Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Expert Advice: Planning an Office Party Checklist

BASIC QUESTIONS

  • Formal event or casual?
  • Focus on business issues or just a party?
  • Available budget? Will employees contribute?
  • Sit-down dinner? Buffet? Finger food? Special dietary requirements?
  • Live entertainment or recorded music?
  • Do-it-yourself affair or hire professionals?

CHECKLIST

  • choose a venue
  • pay attention to parking, disabled access, amenities, etc.
  • create and send invitations
  • select decorations (banners, flowers, centerpieces, balloons, etc.)
  • purchase or request donations for raffle prizes
  • plan schedule for the evening (time for speeches, presentations, etc.)
  • prepare menu and grocery list
  • choose and hire caterer and serving help
  • hire entertainers -- or arrange a sound system and select recorded music

DO-IT-YOURSELF

  • recruit some volunteers
  • assign jobs to help with planning, set up, serving, and clean up
  • purchase or make decorations and decorate the room
  • purchase or rent dishes, glassware, and silverware
  • purchase or rent table cloths, napkins, and serving pieces
  • purchase or rent decorations, centerpieces, candles, etc.
  • shop for groceries and prepare food

TIPS FOR HEADING OFF PROBLEMS

  • include every piece of pertinent info on the invitation or a separate insert
  • include directions, dress requirements, schedule for the evening, etc.
  • have guests RSVP a week before the event
  • so you have time to plan for adequate seating and food
  • let the facility know ASAP of any special needs you might have
  • AV equipment, chairs and tables, space for entertainers, etc.
  • put up directional signs pointing guests toward the right room
  • put up signs to the restrooms if they are not in the immediate area
  • confirm arrangements with hired service providers a few days ahead
  • caterers, bartenders, musicians, valet parking, wait staff, etc.

Content provided by OnlineOrganizing.com -- offering "a world of organizing solutions!" Visit www.onlineorganizing.com for organizing products, free tips, a speakers bureau, get a referral for a Professional Organizer near you, or get some help starting and running your own organizing business.

Office Party Planning is a free aggregate of news and articles on planning office and company events. It is curated Edd Fairman, Wizard of Sorts a Chicago Magician who performs for corporate and company events.

Sunday, March 13, 2011

10 Ways to Green your food and beverage for your event

by Rob Hard, from About.com

The bulk of meetings and events are still held at hotels, conference centers, etc. What should meeting planners expect their meeting venues to be doing as it relates to food and beverage to demonstrate their commitment to sustainability?

Elizabeth Henderson, CMM, CMP, M.E. Des., director of corporate responsibility for Meeting Professionals International (MPI), Calgary, Alberta, Canada, offers the following advice when it comes to expectations of food and beverage, as these have become the standard at MPI events:

  1. Use china and other re-usable items for food service.
  2. Condiments like cream and sugar in bulk containers.
  3. Water in jugs or large coolers, no bottled water; do not pre-fill water glasses.
  4. Use of linen cloths and napkins instead of paper.
  5. Serve sustainable seafood.
  6. Source local foods.
  7. Fair trade/shade grown coffee.
  8. Donate leftover food
  9. Compost scraps
  10. Eliminate polystyrene.
In addition, planners can ask the following four questions to hotel food suppliers, event venues and caterers:
  • Are they local, or do they source local products?
  • Do they provide a certain percentage of organic foods?
  • Do they source fair trade products?
  • If not local, how are far are the products shipped?
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Office Party Planning is a free aggregate of news and articles about company event, company party, office party, and company picnic planning. It is curated by Edd Fairman, a Chicago Magician and corporate event entertainer. Please visit his website http://www.wizardofsorts.com for more information.


Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Mardi Gras Music: Jazz Edition




Mardi Gras and music go hand in hand. After all the country’s biggest Mardi Gras celebration takes place in New Orleans, LA – America’s most musical city (sorry Austin, TX).

No matter where you are in the world your Mardis Gras celebration will be taking place, one of the best ways to celebrate is by enjoying New Orleans jazz, one of the city’s finest exports.

We have already introduced you to a few of our zydeco bands and now it is our pleasure to present just a few of our jazz bands who follow in the New Orleans jazz tradition. These groups are located all over the country and are more than qualified to bring authentic Mardi Gras music to any celebration:

The New Orleans Jazz Ramblers (Memphis, TN)

Ted Hefko’ New Orleans Jazz Band (Brooklyn, NY)

Dr. Jazz And The New Orleans Sounds (New Orleans, LA)

Wildcat Jazz Band (New York, NY)

Uptown Lowdown Jazz (Bellevue, WA)

Happy Mardi Gras!

View the original article here


Office Party Planning is a free aggregate of news and articles about office and company party planning curated by Edd Fairman, Wizard of Sorts a Chicago Magician that performs amazing magic and comedy for company events, office parties, company picnics, and more.

