitting — about 15–20 minutes. Once a questionnaire feels like homework, completion rates drop fast.
The client portal invite
Introduces their private hub for contracts, invoices and files.
- Welcome packet Smart File: thank-you + what's next + portal intro
- Planning questionnaire, sent automatically once the contract is signed and paid
- Client portal link, shared in your welcome email
- Scheduler link for a kickoff or planning call, embedded in the welcome packet
Pro tip: Repeat the portal link in at least one later email too — most clients forget where it went by month two of planning.
Ready to onboard clients like a pro?
Start a free 7-day trial and lock in 30% off your first year through my HoneyBook Pro link.
Get 30% off HoneyBook →
Questions
The onboarding stage, answered.
What should be in a client welcome packet?
A short thank-you, a clear outline of what happens next, an introduction to the client portal, and how and when you’ll be in touch. Keep it warm and brief, the details go in the questionnaire.
When should the planning questionnaire go out?
Immediately after a contract is signed and the deposit clears, ideally automatically, so you start gathering details while the client is most engaged.
What is the HoneyBook client portal?
A branded hub where a client can find their contract, invoices, questionnaire responses, and any shared files in one place, instead of searching through old email threads.
How do I get planning calls actually booked?
Use HoneyBook’s built-in scheduling link inside your welcome packet so clients can pick a time themselves, removing the email back-and-forth that often stalls scheduling.
What's the difference between a Project and a Pipeline?
A Project is the home for one lead or client, holding their files, messages and payments. The Pipeline is the board view of all your Projects, organized into stages like New Inquiry, Booked, and Completed.
Keep reading