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Live rotation map: see your whole floor in real time

The live rotation map turns a published schedule into a real-time view of your floor. Drop your positions onto an uploaded floor plan, and during the day the map shows who is in each position right now, where coverage is thin, and how the rotation moves — with a scrubber to look ahead or back across the day.

From a schedule to a floor view

A published schedule tells you who's on. The live rotation map tells you where they are. You upload your venue's floor plan, place a zone for each position, and the map reads the live schedule to show who's standing in each position at this moment.

It's the difference between a spreadsheet and a control room — coverage you can see at a glance instead of cross-referencing names and times.

How to set up the live map

  1. Upload a floor plan or layout image for the venue.
  2. Add a zone for each position and place it where that position sits on the floor.
  3. Publish the day's schedule so the map has live coverage to read.
  4. Open the map during the day to see who's where, or scrub the timeline to look ahead.

Reading coverage at a glance

Each zone shows the staff currently assigned to that position, so a thinly covered or empty spot stands out immediately. As the rotation moves people between positions, the map animates the change, so a glance tells you the floor is holding.

A time scrubber lets you preview any point in the day — useful for seeing a coverage dip before it happens and adjusting ahead of time.

Frequently asked questions

What is the live rotation map?

It's a real-time view that places your positions on your venue's floor plan and shows who is in each position right now, based on the published schedule.

Do I need to upload a floor plan?

Yes — you upload your venue's layout once and place a zone for each position on it. After that the map reads the live schedule automatically.

Can I see coverage later in the day?

Yes. A time scrubber lets you move forward or back across the day to preview coverage at any point, so you can spot a thin moment before it arrives.