Six Reasons Your Clients Might Not Take a Vendor's Advice on Hiring a Wedding Coordinator.

We've all been there when we have a client who says they have a friend who is caterer or a DJ, their brother has his own band, or someone they know will be really good at taking their pictures. With Day-of Coordinations this is more typical. You get what you get when it comes to the bride's mixture of vendors. Nothing is likely to change even though you see the recipe for a disaster and warnings often fall on deaf ears. (Put this in your contract!)

I cringe when I know there isn't going to be a professional DJ to work with as well as other professionals. I hear from the professionals all the time that they have told their client that they need a wedding coordinator. When I recently asked a very talented DJ how often they actually had a wedding where there was a professional Wedding Coordinator, he said it was only 1 in 10. He said that usually a mother will take care of all the planning. These wedding professionals love having a professional Wedding Coordinator as much as we love working with other professionals. It helps all of us do our jobs the way we prefer to do them and stay within our areas of expertise. We all want to make each other look good!

So, this is what I get from all of this. Wedding Coordinators must find ways to help these vendors who know what they're talking about, change their client's mindset to ever be comfortable enough to hire a wedding coordinator. I see that this task is one that Wedding Coordinators must take on to help other vendors who want to refer us.

I would love it if anyone would add to my list of ideas to help vendors promote a Wedding Coordinator or a list of reasons you believe a wedding coordinator is such a hard concept to "sell".

Possible myths they will run into:

1. Wedding Coordinators are only for "rich" people.
2. Wedding Coordinators are snobs!
3. Wedding Coordinators are just like the ones you see in the movies.
4. Wedding Coordinators take over your whole wedding.
5. The person at the venue is taking care of everything.
6. You can find all of your vendors at a show. (Maybe if all vendors participated in every show and you really got to know them in that type of environment.) What if a bride hates crowds?


Possible answers to those myths and misconceptions:

1. Wedding Coordinators save by way of passing on discounts to clients that the vendors give to them knowing that their job is going to be easier than if they didn't have a coordinator. Coordinators save vendors time!

2. Most Wedding Coordinators do what they do because they love to help people.

3. Being a Wedding Coordinator is a lot of really hard work. There's nothing glamorous about finding out that the city employee didn't open up the restrooms, graffiti appeared overnight, you're going over the floor with a lint roller to pick up confetti or glitter so that the client gets their deposit back. Like in the movies? Hardly!

4. A good Wedding Coordinator will listen above all else to what a bride envisions no matter how hard it is for her to convey her dream wedding. Wedding Coordinators are thrilled when they hear the words, "This is just the way I saw it in my mind, but I just didn't know how to make it happen!"

5. People at a venue even like it when a professional Wedding Coordinator is onsite so they can take care of their staff and venue responsibilities. The venue contact person cannot read a client or be counted to catch the bride's glance in their direction every time she needs something. If brides only knew how busy these venue coordinators and their staff were for an event, they would understand.

6. A Wedding Coordinator spends a lot of time getting to know vendors and the quality of their work. The same is true for studying venues. We want to know what will match the bride's style, personality and budget.
Most Wedding Coordinators give at least some amount of time in the form of a free consultation.

I never have a consultation without hearing a bride, groom or their family members say, "I never would have thought about that!" What pains me the most, is knowing that I could be helping people have a much less painful, less time-consuming role in planning their wedding and not be completely tired out on their wedding day, along with their family and friends!

As always, wishing you the greatest of days!

Views: 77

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

thank you I'm sure you know how many brides think planning a wedding is easy or that the onsite coordinator is going to take care of them

I think you're right on target.  Brides want to know how you are going to help them and that can only happen when they are comfortable around you.  I agree that some people who call themselves wedding planners aren't doing any favor to those of us who love and respect the profession.  Brides also don't care about all of the accreditations attached to a name if that person is not "seeing" their vision or making them feel like they have found a new friend.  

 

All the best to you!

 

Janis

That's good advice. I do have trouble getting over the "snobby" stereotype in my head and thinking that a coordinator might not "get" the fun, silly kind of wedding we want to have. (We are still hoping for a sock monkey themed cake, for example). So while our budget doesn't quite stretch far, you've at least gotten me thinking.
Too bad you don't live in the Seattle-Tacoma area!  I'd have the perfect cake vendor for you!  I love being able to suggest solutions to problems that make the reception fun and not add any costs.  For instance I was talking to one bride who really wanted her reception to be more along the line of a fun day at the park and have games set up all over the 20 acres!  It also turns out that they like to go on long walks in nature and then stop and have an ice cream cone afterwards.  They also don't like cake!  So I suggested that they have a Ben and Jerry's Ice Cream truck for their reception.  They really liked the idea!

RSS

© 2024   Created by Christine Dyer.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service