Monday, March 7, 2011

So What is Mardi Gras:

We all know about the parades, the beads and the partying but not all of us really know what Mardi Gras is all about. We thought we would take a few minutes to teach a quick 'Fat Tuesday 101' seminar in order to answer the question: what is Mardi Gras?

“Mardi Gras” is French for “Fat Tuesday.” The term refers to the practice of overindulging in fatty, rich foods before beginning a fast for Lent which starts the next day, Ash Wednesday. In New Orleans and a number of other U.S. cities the party begins earlier, lasts longer and involves indulging in a lot more than food.

The Mardi Gras tradition was originally brought to the states by French Catholics and the first Mardi Gras festivities in Louisiana are believed to have taken place way back in 1699. The tradition has long since taken on a life of its own in New Orleans and throughout much of the Gulf Coast.

So what is Mardi Gras in New Orleans all about?

Each year hundreds of thousands of tourists flock to New Orleans to join in the Mardi Gras fun and chances are that most of them are not just getting their ya-yas out before fasting for lent. They come to see the elaborate and festive parade floats and the vibrant costumes of the Mardi Gras Indians. They come to sample the region’s amazing food and hear some of the most fun and authentic music in the world.

And yes they also come to have a few cocktails.

For more information on Mardi Gras as well as inspiration for your own celebrations, check out our Mardi Gras party ideas and our introduction to zydeco music.

Let the good times roll!

View the original article here: http://www.gigmasters.com/blog/post/So-what-is-Mardi-Gras.aspx

Office Party Planning is a free aggregate of news and articles dealing with corporate party event planning. It is curated by Edd Fairman, Wizard of Sorts, a Chicago Magician that performs for company events, trade shows, office parties, and company parties.


Thursday, March 3, 2011

5 Ways to Mess Up Your Office Party

5 Ways to Mess Up your Office Party

by Carla Reiger, reposted from: http://bit.ly/6rMQPn

Mistake #1 – Throwing it together at the last minute

Too often, planning the Holiday party ends up in the InBox of the busiest person and it gets thrown together at the last minute. We heard one story in which staff received one day’s notice for the event. They arrived to find an exhausted support staffer racing to put out a Box of Yellow Tail Wine and a bucket of KFC.

Mistake #2 – Un-Inclusiveness

A woman who worked at an insurance company told us that they received a group email like this (no joke): “Christmas Party tomorrow at 3 p.m. All staff attending MUST wear the reindeer ears supplied at the door. For those people who don’t celebrate Christmas you will be required to cover for everyone else. Please don’t invite kids or significant others, as we won’t have enough food or refreshments.”

Mistake #3 – Seating for Silos

Every year a municipal government office has an end-of-the-year party in which food and drink is laid out at round tables of 6 people. The meeting planner complained to us that people just sit with their regular office buddies and make fun of people they don’t like in other departments.

Mistake #4 – Alcohol Free-for-All

One of the most common mistakes we hear about are organizations that have an open bar. People get drunk and then do and say things that end up on Facebook. We heard of one individual that arrived hung over the next morning at work and was entirely surprised to discover he no longer had a job.

Mistake #5 – No Community Building

Too often we hear people say they dread going to the Holiday Office party. It’s boring or uncomfortable and they are just there out of obligation.

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5 Ways to Amp Up your Office Party

In case you aren’t interested in the possible side effects of the above, here are some tried-and-true approaches to ensuring an enjoyable event.

  1. Creating a planning committee

Spread the organizing over several people who enjoy this kind of thing. Ensure there is enough planning time and a big enough budget. However, do survey what employees would most enjoy. In general, people enjoy events where they feel inspired, included and appreciated. Remember — substance is more important than flash. With some creativity you can do a lot on a little.

  1. Being inclusive

A Christmas party may alienate some of your staff. If people are from diverse backgrounds, have a more generic Holiday party. If you have an office party during the day, make sure everyone can attend. Do invite significant others and children for at least one office party a year.

  1. Helping them mix

Your company party may be the only time people get to meet the president, CEO or VPs in person, or people from other departments or locations. Make sure people don’t spend the entire event with their regular office buddies. Enhancing workplace relationships at all levels can create an invisible web of goodwill that can positively affect the bottom line, communication, enjoyment and overall morale.

  1. Eat, drink and be merry — in moderation

If you serve alcohol make sure you serve food at the same time. Include plenty of non-alcoholic drinks and healthy food options along with the usual treats. If people overdo it they may associate your party with negative feelings about what they did or said, or how they felt the next day. Provide other forms of “social lubricant” such as interactive mixers.

  1. Hiring a pro

To create the right atmosphere you might like to hire a professional speaker who can ice break the group and get people laughing and learning some great ways to handle the stress of the holiday season. Just remember, that laughter is the shortest distance between two people.

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Office Party Planning is a free aggregate of news and articles about Office Parties and Company Events curated by Edd Fairman, Wizard of Sorts a Chicago Magician. Edd Fairman is a corporate magician that specializes in making you look good.