When to use Sequences
Sequences control the order and flow of scenes within your playlist. Every playlist is a sequence—the way your content plays from first scene to last, then loops back to the beginning.
When to think about sequences
Focus on sequencing when you need to:
Create a narrative or flow — Welcome message, then product showcase, then customer reviews, then call-to-action
Build momentum or urgency — Countdown timer before event announcement, or teaser before reveal
Balance attention — Alternate high-impact content (videos, animations) with calmer content (text, images)
Guide viewers through information — Step-by-step instructions or multi-part announcements in logical order
Common use cases
Thoughtful sequencing improves:
Retail promotions — Product intro → features → customer testimonial → discount offer
Event signage — Venue welcome → schedule overview → sponsor logos → live social feed
Educational displays — Topic introduction → key points → quiz question → answer reveal
Waiting room content — Health tip → service info → entertainment → brand message
The order matters. Viewers remember the first and last things they see most clearly—put your most important content there.
How to control sequences
Sequences control the order in which playlists play on your screens.
When editing a sequence, you can arrange playlists to play one after another.
Reorder playlists
Drag playlists up or down to change the order they play.
Playlists run from top to bottom. After the last playlist finishes, the sequence loops back to the first playlist.
Adjust playlist duration
If a playlist contains only one scene, it is added to the sequence with a default duration of 30 seconds.
You can increase or decrease the duration to control how long that playlist appears before the sequence moves to the next playlist.
Tips for organizing sequences
If the flow feels off, try:
Placing important playlists earlier in the sequence
Grouping related playlists together
Update and adjusting playlists' scenes durations for better pacing
Ready to build? See Creating your first playlist to get started.