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You are at:Home»Current Issue»Beth Standlee's PARTY PROFESSOR»Party Professor – June 2026
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Party Professor – June 2026

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By RePlay Editor on June 1, 2026 Beth Standlee's PARTY PROFESSOR, COLUMNS, Current Issue

Be the Life of Your Own Party

Four Ways to Reframe Slow Traffic into Strategic Growth

By Beth Standlee, CEO, TrainerTainment

Beth Standlee

When foot traffic slows and customers hold tight to their wallets, family entertainment center operators face a critical choice: wait and hope things improve or take control of things you can do something about. As I wrote in my April column, the difference between holding a “potential party” versus a “pity party” determines whether you thrive or merely survive. The most resilient businesses don’t just weather economic uncertainty, they reframe challenging circumstances as an opportunity to try something new.

Instead of relying on the “build it and they will come” mindset, successful operators shift to purposeful, proactive strategies that replace hope with action. Here are four proven ways to recreate the party when facing slower walk-in traffic.

1. Reframe Passive Hope as Proactive Outreach

The first mental shift involves moving from reactive to proactive thinking. When business is already slow, you’re operating from a position of need or even desperation, rather than strategy. Reframe slower walk-in traffic not as a crisis, but as a signal to prioritize past party outreach to invite guests who are already fans to book a new party and group event. These families already know your venue and trust your experience.
Instead of thinking “people aren’t coming because gas is over $4 a gallon,” reframe it as “families are choosing experiences more carefully, so I need to remind them why we’re worth the drive.” Implement automated email campaigns that remind previous party hosts about upcoming birthdays, send personalized offers based on the child’s age and promote seasonal party themes that create urgency.

2. Turn Economic Anxiety into Value Demonstration

When guests worry about the economy, they don’t stop spending, they spend more carefully. Reframe “guests are holding onto their money” as “our guests need to clearly see the value of the experience we can provide before they commit.” This mindset shift empowers you to take control of your messaging and focus on the value.

Create ready-to-go party packages that eliminate decision fatigue and showcase everything families receive: entertainment, food, party hosts, cleanup and memories. Position your venue as the stress-free solution that delivers more value than DIY alternatives. Leverage social proof through guest testimonials and user-generated content from past parties.

3. Replace “Accidental Business” with Business on Purpose

Waiting for foot traffic means surrendering control of your timeline and your revenue. Transform yourself from passive recipient to active builder by asking, “Who hasn’t experienced our venue yet, and how do we reach them?” Make a top 10 list today of the people you would most like to do business with.

Target organizations that book group events: corporate teams, youth sports leagues, schools, social clubs and community organizations. Tailor the type of outreach that speaks to their specific needs. Leverage current relationships by asking satisfied clients for introductions and form strategic partnerships with complementary businesses like hotels and local attractions to create bundled offerings. Most new business comes from existing networks, so make new business development a priority rather than an afterthought. Top tip: Commit 10 hours per week to prospect for new groups whether they are corporate, charity, church, sports teams, schools and other kid groups.

4. Transform Uncertainty into Operational Excellence

Economic uncertainty often paralyzes operators with “what if” thinking, but resilient businesses use slow periods to strengthen their foundation. Reframe downtime not as lost revenue, but as precious space to improve operations, train staff and plan for multiple scenarios.

Conduct customer surveys to understand what drives bookings and what creates friction in the party planning process. Review your group sales process: Are you making it easy for organizations to book? Do you offer flexible packages and clear pricing? Do you have a proven sales process or are you simply taking reservations? Use this time to build systems that prepare you for various economic conditions.

The Bottom Line

Being the life of your own party means refusing to let external circumstances write your story. The question isn’t whether your business will face challenges, it’s whether you’ll use those challenges to build something bigger and better. Starting today, choose one of these four reframes and take action: call three past party customers, create one new group sales package or schedule one hour to audit your booking and sales process. Your competitors are waiting for things to get better; you can choose to make things better. The most successful operators I know didn’t wait for perfect conditions, they created momentum when it mattered most. What will you do this week to be the life of your own party?

 


Beth is the Chairwoman of TrainerTainment LLC and the GrowthPro Group, a coac­h­ing company devoted to the family entertainment and hosp­ital­ity industries. Beth and her team are focused on helping the companies they serve make more money through sales, service, and leadership. Her company provides books, online products and courses, and onsite, online and ongoing training and business coaching to help teams and businesses grow. Beth is also president of AAMA, a sought-after keynote speaker and the author of People Buy from People. Visit her company’s website at trainertainment.com.

 

 

Beth Standlee GrowthPro Group Nancy Starr Party Professor People Buy From People trainertainment
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