|
|
| A wedding consultant can help you will all aspects of the wedding, taking all the stress on her shoulders. |
|
A consultant's job is to help a couple determine, execute, and direct all of
the many tasks that are required to successfully host a wedding. The consultant
takes on the roles of facilitator, mediator, money manager, planner, organizer,
creative resource person, and advocate of the bride and groom in their
relationships with wedding service providers. The wedding consultant is
responsible for seeing that every detail is taken care of and that the process
runs smoothly and flawlessly. It is the consultant's role to reduce the
inevitable stress and glitches that are a natural part of every celebration.
In this modern age, wedding consultants are trained to work within a variety of
budgets. This means that even if you have a tight budget, you can afford a
consultant who will be able to help you stick to the budget. Usually, wedding
consultants are hired on a start-to-finish basis (which can get expensive), but
wedding consultants can facilitate wedding planning in other capacities.
There are many different ways a consultant can help. You can schedule a
consultation where the consultant provides a wedding guide and a list of
preferred vendors to check out. You can also hire a wedding consultant to
oversee things on the evening before and actual day of the wedding. Or, you can
contract a wedding consultant to work with you on a freelance basis (to help
find a location, advise on catering firms, florists, etc.), in which case
they're paid by the hour.
If you choose to do one of these methods, you will definitely spend less than
normal services. Most consultants charge by the hour and some charge a flat fee
depending on what you need them for. If you have a preference, you should find a
consultant that charges the way you prefer. If you don’t have a preference you
can just call around to a couple consultants and see how much they would charge
for what you want done.
If you do decide to use a wedding consultant keep these points in mind:
-
Be very clear with your consultant about what you wish done and what areas
of the event you wish to control and/or implement on your own. A written,
legal agreement will serve both you and the consultant well.
-
Be clear as to what it is you are paying for. Discuss and decide on the
number of hours you expect your consultant to provide and for what tasks he or
she will be responsible. The more details of the relationship you discuss and
agree upon up front, the better.
-
The consultant needs to work with all the principals, so as soon as it's
feasible, introduce the consultant you hire to your fiancé.
|
|
|
|
|
|
A consultant's job is to help a couple determine, execute, and direct all of
the many tasks that are required to successfully host a wedding. The consultant
takes on the roles of facilitator, mediator, money manager, planner, organizer,
creative resource person, and advocate of the bride and groom in their
relationships with wedding service providers. The wedding consultant is
responsible for seeing that every detail is taken care of and that the process
runs smoothly and flawlessly. It is the consultant's role to reduce the
inevitable stress and glitches that are a natural part of every celebration.
In this modern age, wedding consultants are trained to work within a variety of
budgets. This means that even if you have a tight budget, you can afford a
consultant who will be able to help you stick to the budget. Usually, wedding
consultants are hired on a start-to-finish basis (which can get expensive), but
wedding consultants can facilitate wedding planning in other capacities.
There are many different ways a consultant can help. You can schedule a
consultation where the consultant provides a wedding guide and a list of
preferred vendors to check out. You can also hire a wedding consultant to
oversee things on the evening before and actual day of the wedding. Or, you can
contract a wedding consultant to work with you on a freelance basis (to help
find a location, advise on catering firms, florists, etc.), in which case
they're paid by the hour.
If you choose to do one of these methods, you will definitely spend less than
normal services. Most consultants charge by the hour and some charge a flat fee
depending on what you need them for. If you have a preference, you should find a
consultant that charges the way you prefer. If you don’t have a preference you
can just call around to a couple consultants and see how much they would charge
for what you want done.
If you do decide to use a wedding consultant keep these points in mind:
-
Be very clear with your consultant about what you wish done and what areas
of the event you wish to control and/or implement on your own. A written,
legal agreement will serve both you and the consultant well.
-
Be clear as to what it is you are paying for. Discuss and decide on the
number of hours you expect your consultant to provide and for what tasks he or
she will be responsible. The more details of the relationship you discuss and
agree upon up front, the better.
-
The consultant needs to work with all the principals, so as soon as it's
feasible, introduce the consultant you hire to your fiancé.
|