Very interesting topic we don't see much. I'm probably in the minority, but I'd like to share what has worked best for me.
90% of the business I have ever conducted over a meal has been at breakfast. By lunch time, I'm too busy and dinner is usually reserved for family. But breakfast is perfect. You get people when they're fresh and before they're sidetracked. I prefer to have private meetings first thing in the morning and have also regularly gone to Chamber of Commerce, tech groups, vendor presentations, even Toastmaster breakfasts. They're always early enough for most people and work out great if you want to network or sell and still have a day job. And they never run over because everyone has somewhere to go.
And guess what I've eaten at every single one of them?
Nothing.
Business breakfasts are about business, not breakfast. You can do three things with your mouth at breakfast (talk, eat, or both) and two of them are bad. I spend most of my day at my terminal, so the business breakfast is my big chance to talk, listen, and learn. And food just gets in the way.
OP shares the hidden meanings behind your possible food choices, but the unhidden meaning is always bad: you can't talk while you're chewing, almost every choice is time bomb for an accident, and IMHO, food just slows you down in the morning.
So I let the others eat while I talk (and listen). I accomplish twice as much as anyone else at these breakfasts.
I just have a cup of coffee that I may or may not drink. (You may look like you're wasting food if you don't eat it all, but nobody cares how much of your coffee you drink). If I'm really hungry in the morning, I'll grab something before going to the breakfast, but I'm more likely to wait until afterward.
Jimmy Carter took this idea to the extreme by never eating dinner at dinners. He was too busy networking and conducting business while everyone else was eating. I've never gone that far, but his strategy works perfectly for the business breakfast.
Summary: Anything but oatmeal will queer the deal. This is the same kind of petty bullshit that made me drop out of being a business major--there's no substance, just some arbitrary set of social signaling cues designed by and for insecure people who care what impression their choice in breakfast food will have on other people. Ugh.
While I'm sympathetic to edw's idea (don't eat at all), I don't think I'd go to a business breakfast unless I unusually had to. I'm not fit to socialize with people I don't live with that early.
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[ 5.4 ms ] story [ 31.0 ms ] threadIf a deal fails because I made "bad" breakfast choice, I don't want anything to do with that person. Imagine working daily with somebody like that.
No, not according to the first six words of the post.
90% of the business I have ever conducted over a meal has been at breakfast. By lunch time, I'm too busy and dinner is usually reserved for family. But breakfast is perfect. You get people when they're fresh and before they're sidetracked. I prefer to have private meetings first thing in the morning and have also regularly gone to Chamber of Commerce, tech groups, vendor presentations, even Toastmaster breakfasts. They're always early enough for most people and work out great if you want to network or sell and still have a day job. And they never run over because everyone has somewhere to go.
And guess what I've eaten at every single one of them?
Nothing.
Business breakfasts are about business, not breakfast. You can do three things with your mouth at breakfast (talk, eat, or both) and two of them are bad. I spend most of my day at my terminal, so the business breakfast is my big chance to talk, listen, and learn. And food just gets in the way.
OP shares the hidden meanings behind your possible food choices, but the unhidden meaning is always bad: you can't talk while you're chewing, almost every choice is time bomb for an accident, and IMHO, food just slows you down in the morning.
So I let the others eat while I talk (and listen). I accomplish twice as much as anyone else at these breakfasts.
I just have a cup of coffee that I may or may not drink. (You may look like you're wasting food if you don't eat it all, but nobody cares how much of your coffee you drink). If I'm really hungry in the morning, I'll grab something before going to the breakfast, but I'm more likely to wait until afterward.
Jimmy Carter took this idea to the extreme by never eating dinner at dinners. He was too busy networking and conducting business while everyone else was eating. I've never gone that far, but his strategy works perfectly for the business breakfast.
While I'm sympathetic to edw's idea (don't eat at all), I don't think I'd go to a business breakfast unless I unusually had to. I'm not fit to socialize with people I don't live with that early.