Food Fit Meetings: |
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When you take a meeting onsite, you can help your client get better results with strategies that also take care of participants’ health. The common denominator is a menu plan that goes all-in on nutritious, brain-friendly foods.We’ve all seen the onsite menus that are tailor-made to bring a meeting to a grinding halt. They’re high in fat. They’re loaded with sugar and starch, rather than protein or complex carbohydrates. The quantities are more than most of us would dream of consuming at home.And if they’re served at lunch, we know what will happen: by mid-afternoon, plummeting blood sugar levels collide with participants’ natural daily patterns of sleepiness and wakefulness. Their attention lags, their chins sag, and woe betide the organization that hoped to get anything done in the last couple of hours of the day.
No wonder so many speakers love to hate any time slot after 2 PM. The good news is that there’s a solution in sight. Hotels are paying closer attention to participants’ dietary needs, adapting menus and training chefs to reflect healthier eating trends. That makes it easy for you to plan menus that surpass participants’ expectations, as long as you ask the right questions in the right places:
By starting your menu planning early and asking the right questions, you can make your meeting more food-fit, for your participants and for yourself. Many people eat more under stress, or eat poorly, and if you’re running the event, your need for good nutrition will be at least as great as anyone else’s. So don’t just give yourself and your participants a break. With the right break (and breakfast, lunch, and dinner), you’ll be a giant step closer to a meeting that shines. |
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Global Events & Meetings Solutions Fairmont Hotels & Resorts – 2081 Main Street, Moncton, New Brunswick, Canada E1E 1J2 |
Maralyn D. Hill, The Epicurean Explorer
President, International Food Wine & Travel Writers Association