There are just five steps to becoming a popular and well-paid wedding planner.
1. Business cards, brochures, and your website
2. Gaining access to the resources (vendors and venues) you'll need to do your work
3. Organizing your business
4. Attracting clients and writing a newsletter
5. Collecting your pay
Your Cards and Website Reflect Your Personal Style
Since your job is to reflect the style of the bride and groom, you need to keep your personal preferences to yourself, and send out an image to the public of competence, confidence, and being connected. So when you get dressed to meet a potential client, when you go to meet local vendors, when you get your business cards and brochures designed and printed, when you design (or have someone design) your webpage, the main image you want to convey is: I will get this job done right, on time, the way you want it, and within your budget.
Gaining Access to Local Resources: The Key to Success
If you've lived and worked in one town for any period of time, you have a great start as a wedding planner. Why? Because you know what resources are available: you know the stores, the wholesalers, the hotels, the venues. Even if you don't know them personally, you know where to look.
New in town? Here's your first step. Keep an impeccably organized looseleaf notebook, divided into sections in which you collect names, addresses, and details on all the resources you might need in planning a wedding. You'll have a section for flower shops, including wholesale distributers; a section noting all the flower shops within a 50 or 60 mile radius; and sections for bridal boutiques, clothing stores, tux rental places, bartenders, seamstresses, justices of the peace, car valets, limo and car services, gift services and sources, makeup and hair professionals, photographers, churches, venues, parks (for outdoor weddings), lighting designers, caterers and all varieties of food and beverage options, including cake and pastry designers. You'll also want a division in your notebook that you will with music resources. A page for each band, dj, harpist, string quartet, organist, singer, or specialty band. This page would include contact information, price ranges, reviews, and feedback from references.
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