By: Ruth Lawrence
For years, wedding inspiration has meant scrolling through an endless gallery of beautiful, unreachable ideas. The arches were stunning, but nobody local could build them. The florists were exquisite, but nobody could actually book them. The pictures were plentiful. The path to hiring anyone in them was not. Wed Society built its business on closing that gap, and its growth over the past two decades suggests the gap was larger and more common than the industry liked to admit.
The Local Advantage
Founded in 2007 by Ashley Bowen Murphy and Kami Huddleston, the company has grown around one straightforward premise: couples want inspiration they can actually use, not just admire from a distance. Rather than curating a borderless feed of aspirational imagery pulled from anywhere and everywhere, Wed Society features real weddings from real cities, tied to vendors couples can realistically hire in their own market. A couple planning a wedding in Cleveland sees work by professionals actually based in Cleveland. The same holds true across the company’s other markets.
That model has scaled meaningfully. Wed Society now operates in 38 cities across the country and generates more than 11 million views each month, making it one of the most widely used wedding-planning platforms in North America. Each month, more than 500 recently married couples apply to have their weddings featured on the platform, bringing vendor endorsements intended to help other couples still in the planning stages. It is, in effect, a running record of what worked, updated constantly by the people who just lived it.
Why It Resonates
The appeal isn’t complicated. Couples today are careful, somewhat skeptical consumers of content. They understand the difference between a photo that simply dazzles and a plan that can actually be executed on a real date, in a real venue, on a real budget. Wed Society’s emphasis on local vendors gives its content a kind of usefulness that more generic platforms often lack. A beautiful photograph means more when it comes attached to a name, a city, and a working phone number.
As Huddleston has described it, the company’s mission is “to connect couples with the best local vendors and to elevate the businesses that make wedding dreams come true.” It is a modest way of describing what has become a fairly significant shift in how couples approach planning: less fantasy, more follow-through. Couples aren’t just looking for something to admire. They’re looking for someone they can hire, and some reassurance that the choice will hold up once the deposit is paid.
A Model Built on Trust
There is a broader lesson here for an industry that has often equated more content with more value. Endless inspiration, it turns out, is not the same thing as helpful inspiration. When every option looks beautiful, few of them feel usable, and couples are left no closer to actually planning their day. Wed Society’s growth suggests couples are responding instead to specificity and credibility: real vendors, in their own market, recommended by couples who worked with them directly and had no reason to embellish.
It isn’t a particularly flashy idea. It is closer to word of mouth, formalized and scaled: a growing archive built on the endorsements of people who have already been through the process, offered up to those who have not. That may be its quiet advantage over louder, more generic competitors. In a category long built on aspiration alone, Wed Society has found traction by making its content usable, grounding it in real weddings, real vendors, and real cities, rather than an abstract and ultimately unreachable ideal of one.
The result is a platform that treats a wedding less as a fantasy to admire and more as a decision worth getting right, backed by the people who have already made it work.
