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Sealing
the Deal over the Business Meal
Doing
business over meals is a ritual that has existed for centuries.
Taking clients to breakfast, lunch or dinner has long been an
effective way to build relationships, make the sale or seal the
deal. These business meals are essentially business meetings.
Knowledge of your product or your service is crucial to the success
of the meeting, but so are your manners. Too many people
jeopardize an opportunity because they fail to use good dining
etiquette. Here are a few basic rules to make the experience
pleasurable and profitable.
Know your
duties as the host. You are in charge. It is up to you to
see that things go well and that your guests are comfortable.
You need to attend to every detail from extending the invitation to
paying the bill.
Plan
ahead when you issue the invitation. Allow a week for a
business dinner and three days for lunch. Be certain that the
date works for you. That might sound obvious, but if you have to
cancel or postpone, you can look disorganized and disrespectful of
your clients’ time.
Select a
restaurant that you know, preferably one where you are known. This
is no time to try out the latest hot spot. Being confident of
the quality of the food and service leaves you free to focus on
business.
Consider
the atmosphere. Does it lend itself to conversation and
discussion? If you and your clients can’t hear each other over
the roar of the diners and dishes, you will have wasted your time and
money.
When you
make your reservation, let the staff know that you will be dining
with clients. If your guests suggest a restaurant new to you
(perhaps you are hosting clients out-of-town), call ahead and speak
with the maitre’d. Make it clear that you will be having an
important business meal and picking up the check.
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Confirm
the meal appointment with your clients the day before if you are
meeting for breakfast or that day if you are having lunch or dinner.
Things do happen and mix-ups occur.
Arrive
early so you can attend to last minute details. This is the perfect
time to give your credit card to the maitre’d and avoid the
awkwardness that seems to accompany the arrival of the
bill.
Take
charge of the seating. Your guests should have the prime
seats—the ones with the view. As the host, take the least desirable
spot—the one facing the wall, the kitchen or the restrooms.
Beyond
being polite, where you seat your guests is strategic. When you
are entertaining one client, sit next to each at a right angle rather
than across the table. With two clients, put one across from you and
the other to your side. If you sit between them, you will look
as if you are watching a match at Wimbledon as you try to follow the
conversation.
Allow
your guests to order first. You might suggest certain dishes to
be helpful. By recommending specific items, you are indicating a
price range. Order as many courses as your guests, no more and
no less, to facilitate the flow of the meal. It is awkward if one of
you orders an appetizer or dessert and the others do not.
As the
host, you are the one who decides when to start discussing
business. That will depend on a number of factors such as the
time of day and how well you know your clients. At breakfast,
time is short so get down to business quickly. At lunch, wait until
you have ordered so you won’t be interrupted. Dinner, the more social
occasion, is a time for rapport building. Limit the business
talk and do it after the main course is completed.
When you
know your clients well, you have more of a basis for small
talk. However, because you have established a business
friendship, you can eliminate some of the chitchat when time is an
issue. When you don’t know your clients well, spend more time
getting acquainted before launching your shoptalk.
Sometimes
you simply need to use your own judgment about when to get down to
business, realizing that if you wait too long, your clients may start
to wonder why they were invited. If you begin too early in the meal,
your guests might suspect that you are more interested in their money
than you are in them.
Keep an
eye on the time, but don’t let your guests see you checking your
watch. Breakfast should typically last an hour; lunch an hour
and a half. Wrap up your business dinner in two to three hours, no
more.
Handle
any disasters with grace. With all your attention to detail, things
can still go wrong. The food may not be up to your standards, the
waiter might be rude or the people at the next table boisterous and
out of control. Whatever happens, make sure you are not the one
to lose control. Excuse yourself to discuss any problems with the
staff. Your guests will feel uncomfortable if you complain in front
of or to them.
Limit the
amount of alcohol you drink at the business meal. The three
Martini lunch is mostly a thing of the past. However, cocktails and
wine are still part of the business dinner. Since alcohol can have
the same effect as truth serum, keep your consumption to one or two
glasses. When guests are drinking liberally and you sense
trouble, excuse yourself and discreetly ask the server to hold back
on refilling the wine glasses or offering another cocktail.
Your
conduct over the meal will determine your professional success. If
you pay attention to the details and make every effort to see that
your clients have a pleasant experience, they will assume that you
will handle their business the same way. Before long you could have
them eating out of your hand.
© Lydia
Ramsey. All rights in all media reserved.

About the
Author
Lydia Ramsey is a business etiquette expert, professional
speaker, corporate trainer and author of Manners That Sell: Adding
The Polish That Builds Profits. She has been quoted or featured
in The New York Times, Investors' Business Daily, Entrepreneur, Inc.,
Real Simple and Woman's Day. For more information about her
programs, products and services, e-mail her at lydia@mannersthatsell.com or visit
her web site http://www.mannersthatsell.com
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