Club operations

Parents are first-class users.

Multi-child Family Calendar. Inline RSVP. Per-child consent toggles. Family Group Sessions. Summit treats parents as the operational adults they are, not as side-channel observers.

A parent holding a smartphone with a colour-coded family calendar, with their two children holding badminton rackets beside them.

The Family Dashboard.

A parent's home screen on Summit is a family-shaped dashboard. Every linked child has their own card. Each card carries the child's upcoming sessions, their next event, their current active goal, and quick links into their full profile. One parent, three kids, three squads — and one screen that actually fits all of it.

Condensed upcoming + inline RSVP.

The most common parent action — "is Maya in tonight or not?" — takes one tap. The condensed upcoming strip on the dashboard shows the next handful of sessions across every child, with inline RSVP buttons right there. No need to open the session, no need to drill into the child. Tap attending, tap not attending, optionally pick a reason, done.

Multi-child Family Group Sessions tile.

When two siblings are in the same group session, Summit recognises that and presents the session as a single Family Group Sessions tile — one entry, both children visible, RSVP-able for both at once. No more separately RSVPing both kids to the same Saturday squad.

Family Calendar — colour-coded.

The Family Calendar shows every linked child on the same screen, with each child colour-coded distinctly. A glance tells you whose event is on what day. The same RSVP-inline behaviour from the dashboard works on the calendar — tap the event, set the status.

Per-child consent toggles.

Parents control what each child is allowed to do on the platform — separately, per child. Can this child message the head coach directly? Can this child message any of their coaches? Can this child message other under-16 players? Each toggle is per-child, editable at any time, and respected by the rest of the platform.

Parent ↔ child linking, properly authenticated.

Linking a parent account to a child is a deliberate, auditable workflow. The parent sends a link request to the child's email address; the link is reviewed by the club's coaching team. No rogue linking. No quiet account hijack. When the child turns 18, the link transitions cleanly to an adult arrangement.