# How to Hire a Proposal Planner: Contracts, Vetting & What's Included

> What to ask before you sign, how to read the contract, and the key differences between what's included and what gets billed as an add-on.

*Published 2026-06-25 · By Sophie Bellange*

In short
Hiring a proposal planner is the same discipline as hiring any major event professional: vet the portfolio, confirm on-site presence, read the contract clause by clause, and get an itemized scope that distinguishes planning-fee inclusions from vendor invoices billed separately. The profession is still niche — The Knot's 2023 Real Weddings Study found only about 2% of proposers hire a dedicated planner — but for complex, multi-vendor proposals the risk-reduction value is real.

A marriage proposal is a once-in-a-lifetime event with no practical rehearsal and no recovery if the venue is occupied, a vendor cancels, or a friend accidentally tips off your partner. For a small but growing share of proposers, that irreversibility is reason enough to bring in a professional. But proposal planning is a relatively young, largely unregulated profession — the first dedicated firms appeared around 2008 — and the quality gap between a skilled planner and a well-marketed one is wide. Knowing how to evaluate a planner before signing is not a luxury; it is basic due diligence on a decision that can run from $1,500 to well over $10,000.

This guide walks through the full hiring process: how to assess a portfolio, the questions that separate prepared planners from unprepared ones, the contract terms that matter most, and a clear-eyed look at what core service packages actually include versus what gets billed as an add-on once the concept is locked. If you are still deciding whether to hire a planner at all, our companion piece on [what a proposal planner does and costs](https://caratyes.com/proposals/proposal-planner-cost) covers the full price spectrum and the DIY comparison.

## How Do You Assess a Proposal Planner's Portfolio and Process?

Start with the portfolio. Request photographs from past proposals — not just the styled hero shots, but images that reveal execution quality: setup details, venue ambiance, candid reaction moments. Look for variety: a planner who can demonstrate results across a range of settings (intimate indoor dinners, outdoor garden setups, urban rooftops, destination proposals) is generally more adaptable than one whose portfolio shows the same arch-and-candle template repeated across different cities.

Equally important is understanding the planner's process for personalizing concepts. Approximately 68% of couples now seek customized proposal experiences rather than off-the-shelf packages, according to My Planner Friend's 2026 planning guide. The profession's leading firms reflect this: both [The Yes Girls](https://theyesgirls.com/services/) — widely cited as the original dedicated proposal planning company, founded in 2008 — and [The Heart Bandits](https://www.theheartbandits.com/), founded in 2010 and based in Los Angeles, begin each engagement with a proprietary relationship questionnaire designed to surface the couple's shared history, personalities, and preferences before any concept is drafted. If a planner cannot articulate how they gather and apply personal information about your relationship, their output will likely resemble anyone else's — just with your names added.

Ask specifically for two or three client references you can contact independently. Testimonials published on a firm's own website are necessarily curated; a brief conversation with a past client is not. Useful questions for references: Did the planner communicate proactively, or did you have to chase updates? Did the final event match the original concept? Were there surprises on the invoice? Was the planner physically present during the setup and the proposal moment?

That last question matters more than it may appear. Many firms headquartered in one metro — Los Angeles, New York, Chicago — coordinate proposals nationwide or internationally by engaging vetted local vendor networks. This is operationally sound, but it is different from a planner's own team being on-site. Confirm explicitly who will be physically present on proposal day, and establish direct-contact protocols for proposal morning in case of last-minute problems.

