Contact
Questions, ideas, or bug reports? We’d love to hear from you.
Helpful details to include
- Your device & browser (e.g., iPhone Safari, Windows Chrome).
- What you expected vs. what happened.
- Steps to reproduce; a screenshot if possible.
We typically respond within a few business days.
Support hours
We typically respond within a few business days. During peak holiday periods, replies may take longer.
Troubleshooting before you email
- Refresh the page; ensure the tab is active (browsers pause background timers).
- Check timezone: “Auto” follows your device; switch to a fixed zone when traveling.
- For embeds, clear your CMS cache and reload.
Bug report template
Copy/paste the template below into your email so we can help faster.
Subject: Bug report — Holiday Countdown Device/Browser: e.g., iPhone 14 / Safari 17 URL: https://holidaycountdowm.netlify.app/?h=________ Expected: ________________________________ Actual: ________________________________ Steps: 1) ___ 2) ___ 3) ___ Screenshot: (attach if possible)
Feedback & feature requests
Have a holiday we should add? A timezone nuance we missed? Send us a note with links to official calendars if you have them.
Email: everydayroyalties@gmail.com
Last updated: 2025-09-23
What to Include When You Reach Out
A little context in your message helps us understand how you’re using the countdowns and what would make them better.
- Tell us whether you use the site for family planning, classroom activities, work events, or something else.
- Mention which holidays matter most in your home, school, or community.
- Let us know if you’d like more accessibility options, such as higher-contrast themes or different time formats.
- Share one small improvement that would make the countdown experience smoother for you.
Thoughtful feedback helps shape future updates so they actually match the way people plan their celebrations.
Examples of Helpful Messages
If you’re not sure what to say when you reach out, here are a few ideas that make it easier to understand your situation.
- “I’m a teacher using the countdowns with a 4th grade class—could you add more school‑year holidays or breaks?”
- “My family celebrates both religious and secular holidays—here are a few we’d love to see included.”
- “I have low vision and mostly browse on mobile. Here’s how the current design works for me, and here are a few changes that would help.”
- “We’re a remote team spread across time zones and we’re using the countdowns for shared days off. Any chance of a feature that calls this out?”
Real‑world stories like these help guide future updates more than any spreadsheet ever could.
When You’re Not Sure What You Need Yet
Sometimes you only know that holiday planning feels messy, but you’re not sure which feature or article would help.
- Describe what feels hardest right now—timing, money, travel, kids’ schedules, or emotional pressure.
- Share one or two holidays that regularly sneak up on you despite your best efforts.
- Mention whether you’re usually planning alone or with other people who share the load.
- It’s okay if your message sounds like a brain dump—clarity often comes after you put the jumble into words.
You don’t need a perfect plan to start a conversation about better tools.
When to Ask for Help Versus Adjusting Your Own Plan
Sometimes the right move is a new feature or article; other times the best solution is a small change in how you’re planning.
- Reach out when you notice recurring friction—for example, every year the same holiday or school break catches you off guard.
- Reach out when you have a clear idea for a missing countdown or type of guide that would help many people, not just one household.
- Adjust your own plan when the challenge is more about boundaries, budgets, or expectations within your specific group.
- Use your message to separate “what the site could do” from “what we might need to talk about at home or work.”
Clarity on what you’re hoping for makes it easier to point you toward the right next step.
Sharing What Has Already Worked for You
Feedback isn’t only about problems—success stories are just as helpful when improving holiday tools.
- Tell us about a ritual or habit that made one recent season feel calmer or more connected.
- Describe how you’ve used countdowns in classrooms, community groups, or workplaces.
- Mention any phrases or explanations from the site that resonated with you or others.
- Share what you wish you’d known ten seasons ago so we can bake that wisdom into future guides.
Your lived experience can quietly support strangers who are walking through similar holidays.
Examples of Questions You Might Ask
If you’re unsure whether your idea is “big enough,” here are the kinds of questions that can still be very useful.
- “Do you have any suggestions for making this specific holiday quieter without skipping it entirely?”
- “How could a countdown help when I work night shifts or irregular hours?”
- “Are there resources for blended families or co‑parenting across multiple households?”
- “What would you prioritize for someone who is celebrating for the first time after a major life change?”
Concrete questions like these make it easier to offer targeted guidance.
Sharing Constraints as Well as Hopes
When you reach out, it can be just as helpful to describe your limitations as your ideal vision.
- Mention your time constraints—such as caregiving, shift work, or chronic fatigue.
- Share your budget range so suggestions can match what’s realistic.
- Note any accessibility needs, like mobility, sensory sensitivity, or technology comfort.
- Describe what has felt unsustainable in the past so recommendations avoid repeating the same patterns.
Realistic context makes it easier to suggest plans that are gentle and doable.
Before You Reach Out
A quick note about how we handle messages helps us respond more clearly and efficiently.
- Include specific URLs if you’re reporting a bug or a countdown that doesn’t look right.
- Mention your timezone when describing issues with dates or times so we can reproduce what you’re seeing.
- Describe your device briefly (phone, tablet, or desktop and browser) if something looks broken on the page.
- Share ideas generously—feature requests and small quality‑of‑life improvements often come directly from user messages.
We can’t respond to every note, but we do read them and use them to decide what to improve next.
Examples of Messages We Can Act On Quickly
Not every question has a simple answer, but certain kinds of messages help us spot issues and improvements almost immediately.
- “The Contact countdown looks off by one day” with your timezone and device included.
- “This paragraph was confusing on mobile” plus the URL and a short description of what you expected to see.
- “Here’s a feature that would help my class or team” with a real‑world example of how you’d use it.
- “This page loaded slowly for me” with an approximate time and location so we can investigate.
The more concrete your message, the easier it is for us to prioritize a fix or improvement for a future update.
When You Might Not Need to Contact Us
Sometimes a small adjustment on your side solves the issue faster than waiting for a reply.
- Refresh the page or try a different browser if something briefly looks off.
- Double-check the holiday name with the home page search if a link seems broken.
- Confirm your device time and timezone if the countdown doesn't match what you expect.
- Skim the related blog posts for longer planning questions—they may already cover what you're wondering.
And if you're still stuck after trying these, a quick message with details is always welcome.
What Happens After You Send a Message
While we can't promise individual replies, there is a simple process for handling the notes that arrive.
- Messages are grouped into themes such as bugs, content suggestions, and general feedback.
- Urgent issues—like obviously broken countdowns—are prioritized for investigation.
- Insightful suggestions are saved to an idea list that we revisit when planning improvements.
- Trends over time matter more than any single note, which helps keep updates focused and fair.
Knowing this can make it easier to write the kind of message that genuinely influences what we work on next.
Examples of Especially Helpful Feedback
Some messages stand out because they make a concrete difference in how we improve the site.
- Side-by-side screenshots showing how a page looks on two different devices.
- Real stories about how a countdown or article helped (or didn't) during a specific holiday.
- Clear bug reports that include steps to reproduce an issue instead of just the end result.
- Suggestions grounded in use—features you've already tried to approximate with the tools that exist.
The more context you share, the easier it is to translate your feedback into practical changes.