A church environment is communicating long before a service begins.
It is in the lobby, the kids space, the office hallway, the room used for a staff meeting, and the screens people see while they wait. As a church grows across campuses, those details can start to drift. One room feels polished. Another feels improvised. One campus has a clear visual language. Another is left trying to piece together its own version.
Red Rocks Church has chosen a different approach.

Across its campuses, Red Rocks treats the environment as a system. Physical spaces are built with a shared look and feel in mind: approved colors, furniture, finishes, and layouts help each campus feel unmistakably like Red Rocks, even when the building, size, or purpose of the space is different.
The screens are part of that system too.
Red Rocks uses Playlister throughout its campus environments, including lobbies, offices, kids spaces, etc. A screen may need to welcome someone into the building, carry a ministry meeting, show a kids lesson, provide a simple digital-signage loop, or support an event. The content changes, but the expectation stays the same: it should feel intentional and consistent with the rest of the room.
That is where a repeatable strategy matters.
With Apple TV and Playlister, Red Rocks can give each space the right content without turning every room into a production project. A lobby can run the right signage. A kids room can be ready for a leader. An office screen can switch for a ministry meeting. An event space can show what it needs without a complicated setup or a separate system to manage.

The result is not just more screens. It is consistency.
For Red Rocks, visual consistency is not about making every campus identical. It is about making every campus feel connected. Each space can serve its own ministry and audience while still carrying the same level of clarity, care, and brand presence.

That is a useful idea for any growing church. Screens should not be an afterthought once a room is finished. They are part of the environment people experience. When a church builds a simple, repeatable way to manage them, it becomes much easier to protect the consistency of its spaces while giving ministry teams the flexibility they need.