## What Questions Should You Ask a Proposal Planner Before Booking?

The difference between a well-prepared planner and an underprepared one is often visible in how they answer logistics questions. A professional should be able to answer all of the following without hesitation:

  Key Questions to Ask a Proposal Planner Before Signing

      Question
      What a Strong Answer Looks Like
      Red Flag

      How do you generate the initial concept?
      A structured intake questionnaire covering relationship history, partner preferences, meaningful locations
      Immediate presentation of preset packages without asking anything about the couple

      Will you or your team be on-site during setup and the proposal?
      Clear yes, with named point of contact and communication protocol for proposal day
      Vague answer; "we manage remotely" without an on-site escalation plan

      What is your backup plan if the primary venue falls through?
      A described protocol — backup venue options already identified, proactive venue verification in advance
      No prepared answer; shifts responsibility to the client

      How are vendor costs handled — through your firm or billed separately?
      Clear delineation: planning fee vs. vendor invoices; written itemized scope before signing
      "It's all in the package" without documentation

      Do you have active vendor relationships in my target city?
      Named vendors they have worked with in that market, or a clear process for sourcing new vendors with quality controls
      "We can find anyone" without specifics

      What happens if my partner's schedule changes and the date needs to move?
      A rescheduling policy with specific terms (vendor rebooking fees, timeline impact) and a defined process
      No answer or an answer that places all rescheduling costs on the client without firm protections

The Yes Girls addresses one of these questions proactively on its public website: proactive venue verification — confirming with parks departments or venue managers that a location is accessible, unobstructed, and permit-compliant — is described as a core service component. A DIY proposer must manage this independently; an outdoor proposal at an unexpectedly closed park or under construction is a failure mode that professional venue-checking eliminates. Ask any planner you are evaluating whether this verification is part of their service or your responsibility.

## What Are the Contract Terms That Matter Most When Hiring a Proposal Planner?

The planning contract is the most important document in the process. Read it before signing, and if anything is unclear, ask for clarification in writing before committing. The following are the clauses that produce the most disputes when left ambiguous:

### Scope of Services and Itemized Inclusions

The contract should include a written scope of services that explicitly distinguishes what is covered by the planning fee from what is handled separately through vendor invoices. The planning fee covers the planner's time and expertise — concept development, vendor sourcing and booking, timeline, on-site coordination. Vendor costs (venue rental, photographer, florist, decor rental, entertainment) are almost always invoiced separately, either directly to the client or passed through the planner at cost. **If the contract does not contain an itemized scope, request one before signing.** Discovering mid-planning that florals, photography, and venue are all additional is a significant financial surprise.

### Payment Schedule

Industry-standard proposal planning contracts typically structure payments in three stages. A common split is 20% on booking, 40% at a mid-planning milestone (often when the concept is approved), and the remaining 40% approximately ten days before the event. The Yes Girls uses a structure in which a $499 non-refundable deposit is credited toward the planning fee at signing, 50% of the total planning fee is due at signing, and the balance is due one week before the event — vendor costs are charged directly to the client. My Planner Friend follows a similar deposit-plus-staged-payment model. Confirm whether the initial deposit is credited toward your total or is charged in addition to the stated planning fee — these are materially different financial structures.

### Cancellation Policy

Cancellation terms vary by firm, but event industry norms documented by platforms like [Aisle Planner](https://www.aisleplanner.com/blog/work-life/aisle-planners-answer-what-are-your-cancellation-policies) suggest that cancellations with more than 180 days' notice may receive a 25% refund of the deposit paid, while cancellations inside 180 days forfeit the deposit entirely. The rationale is that planners commit vendor holds and development time as soon as a date is booked. Confirm whether the cancellation policy applies differently to the planning fee versus vendor costs already incurred, and ask specifically about rescheduling: a rescheduled event is not the same as a cancellation, and the terms should reflect that distinction.

### Force Majeure and Weather Contingency

Any proposal involving an outdoor venue should include a documented backup plan — either a named indoor alternative or a written reschedule protocol. Confirm this is in the contract, not just in a verbal conversation. A force majeure clause should also protect both parties if the event is prevented by circumstances genuinely outside either party's reasonable control (public health events, natural disasters, venue closures by third-party authority).

