14 Mar 2008 02:21:23 | Peter Togel
A Tip List For Creating That Unique Holiday Party
Once again, it is time for holiday parties. While everyone is
downsizing and looking for new ways to cut costs, a holiday
party at a lower price may not be a good answer. The following
list of useful tips will help and assist you in creating
pleasant and successful holiday cheer.
1. The Venue Choosing a good venue needs a lot of thought. If
you choose your venue too big, your guests will feel lost.
Choose a venue that is too small and not all guests will fit in.
But size is not all that needs to be considered. If you want to
have people remember that event forever, choose a venue that is
not a typical place for a holiday party. Be creative. Would you
remember a party in a barn, an airplane, a mall, the zoo, an
indoor pool, an airplane hangar, a theater, a railway car, or an
old historic church building? You see, there are other places
than hotels and restaurants.
2. The Party Theme Not every holiday party needs to look like a
mall in December. Find a theme that makes it interesting to come
to the event. It sounds much more interesting to visit a party
with a theme like "Jungle Christmas", "Santa's laboratory",
"Party under the Sea", "Dude Ranch", "Out of the Box"...
3. The Decoration Once you’ve found a great theme, think about
the decoration that supports the theme. You can create your own
labels for bottles, rent trees, collect large boxes from
surrounding retailers, borrow some cattle (though that might
cause some problems....), free lab coats for everyone with the
company logo and rubber gloves (who said your employees are
thrilled with getting yet another company t-shirt as a Christmas
bonus?), rent an "electric cow" (the rodeo thing...), dress up
some cardboard Rudolphs with lab coats and goggles, or strap
some reindeer antlers to the borrowed cows. Dress up the waiters
as Santas or mad scientists. In other words, turn your venue
into a stage set for a fun time by making it match the theme.
Place single use cameras on the tables so your guests can make
pictures for their memories. And don’t forget good lighting.
Creative lighting will contribute much to the atmosphere.
4. The Music To find the right music for your event, you have to
visualize your guests. See the event through your guest's eyes.
While a string quartet might fit great to your theme, the result
may be that your guests fall asleep. If you get bored from DJs
and bands, try a cowbell orchestra, a square-dance lesson, or a
barbershop quartet.
5. The Entertainment While music is usually a big part of a
great evening, music should not be everything. What makes and
breaks the evening is the number of different diversions and
surprises. This state offers some of the best entertainers you
can find in this country. Invite a comedian, magician or
mentalist to your event, and your guests will have something to
talk about. Good magic entertainers will not only produce the
CEO on stage, they will also integrate your guests in the stage
performance and make them heroes. This is a perfect treat for
persons that work hard and well.
When hiring entertainers, do not always go for the lowest price.
Whoever you hire, he/she will affect your image. Reliability and
follow-through are more important than a lower bid. You can find
great magicians by looking for example at the web site of the
local chapter of the Society of American Magicians
(http://www.magicsam.com/samweb.html). When working on the
program, don't save the best for last. At the end of the event,
the guests may be tired, hung-over, or worried about getting
home.
6. The Drinks The best holiday gift you can give to your guests
is preventing them from driving after they have been drinking
alcohol. Provide enough low-alcohol and non-alcoholic drinks,
for both underage and non-drinking attendees to have plenty of
options. Display these options as prominently as the alcoholic
beverages. Using smaller cups help your guests to keep their
alcohol servings to an appropriate size. Create little stickers
like "designated driver" or "I enjoy non-alcoholic drinks" that
drivers can wear during the party. Have your guests sign up for
alternate transportation at the beginning of your event in case
they decide to drink. Provide a "check-in" for car keys. Collect
and tag each guest's car keys, and at the conclusion of the
party, only return keys to designated drivers. And stop serving
alcohol at least one hour before the party is over.
7. The Food The theme, date and place will make the ultimate
difference to the type of food you will decide to serve. A
mouth-watering buffet is sure to keep people's attention, not to
mention help their bodies absorb the alcohol they consume.
Especially high protein and carbohydrate foods like meats,
cheese, veggies, breads and light dips are very good. They taste
great and do not make your guests thirsty. Make sure you have
options available for alternative diet needs.
8. The Analysis After every event, do an "event analysis." Write
down what was good, what went wrong, what you would do
differently next time, and who the vendors were that made your
life easier.
Planning for a successful event requires a tremendous amount of
effort, time and energy. Every event is different and if you
want your holiday party to be unique, you have to be bold and
make a leap. If you don’t have the time, talk to some of the
events planner about your ideas. They are in business to help
you.
About Author :
Best-selling author, mentalist and master magician Pit Finn (aka
Peter Togel) is a frequent guest on radio and television shows
and a member of the International Brotherhood of Magicians, the
Fellowship of Christian Magicians , the PSI-Clones, as well as
the Society of American Magicians. He can be reached at
peter@pitfinn.com (http://www.pitfinn.com).