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Marketing has become the second pillar of the practice of law. To succeed,
lawyers have to develop business for the firm. No matter how adept you are at
marketing, however, the time will come when the required activity includes
dinner. Nothing causes more angst amongst women lawyers than the idea of taking
a male client out to dinner alone. Why are women so concerned about the basic
business dinner? They are typically concerned because in American culture dinner
means dating.
How does the successful marketer disconnect those two concepts?
Simply, you should take charge of the situation. Demonstrate that the dinner
is a business.
Develop your own list of restaurants that are appropriate for business, spend
time getting to know the staff and have them view you as a regular customer. You
make the reservation at a restaurant you have found to be perfect for business
dinners: good food, good service, good lighting, and low noise level. Make sure
that the maitre’d knows you are having a business dinner and gives you an
appropriate table, rather than "the romantic" table in the corner.
Dress in a business like way. Wear a suit. Look like you are going to a
business meeting.
Arrange for your client to meet you at the restaurant: do not pick him up
unless you have an established business relationship that cannot be
misconstrued. If need be, arrange for a car service to pick up and retrieve him.
Don't drink too much. Remember, this is not a social outing. There is nothing
wrong with sharing a good bottle of wine or having a pre-dinner cocktail.
However, know your limits and stick to them. Since you will be choosing the
restaurant, consider arranging with the sommelier to bring a pre-selected bottle
of wine. Not only does it remove the stress of picking something appropriate, it
subtly signals that you are in control.
Take a legal pad with you so that you can jot notes down when you get to the
portion of the dinner where you are talking about business. Prepare a simple
agenda of topics to be discussed.
Don't take someone else with you unless they are part of the existing
business relationship. You should treat this event as you would any other
business event. Take a colleague if you would take him to a non-dinner meeting,
but not if he is only there for protection. Business men tell me that they are
insulted to be viewed as potential perverts who necessitate the presence of a
chaperone. (If you have reason to believe that dinner is a pretext for something
else entirely, change the meeting to a lunch or breakfast meeting. The venue
remains the same, but the social implications are quite different.)
Schedule another engagement to attend after the dinner, so that you are able
to leave the restaurant without being obligated to after-dinner socializing.
Remember: it's just dinner. Don't stress over it.
First published in the NAWL Journal, June 2006. Reprinted by
permission of author in conjunction with the SAGE PDI seminar, "Rainmaking
Lessons from a Top Woman Litigator" www.sagelawmarketing.com/webseminar-at29
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