Many facilitators understandably want to help couples move efficiently through marriage preparation.
Schedules are busy. Wedding planning can feel overwhelming. Couples may be balancing work, school, travel, military service, or family responsibilities.
Because of these pressures, some facilitators may feel tempted to complete the FOCCUS® process in a single long session.
But at FOCCUS®, we strongly encourage facilitators to remember something important:
Meaningful conversation takes time.
That is one reason FOCCUS® generally recommends:
- 4–6 facilitation sessions
- no more than approximately 90 minutes each
These guidelines help create healthier pacing, deeper reflection, and more productive conversation.
Why This Matters
FOCCUS® is not designed to be a quick checklist or information session.
The inventory is a conversation tool.
Healthy facilitation gives couples time to:
- reflect
- process emotions
- revisit topics later
- discuss concerns thoughtfully
- continue conversations between sessions
One session is rarely enough time for couples to explore important topics deeply and comfortably.
Many meaningful conversations develop gradually over multiple meetings.
That slower process matters deeply.
The Goal Is Meaningful Conversation — Not Speed
Sometimes facilitators unintentionally become too focused on “getting through” the inventory.
But healthy facilitation is not about speed or completion.
It is about helping couples:
- communicate honestly
- deepen understanding
- identify concerns
- strengthen emotional awareness
- build healthier communication habits
These things usually require more than one meeting.
When sessions are rushed:
- reflection decreases
- emotional safety weakens
- difficult topics may be avoided
- couples become mentally fatigued
- meaningful discussion often stays surface-level
Healthy pacing strengthens conversation.
The Recommended Structure Is a Guideline
FOCCUS® recommends:
- approximately 4–6 sessions
- sessions lasting no more than about 90 minutes
But these are guidelines, not rigid rules.
Every couple is different.
Some couples may need:
- only 3 sessions
- 7 or more sessions
- slightly longer meetings due to travel or scheduling realities
For example:
- military couples
- long-distance couples
- rural couples
- couples with demanding schedules
…may occasionally benefit from adjusted pacing or longer sessions when necessary.
Healthy facilitators remain flexible while still protecting the quality of conversation.
One Session Is Usually Not Enough
It is important for facilitators to understand this clearly:
Completing FOCCUS® in one session usually does not serve the couple well.
Couples need:
- time to reflect
- opportunities to revisit conversations
- emotional breathing room
- time between meetings to process discussion topics
Healthy marriage preparation is not simply about reviewing answers quickly.
It is about helping couples develop meaningful communication habits that can strengthen future marriage.
That process deserves time and attentiveness.
Preparation Matters Too
Strong facilitation begins before the couple arrives.
Healthy facilitators prepare carefully by:
- reviewing the Facilitator Report thoroughly
- identifying topics needing slower discussion
- selecting discussion aids thoughtfully
- planning helpful follow-up questions
- identifying areas that may require pastoral sensitivity
Preparation helps sessions feel:
- calmer
- more focused
- more intentional
- less rushed
Couples benefit when facilitators arrive prepared and attentive.
Facilitator Couples Should Work as a Team
When facilitation is done by a married couple or deacon couple, preparation together becomes especially important.
Healthy facilitator teams should discuss:
- who will guide certain topics
- who will ask specific discussion aids
- when personal examples may be helpful
- how to balance participation naturally
Good facilitator teamwork creates smoother and calmer conversation.
It also models respectful communication and collaboration for the engaged couple.
Personal Stories Should Be Used Sparingly and Purposefully
Facilitator couples often bring valuable:
- life experience
- marriage wisdom
- faith perspective
- communication insight
These experiences can strengthen sessions when shared appropriately.
But facilitators should remember: the session is about the engaged couple — not the facilitator couple.
Personal examples should:
- support conversation
- normalize struggles
- offer encouragement
- create connection
…without shifting excessive focus away from the engaged couple’s relationship.
Healthy facilitators use personal examples carefully and sparingly.
In-Person Is Best — But Zoom Can Still Be Effective
Whenever possible, in-person facilitation remains ideal.
In-person sessions often strengthen:
- emotional connection
- attentiveness
- communication flow
- relational comfort
But sometimes Zoom or virtual sessions are necessary.
For example:
- military couples
- long-distance couples
- deployment situations
- travel limitations
- health concerns
- geographic distance
In these situations, Zoom can still provide meaningful and effective facilitation.
The key is maintaining:
- attentiveness
- calm pacing
- emotional presence
- thoughtful conversation
While in-person remains best, virtual facilitation is often far better than rushing or reducing meaningful preparation.
Helpful Reminder
Healthy marriage preparation is not measured by how quickly the process is completed.
It is measured by the quality of conversation, reflection, and communication that takes place.
Meaningful conversations deserve time.
Facilitator Encouragement
If you are facilitating couples, remember:
You are not simply completing a requirement.
You are helping create space for:
- reflection
- discernment
- emotional growth
- healthier communication
- stronger preparation for marriage
That work cannot always be rushed.
Your preparation, your attentiveness, your pacing, and your willingness to slow conversations down thoughtfully all help strengthen the experience for couples in meaningful ways.
And meaningful preparation helps build healthier marriages.

