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A well
trained banquet staff will take care of certain details for you – they will
be there to guide your wedding party during introductions. Someone will be
assigned to take your flowers from you and the wedding party after you are
introduced. For introductions, there should be a clear (and straight)
path wide enough for two people to walk arm in arm to the dance floor and to
the head table. If you visit a banquet facility – you should look at the
layout and see if you and your partner can walk together through the tables
and onto the dance floor. You should imagine the room filled with guests
and people standing around each table and chairs pulled back from the tables
as they will be during your entrance.
Typically, a well run facility will assign server(s) to the head table and
possibly the family tables and they will be your contact person throughout
your reception. Ask if that head server will be in the room the entire
night or if they will be leaving after dinner.
Another
thing to look at is where your entertainment will be setting up. Is it near
the dance floor? Where will their speakers go? Many banquet facilities
do not leave enough room for a typical DJ to setup in. Many even expect the
DJ to setup their speakers so that they have to project music across a
couple tables worth of guests (your grandparents won’t like that as that is
typically the grandparents table). If you have a large number of people in
your wedding party, you might want to tier the head table to allow for more
access to the dance floor for your DJ and their sound gear. Stand where the
DJ will be setup. Can they see the cake? Can they see where you will be
introduced from and the head table for introductions? It is best if your
entertainment is setup along one edge or at the corner of the dance floor
(not 20 feet back from the dance floor).
How
fast is the meal service? There are too many facilities that are slow at
serving the meal. Your 7-12 wedding will get less than 2 hours worth of
dancing. Ask your DJ about the speed of service. Yes, you do not want to
rush your guests eating, but you also do not want to make them wait 30
minutes between each course either. If your guests are just getting desert
at 10:30 pm, the chances of having a great time dancing becomes very difficult.
With only an hour and a half of dancing, you might get 30 songs to dance to.
Other
things to consider when checking out a banquet facility – if your reception
is over at midnight, can the music play until midnight or do they force the
entertainment to end at 10-15 minutes prior? This is becoming more and more
common for area banquet facilities. A banquet facility should not run on
“bar time” as we typically refer to the practice of bars making last call
and ending early to push patrons out prior to the top of the hour. We’ve
even seen high end banquet facilities turn on the lights 10 minutes prior to
scare away guests. Strip clearing tables is also a common technique that
facilities use to push guests away early. The staff would come around and
clear everything off of the tables – all glasses, centerpieces, etc. This
is a subtle way to force guests to leave. This is unacceptable. A good
facility will wait even 10-15 minutes AFTER the contracted end time before
they start clearing. This is proper etiquette.
In
closing, yes it is important to fall in love with your facility. The feel
has to be what you are looking for (romantic, beautiful view, old world
charm, etc.) and you should be treated as if they are really interested in
your business and your ideas. There are other logistic things to pay
attention to and question before your sign on the dotted line. If you’re
just not sure, call a local wedding vendor (photographer, videographer, disc
jockey) and ask them what their experience has been with a particular
venue. Ask what to look out for (slow service, lack of staff, etc.) and
make sure you get everything in writing from your facility. If they promise
to do something for you – it should be part of the contract.
Copyright 2005
Wedding Insider - Staff Writer |