### Change-Order Process

Scope additions — upgrading the floral arch, adding a videographer, moving from a restaurant to a private rooftop — should have a defined change-order process: who proposes the change, how pricing is presented, and what written approval is required before the change is executed. Without this, scope creep is almost inevitable, and the final invoice can look substantially different from the original quote.

## What Is Actually Included in a Proposal Planning Package — and What Is an Add-On?

This distinction is where most client-planner friction originates. The list below reflects what mid-range and luxury proposal planning packages at firms including The Yes Girls, [My Planner Friend](https://www.myplannerfriend.com/blog/proposal-planner-cost), and The Heart Bandits describe as standard inclusions versus common add-ons.

**Typically included in the planning fee:**

  - Initial consultation and relationship questionnaire

  - Personalized concept development (one to two bespoke concepts, depending on tier)

  - Venue research and booking assistance

  - Vendor sourcing and coordination (photographer, florist, decor company)

  - Proposal-day timeline document

  - Cover story development to preserve the surprise

  - On-site coordination during setup and the proposal moment

**Common add-ons billed separately:**

  - Professional photography (often the single largest additional cost; proposal photography typically runs $400–$1,200 depending on hours and market)

  - Videography or highlight reel editing

  - Custom florals beyond a base arrangement

  - Engagement party planning and coordination

  - Travel fees for proposals outside the planner's home market

  - Branded keepsakes: custom neon or LED signs, personalized champagne flutes, monogrammed items

  - Venue rental fees — almost always invoiced separately through the venue directly or passed through the planner at cost

My Planner Friend's entry-level package at $995 includes a styled setup, planning guidance, and an on-site helper. Higher tiers add photography and upgraded florals. The Yes Girls' Signature packages start at a $1,000 planning fee with an event budget of $2,100–$7,500 for venue and vendors combined — making the all-in range $3,100–$8,500 before any add-ons. Their Custom Proposal Planning tier requires a $2,399 planning fee plus a recommended event budget floor of $6,000, with total spend often reaching $8,000–$10,000 or more. Understanding which layer of cost you are committing to at the moment of signing is the clearest protection against invoice shock.

For proposers who want professional support without the full planning fee, a dedicated proposal photographer occupies a useful middle tier. For $400–$800, a hidden photographer captures the moment and often advises on location and timing — a lighter engagement with real value. Our [proposal photographer guide](https://caratyes.com/proposals/proposal-photographer-guide) covers how to book a hidden shoot, cost tiers by market, and what deliverables to expect. And if you are still at the earlier stage of shaping the proposal concept itself, our step-by-step [how to propose guide](https://caratyes.com/proposals/how-to-propose) walks through every stage from ring readiness to the question itself.

The profession of proposal planning is young enough that standards are still forming — there is no industry certification, no licensing body, and no formal accreditation to verify. What you have instead is a paper trail: a portfolio, client references, a written contract with itemized scope, and the planner's answers to direct logistics questions. Those are the four things that separate a professionally executed proposal from a very expensive learning experience.

## Sources

1. [Services — The Yes Girls Luxury Proposal Planner](https://theyesgirls.com/services/)
2. [The Heart Bandits — World's Best Marriage Proposal Planners](https://www.theheartbandits.com/)
3. [How Much Does a Proposal Planner Cost? [2025 Guide]](https://www.myplannerfriend.com/blog/proposal-planner-cost)
4. [Proposal Planners Help Slay the Big Moment — Here's How to Find One](https://www.theknot.com/content/proposal-concierge-services-ideas)
5. [Aisle Planners Answer: What Are Your Cancellation Policies?](https://www.aisleplanner.com/blog/work-life/aisle-planners-answer-what-are-your-cancellation-policies)
6. [The Complete Guide to Marriage Proposal Planning in 2026](https://www.myplannerfriend.com/marriage-proposal-planning)

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Source: https://caratyes.com/proposals/hire-proposal-planner
Index: https://caratyes.com/llms.txt · Full text: https://caratyes.com/llms-full.txt
