Staying Focused

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

We all like to present ourselves as multi-taskers. I use to be in Human Resources, and interviewing potential candidates for the company was a big part of my job. Every interviewee I met with always brought up 'multi-tasking' as one of their greatest strength. Indeed, it is important to have the ability to multi-task, but I also find it valuable to have the ability to stay focused. Creative people often have a hard time doing that, but in order to raise our productivity, we need to learn how to stay focused! It's extremely challenging in today's world to be focused, for email alerts often keeps us spinning in circles. Then, there's the urge to sign in to facebook to see what our friends/colleagues are up to, or tweet a message to your followers. How many of us take pride in our ability to stay focus? It's an important skill that often gets unnoticed.

I bring this topic up because I'm seeing that more and more wedding professionals are selling themselves in so many different facets in order to bring more 'value' to the table. A DJ may include 'wedding coordination services' in their proposal, because they also create a timeline for the reception. A photographer may bring in an extra assistant who just happens to know how to operate a video camera, and thus, 'videography services' can now be included in the proposal. 'Event design' is an easy add to a planner's proposal--after all, she can match a napkin to a linen, right?

Before you start selling yourself as a multi-talented professional, please ask yourself if you can truly offer the services you are selling. A wedding coordinator's scope of service goes way beyond creating a timeline. An event designer will conceptualize, sketch, source, and style. A videographer needs to have the ability to tell a story from beginning to end and have a thorough understanding on shooting techniques, lighting, and editing.

In order to raise the standard in the wedding industry, we need to encourage brides and grooms to hire the right person for the right job. We should not proclaim ourselves to be everything to everyone. Focus at what you do best, and over deliver to your clients when you can. Exceeding expectations is always better than not meeting expectations.

If you only take a bit of time to try to understand and respect other professionals' scope of work, you will quickly realize that it's not easy to proclaim certain titles. By trying to fool your clients into thinking that you can do things which you have no training on will only come back to bite you in the long run. Remember it's not about making the immediate sales. It's about establishing trust, and relationship, so that the one sale can turn into a lifetime of referrals.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

very interesting and great perspective. thanks for taking the time to write and for sharing!

Christi said...

Fabulous, concise~couldn't agree more. It's great to see that perspective being talked about.

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