My Photo

Vida's Poetry

« July 2006 | Main | September 2006 »

Friday, August 11, 2006

Don’t a husband and wife have to sit next to each other at a business function?

I think you’d likely have a quick answer to that question. “No.” You’d probably laugh if you were pressed by a guest with this type of question at an event. Seating next to your spouse should never be assumed.

However, it isn’t obvious to everyone, as I’ll explain. For those of us who consider questions of etiquette and protocol in an intercultural context, it is particularly important, to avoid these sorts of assumptions.

According to Western context and international diplomatic protocol, seating of guests proceeds according to relative importance, not gender. Letitia Baldrige, who was served in the American embassies in Paris and Rome, and was Jacqueline Kennedy’s Chief of Staff, recommends to following with regards to seating: “the sexes seated alternatively, husbands and wives separated (even at separate tables), with the priorities of protocol. For a meal with spouses, each person’s spouse assumes the rank of his or her mate and is given a “high seat” accordingly.”

Ms. Baldridge continues, that this is a standard procedure with for all Western countries and one that has been adopted by many other cultures internationally, when foreign visitors are present.

Recently I helped to plan and organize a high profile event in Silicon Valley. At the last minute there was a request from someone who wanted to sit next to her husband. She had been provided seating at a different table. My team and I tried our best to meet this guest’s request but at the same time, we were reluctant to disrupt something, which had been so carefully planned. There were a pre-set number of guests at each table. This seemingly “small” request from one guest would actually require explanation and impose inconvenience on all the other people who would have to be moved and shifted to accommodate this person.

While we were wondering why it was this guest wanted to sit next to her husband, someone suggested: “She’s Chinese and not used to the Western style of seating arrangement.”

I thought about that for some time. The event was taking place in Silicon Valley, thought it was hosted by a Chinese company and over 80% of the guests were of Chinese decent. So how do we assert one idea of protocol over another?

While I am not going to comment on whether cultural background is the root cause of this particular example, I would say, that it is better to confirm with all the guests who are coming as couples, before the event and to explain the seating arrangement. In my experience this is particularly important when we dealing with an international clientele. Let the guests know the particulars of the arrangement and why it is structured this way. When providing the explanation, be careful to do it in a way that speaks to the sophistication of everyone involved, particularly those who may already well-understand this custom.

Wednesday, August 09, 2006

A movie you love and hate

A freind of mine sent me this movie and he said "here is something you would love and hate."  Sure he is right.  For the moment I was watching it, I forgot all the table manner related rules. . .Instead, I was feeling very sexy about slurping. . .

Click on the file below and enjoy!

Download CHINITAOCUPADA.asf

March 2007

Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
        1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30 31

Book List - currently reading

  • Richard Nisbett: The Geography of Thought
    "More than a billion people in the world today claim intellectual inheritance from ancient Greece..."

Book List - finished (1/1/06-2/9/07)

  • Peter G. de. Krassel: Custom Maid Spin for New World Disorder
    Since Hong Kong’s reversion to Chinese rule on July 1, 1997, it has developed the potential to become a model society for America to emulate. It blends the best of Anglo-American and Sino-Latino cultures which already are the cornerstones and foundations of today’s Easter and Western civilizations.
  • AnnaLee Saxenian: : The New Argonauts
    The New Argonauts shows how engineers who came to Silicon Valley from China, India, Taiwan, and Israel are going back, seeding those countries.
  • Tim Clissold: Mr. China

    Tim Clissold: Mr. China

  • Juan Antonio Fernandez, Laurie Underwood: China CEO

    Juan Antonio Fernandez, Laurie Underwood: China CEO
    Voices of Experience from 20 International Business Leaders

  • : The World is Flat

    The World is Flat

  • Malcolm Gladwell: Blink

    Malcolm Gladwell: Blink
    (****)

  • Malcolm Gladwell: The Tipping Point

    Malcolm Gladwell: The Tipping Point
    a facinating book that makes you see the world in a different way. - Fortune (*****)