Best Event Management Population Techniques

John Reed

October 31, 2018

3 Min Read
Best Event Management Population Techniques

Catering companies worldwide look to event management software to help them manage day-to-day processes and sell and execute event successfully. Whether you use a Point of Sale (POS) system or custom-built event management system, these applications are tremendously helpful operational tools.

Why POS & event management systems are important

It’s important to realize that these systems are more than just portals to print proposals or packing lists. They can be high-functioning, analytical tools to help leadership teams monitor their business’s financial components and much more.

If properly configured, they can also provide menu engineering support, key performance reports, and business forecasts. In order to fully utilize these features, business leaders must first understand how they want to evaluate their business as well as make key decisions on business rules.

Screen_Shot_2018-10-03_at_1.12.14_PM.png

Event management systems are built around the use of pre-loaded data that is arranged and stored in tables within the database. These tables allow the system to organize attributes of specific parts of the data and sort for analysis.

In basic terms, when you’re building an event, you may be allowed to pull from a drop-down list of conditions or values. These values are key to analyzing your business.

These lists should be customized, and not left to the defaults supplied by the vendor when you first purchased the system. You must create detailed and accurate lists of categories or item types. This is where the real work and big-picture thinking comes in.

Screen_Shot_2018-10-03_at_1.12.22_PM.png

There are many types of questions you may have including:

• Where is my business coming from and was the advertising budget well spent?
• What percentage of my business is drop-off, and are we profitable at it?
• Will we have enough plates and glassware for the upcoming busy season?
• What are the closure rates of my key sales associates?
• How many vegetarian offerings do we need, and do they really sell?

Many systems can print data easily enough, but you may not have the time to work with it to address these granular questions.

Screen_Shot_2018-10-03_at_1.12.30_PM.png

Look at the structure and sub-structure of your categories and sub-categories or Quick Pick list that populate your drop-downs. It should not be left to the general staff to determine items by typing random information.

From the sales side, the key areas you want to review are:

• Business types
• Event types
• Referrals
• Status
• Cancellation types

From a menu perspective, you may want to review:

• Menu item types
• Production locations
• Dietary attributes

Let’s look a great example list you’d create of referral types:

• Web contact
• Phone call
• Business or trade journal where you advertise
• Event planner referral
• Venue referrals
• Constant contact/email service
• Open house/promotional events
• Referral from current customer
• Repeat business

When creating an event, your team should use specific language to populate fields. This can be set up with most systems’ administrative tools. This will allow you to query or search events by referral type over a period of time, helping you better understand where your business is coming from and where you should be concentrating current and future marketing campaigns.

Screen_Shot_2018-10-03_at_1.12.37_PM.png

• Pre-determine required business attributes for all events
• Populate all available drop-downs
• List in order of most used
• Don’t make them complicated
• Use enough information to be able to drill down from larger groups

If you do the hard work up front by setting up your POS or event management system correctly, you’ll have a better, more long-term understanding of your business.

See John Reed at Catersource 2019! Join him at Catersource 2019 in New Orleans for more information on this important topic. Click here for session information and here to take you to registration.

About the Author

John Reed

John Reed is a professional chef with over 30 years’ experience. He is the owner of Customized Culinary Solutions, a culinary consulting firm located in the Chicago Northshore area. He works with restaurant, catering, and foodservice companies to provide the highest quality food possible. His contributions include menu and recipe development, emerging concept development, and transition management for companies introducing culinary and production software programs. His company specializes as an on-demand culinary department supporting out-sourced culinary project management.

An active member of the ACF, he has earned certifications as a Certified Executive Chef, Certified Culinary Administrator, and American Academy of Chefs. He recently received his Certified Cicerone® accreditation one of only 2100 such certifications globally; John won the ACF National Chef Professionalism Award in 2010. He has competed many times in culinary competitions around the country. As part of the ACF Team USA Regional Culinary Team he competed at the International Culinary Olympics in October 2012.  He also volunteered as an operations manager for the ACF US Culinary Olympic Team that represents the US in all major competitions and recognized in international culinary competitions. He was the WCPC Chef of the Year in 2007 and Member of the Year 2010.  He was just recently inducted into the Disciples d’ Escoffier International.

Presently he serves as Chairmen of the Board for the Chefs and Culinary Professionals of Chicagoland. He is also a member of the Research Chefs Association, Foodservice Consultants Society International and NACE. He also participates in Industry Advisory Boards and Focus Groups. 

John also has experience as a culinary educator at Johnson & Wales University in North Miami, Florida and College of DuPage in Glen Ellyn, Illinois. He also holds degree in Culinary Arts from Johnson and Wales University and a bachelor’s degree in Hotel, Restaurant and Travel Administration from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst.

John has spent time with the Navy’s Adopt-a-Ship Program supporting the culinary divisions on board both the USS Stethem (DDG-63) and USS Fitzgerald (DDG-62) of the coast of Japan while both ships were in active forward deployment.

Subscribe and receive the latest catering news, recipes, tips, essential content.
Yes, it's completely free