The surface area of weddings as a solvable problem is insane, partially because the variance in what people want out of a wedding is huge, and since the cost is usually so high, people are less incentivized to compromise on what they do and don't want.
Then it becomes a configuration problem. You could build a platform that connects couples with wedding vendors, but you might struggle to make that platform flexible enough to allow people to search for all aspects of what they're looking for. Food is a good example of this. When I got married, I had 3 separate dietary requirements I had to meet, which most caterers weren't able or willing to accommodate without a drastic price increase.
It would've been really difficult to build a platform that vendors would fill out fully because there are probably dozens of questions to ask.
I'm sure there are other reasons as well, but that was the biggest pain point for my wedding.
Then it becomes a configuration problem. You could build a platform that connects couples with wedding vendors, but you might struggle to make that platform flexible enough to allow people to search for all aspects of what they're looking for. Food is a good example of this. When I got married, I had 3 separate dietary requirements I had to meet, which most caterers weren't able or willing to accommodate without a drastic price increase.
It would've been really difficult to build a platform that vendors would fill out fully because there are probably dozens of questions to ask.
I'm sure there are other reasons as well, but that was the biggest pain point for my wedding.