If you’ve been to enough Lagos events recently, you may have noticed a subtle shift happening. The thing guests are gathering around, talking about, and photographing most isn’t always the food, it’s the bar.
We still love Small chops and We’re not here to start anything. But there’s a real conversation happening among Lagos event planners and hosts about where the experience budget goes, and cocktail bars are increasingly taking a larger share of that conversation.
Here’s why.
Small chops are transactional. Guests grab them, eat them, move on. There’s no lingering. No story. No photograph. A cocktail experience, on the other hand, is something guests hold, savour, and share. It’s in their hands for the duration. It’s in every group photo. It’s what they’re sipping when they’re laughing and dancing and having the time of their lives.
There’s also the personalisation factor.
You can’t put a bride’s name on a puff puff. But you absolutely can and should name a cocktail after her.
That level of personalisation creates a moment, and moments are what make events memorable.
Then there’s the aesthetic reality of modern Lagos hosting. Events are documented. Thoroughly. A gorgeous cocktail bar setup, with thoughtfully garnished drinks and a well-dressed bar, photographs beautifully and elevates the visual story of the entire event.
None of this is to say you have to choose. The best events have great food and great drinks. But if you’re thinking about where intentionality pays off most visibly, the bar is often the answer.
Want to know what a cocktail experience would look like at your next event? OTRwithB is always happy to talk through ideas. Reach out on WhatsApp.