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Life As
A Wedding Disc Jockey
by Rob Alberti
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It must be great. You work on Saturday night for 5 hours and make
$1,000 or more. What a life. It has been equated to selling drugs – the
lucrative wedding disc jockey business is not what it’s cracked up to be.
The reality is – this is far from the easy money that a potential wedding
client thinks it is. They are shocked when they first hear the price that
professional DJs charge and think that they are being ripped off because
“wedding” was in their vocabulary when they called for a quote.
Here are some interesting facts to understand better what
the life of a wedding disc jockey really is like:
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Clients call at all times of the day – the phone rings
from 8am until around 11pm virtually every day. For the most part, you
must be available to answer the calls because most people won’t leave a
message if you don’t.
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Most weekday nights are spent away from home meeting
with clients or potential clients.
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Most weekends are spent away from friends and family
working at your events. Forget the 4th of July picnic and New Years Eve.
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Wedding Disc Jockeys are booked a year or two in
advance – so that last minute call from your friend asking you to dinner
or to a concert is a wasted call. You’re already booked.
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Your daughter’s concert that is on a Friday in May –
you will most likely miss. Again, you are already booked.
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Try standing for 5 hours straight and see how your legs
and feet feel.
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Did you know one of the most feared things to do is
speak in public? As a wedding disc jockey, that is what we do every
weekend.
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Most people bring a cup of coffee to work – a wedding
disc jockey brings over $15,000 worth of equipment and another $20,000 or
more in music to most events.
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A wedding disc jockey will haul in about 1,000 pounds
of equipment into and out of the reception – that means up stairs, across
rickety stone paths and through parking garages, through kitchens and in
the cold and rain.
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A typical wedding lasts for 5 hours. Your wedding disc
jockey will arrive an hour early to setup, will be there after guests
leave tearing down and typically drives 30 minutes to 60 minutes each way
to the event. They have to spend time preparing equipment before they
leave the office. They have to unload and put away gear when they return.
That adds up to between 8 and 10 hours on the day of the event alone
invested in your wedding.
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A wedding disc jockey will typically meet you prior to
booking (pre-sales meeting) for about an hour. Most disc jockeys will
drive to meet their clients. Presales and travel to and from this meeting
will add about 2 hours of their time into your event.
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When it’s time to discuss details, your disc jockey
will again drive to meet you and spend another hour with you going over
details, they’ll return to the office, type up this information and send
you a copy. They’ll spend a couple hours organizing music, talking on the
phone and sending/receiving emails from you over the course of the two
months prior to your wedding. You can figure they’ve just invested another
5 hours into preparing for your event.
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The total time invested per event will be around 17 –
20 hours when it’s all said and done. That $1,000 for 5 hours is now
really $1,000 for 20 hours of time.
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A wedding disc jockey will spend about $2,000 or more
each year on music updates. They might invest $2,000-$6,000 in equipment,
repairs and upgrades each year. They will spend $1,000 - $10,000 in
advertising, bridal shows, printing, etc. They will spend $5,000 - $20,000
for office supplies, computers, and business services. They will spend
$500 - $1,500 on liability insurance policies. They will spend $2,000 to
$5,000 on postage. They will travel to one of the national DJ conventions
to keep up to date with the industry and spend around $1,500 doing so.
They will have a 800 number, cell phone, fax and voice mail services
costing them around $5,000 each year. They will spend $5,000 each year on
health insurance. They will spend $5,000 in gas getting back and forth to
meetings and events.
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A wedding disc jockey will drive 25,000 – 35,000 miles
each year between meetings and back and forth to their events. That will
be approximately 750 hours away from home each year just in travel time.
The reason that wedding disc jockeys charge the price
that they do is simple. It is the cost of doing business. The value that a
professional disc jockey brings to your event is priceless. Take away the
music and you’re just inviting friends and family to eat and drink. That
accounts for about 2 of the typical 5 hour wedding reception. Your
professional wedding disc jockey is responsible for coordinating all the
details of the flow of the event – from introductions to the cake cutting.
They are the middle man between the banquet staff, your photographer and
videographer. They are your wedding coordinator. Without proper quality
entertainment – guests will leave soon after dinner.
If a typical wedding reception costs around $25,000 (or
$5,000 per hour!), and your guests leave 2 hours before the end due to poor
entertainment – you’ve just wasted $10,000 of your wedding budget. If you’re
debating between a cheap $500 DJ and a professional DJ costing $1,500, the
decision should be easy. Trying to cut corners on entertainment could cost
you $10,000. The additional $1,000 is money well spent when the big picture
is in focus. The time and effort a true professional disc jockey puts into
your event will be worth every penny.
Article by: Rob Alberti,
After Hours Disc Jockey Service
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