Proper Naming Conventions for Event Management Software

John Reed

July 4, 2018

3 Min Read
Proper Naming Conventions for Event Management Software

Catering is a living, breathing system of communication, planning, and logistics. Everyone—from server to sales associate to operations manager—is responsible for these functions, in addition to their own responsibilities. Every department from culinary to administrative has its own unique lingo and modes of communication people use to convey important information to each other. 

Every department develops its own vocabulary as it relates to its business. Let’s take for example, a menu item. It’s the sales team’s job to make a dish sound appealing to a client. They’re interested in the menu item’s composition and aesthetic value, so they speak in descriptive words that would attract a client. The kitchen does not describe a menu item using sales language. They see it as a list of ingredients or prep items. They talk in terms of size and production.

“Advanced catering event management systems recognize the need for different terminology across departments. These systems allow users to use two or more names or multiple descriptions for a single item.”

Catering lingo into data

It’s very important to understand that there may more than one way to describe an item or service being sold by your company before choosing an event management software program. Software doesn’t always understand the various catering departments’ language breakdowns. Inputting data into a single source oftentimes requires uniformity.

The language of your system should reflect the language of your organization. Advanced catering event management systems recognize the need for different terminology across departments. These systems allow users to use two or more names or multiple descriptions for a single item. Prompts generally fall into two categories:

1. Kitchen name

2. Sales name or description

The purpose of having these two unique values and allowing them to take on their own functionality within a system is make the information more easily understood by users.

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Determining what kitchen names to use

Here are some things to keep in mind when developing kitchen names for a system management program:

• It should be a common name used by internal departments
• Use a defined or limited number of characters
• Be clear about function, portion size, cooking method or basic flavor profile
• An index tool can easily organize and sort like items, such as proteins and desserts

Here’s a great example: Chicken Breast, 6 oz, Seared, Thai Marinated (Notice how it’s very clear and concise.)

Determining what sales names to use

Here are some things to keep in mind when determining sales names or descriptions for a system management program:

• It’s a text or narrative used to sell an image and create an attractive menu
• It can be easily integrated into custom fonts, style, and color
• The description can be edited and customized
• This content is used in proposals to clients
• It is a unique name or data value

Here are two ways sales describes the same chicken dish:

Lemon Grass and Red Curry Marinated Pan Seared Chicken Breast with Kaffir Lime Leaf and Coconut Milk

* Seared Chicken Breast

red curry, lemon grass, Kaffir lime leaf and coconut

(Each of these descriptions sets a different tone or image of the same dish.)

Establish some ground rules

Before entering kitchen or sales names into a database, it’s important that everyone is in agreement. Here are some tips to consider before you get started:

• Create a set of naming rules for kitchen items
• Limit the number of users who can create item names
• Set a standard formatting style for sales descriptions that is consistent with your company brand
• Limit description editing without approval
• Edit for formatting, spelling and content
• Overbuild to create multiple variants of the same item if you want to deter the need to edit items on individual proposals

The names you choose and the structure you follow when populating your database need to be organized and well-planned. Your intent is to develop a naming system that allows each department to function at a high level—with clarity and ease.

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.

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