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	<title>Lowe House Creative &#187; etiquette</title>
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		<title>on tipping your wedding vendors</title>
		<link>http://lowehousecreative.com/2012/04/on-tipping-your-wedding-vendors/</link>
		<comments>http://lowehousecreative.com/2012/04/on-tipping-your-wedding-vendors/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 26 Apr 2012 15:10:33 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>elizabeth</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[etiquette]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[wedding]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://lowehousecreative.com/?p=2899</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[One of the questions I&#8217;m asked most by clients is which of their wedding vendors they should tip and how much they should tip them. Now, hopefully you are paying your vendors a fair wage, and if so, tipping when it comes to weddings is most definitely optional. That said, when asked, I generally suggest [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a rel="attachment wp-att-2902" href="http://lowehousecreative.com/2012/04/on-tipping-your-wedding-vendors/thank-you-notes/"><img class="aligncenter size-medium wp-image-2902" title="thank-you-notes" src="http://lowehousecreative.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/thank-you-notes-600x389.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="389" /></a></p>
<p>One of the questions I&#8217;m asked most by clients is which of their  wedding vendors they should tip and how much they should tip them. Now,  hopefully you are paying your vendors a fair wage, and if so, tipping  when it comes to weddings is most definitely optional. That said, when  asked, I generally suggest tipping (proven they do a good job, obviously):</p>
<ul>
<li>musicians ($20-60 each, depending on the size of the band)</li>
<li>waitstaff &amp; bartenders ($20-$60 each)</li>
<li>custodians ($20-$40 each)</li>
<li>limo/shuttle/other drivers ($20-40 each)</li>
</ul>
<p>Now, that being out of the way, if you feel that ANY of your vendors  went above and beyond what you paid them to do (example: your  photographer stayed an extra hour to catch amazing dance floor pictures,  your caterer scrambled and made it work when 10 extra guests showed up  unannounced, your DJ brought &amp; lit an unexpected disco ball that  made the party, you florist threw in an awesome and giant buffet  arrangement, etc,) tips are always appreciated. Most wedding vendors  work super, super hard to make a pretty middle-class income &#8211; it&#8217;s a  total myth that we&#8217;re raking it in. BUT, when you&#8217;re paying someone  several thousand dollars, tipping a restaurant-bill equivalent  percentage can be obviously way over the top (20% of a dinner bill is  one thing, 20% of a planning or photography bill is a totally different  ballpark.) In this case, or in the case where you want to give a vendor a  thank you gift but cash feels tacky, I think it&#8217;s totally fine to give  some type of non-cash tip &#8211; a gift certificate to a nice restaurant in  their area (make sure it&#8217;s for enough to cover dinner for two), a spa  day, or something else luxurious that they&#8217;re probably not going to  spring for themselves. (Although it should be noted also that I have yet  to meet a wedding vendor who doesn&#8217;t appreciate a cash tip.)</p>
<p>All of that said, I deal intimately with client&#8217;s wedding budgets,  and realize that sometimes there is just not any cash leftover to  monetarily tip everyone you&#8217;d like to. Because of this I&#8217;m firmly of the  school that the <em>very best tip</em> you can give any wedding vendor  is a glowing review (on yelp, wedding wire, or any other site they&#8217;re  listed on,) a written testimonial for their website, or the offer to be a  referral for future clients (or better yet, all three.) Weddings by  nature consist of non-repeat clients, and so we&#8217;re always working hard  to keep bringing new ones in &#8211; help with this is appreciated way more  that you know. I also have yet to meet a wedding vendor who doesn&#8217;t <em>love</em> getting hand written thank yous from their clients &#8211; add them to your  list of wedding-thank-you-cards-to-write and you will definitely make  someone&#8217;s day.</p>
<p>Getting more personal for a second: Do I expect my clients to tip me? Of <em> course</em> not &#8211; I own my own business and set my own prices. Do I  appreciate it when it happens? Of course &#8211; tips are a concrete way for them to tell me that they really appreciated the work that I did for them. I also have a personal policy of spending tip money on unnecessary expenditures, i.e. things I want but don&#8217;t <em>need</em>. So that money doesn&#8217;t go to advertising, or paying my assistant, or printer paper, or phone bills, it goes towards fun things &#8211; dinner at a nice restaurant, a plane ticket, or, my last tip-money purchase &#8211; an iPad (which I&#8217;m using almost exclusively for work, but I didn&#8217;t consider &#8220;necessary&#8221; enough to build into my business budget for the year.) And, as you can see above, I adore the thank you cards I get from clients so much that I display them in my office.</p>
<p><em>photo: thank you notes I&#8217;ve received from former clients, hung across the window in my office</em></p>
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