How This Works for Corporate Events
For offices and corporate venues, grazing tables are often used as the main food station when the event is open-house style: holiday parties, client receptions, open networking, or “drop in anytime between 4–6.” People snack in waves, come back for seconds, and it keeps the flow casual without needing a formal buffet line.
Charcuterie boards fit well for smaller meetings, breakout rooms, side stations near the bar, or when food needs to be split across floors or departments. They’re also useful when the event has a seated component (training sessions, presentations) because boards can live on a side table and people can grab something during breaks without disrupting the room.
Dessert options usually work best after the main food rush. A dessert cart is a clear “sweet station” for late in the event, especially when the room is already busy, and you don’t want dessert cluttering the same counter as coffee and drinks. Roaming cannoli tends to land well once people are standing and mingling again — end of a holiday party, post-dinner, or after a keynote — because it’s interactive and doesn’t require everyone to line up in one spot.
Layout, Timing & Planning Considerations
Offices come with practical constraints: elevators, security desks, loading docks, and hallways that get tight fast once a crowd forms. The best food placement is usually near (but not blocking) the main gathering space, with enough clearance for people to approach, step away, and keep traffic moving. If the food table ends up in the same pinch point as check-in, the coat area, or the bar, it can bottleneck within minutes.
Conference rooms and training spaces need a slightly different plan. If people are seated and there are scheduled breaks, boards, or a smaller station setup often works better than one large display that pulls everyone up at the same time. If the event is a reception with roaming conversation, a grazing table can be the main hub — but it needs a stable surface, good lighting, and an approach path that doesn’t cut through a presentation area.
Access windows matter more than people expect. Some buildings only allow vendor entry through a specific door, or only at certain times, and parking can be “the closest spot is a block away.” If it’s a downtown office or a campus building, knowing where to unload, which elevator to use, and whether a badge is required prevents last-minute delays.
Dessert formats affect layout differently. A dessert cart needs flat flooring and a spot that won’t block an exit corridor or doorway. Roaming cannoli needs walking lanes; it’s hard to do well in a tightly packed conference room or when the event space has narrow aisles between high-top tables.
What Works Well / What to Expect
- If people are dropping in over a couple of hours, a grazing table handles it better than a single buffet line — guests take a little, loop back, and it doesn’t jam up the room.
- For trainings or presentations with breaks, boards set along a side wall (not at the doorway) keep the “grab and go” traffic quick and quieter.
- Dessert carts land best after the main eating stretch, especially when the same counter is already doing double duty for coffee, water, and drinks.
- Roaming cannoli works when the room has actual space to move — reception-style layouts with clear lanes, not a packed conference room with tight aisles.
- In office buildings, access rules tend to be the make-or-break detail: security check-in, which door to use, elevator size, and where unloading is allowed.
How It Works
- Arrival timing & access coordination – Arrival is usually planned about 60–90 minutes before food needs to be ready, with an extra cushion if the building has security or a long walk from parking. Access details get nailed down ahead of time (entry door, check-in, elevator/loading dock rules) so setup isn’t starting behind schedule. If the event is on an upper floor or the room is far from the unloading, that’s accounted for in the arrival window
- Setup & space needs – Setup requires a cleared, stable surface and enough room to work without blocking walkways. Grazing tables are built in place; boards can be staged in smaller pieces if space is tight or if the room needs to stay clear until the last minute. Dessert carts are usually staged off to the side until later in the event.
- During peak guest time – Food is designed to be self-serve and quick to approach, so lines don’t dominate the room. Light touch-ups can keep the spread balanced during the busiest stretch without hovering. Roaming cannoli is timed for a point when people are already standing and mingling, so it can move smoothly through the space.
- Breakdown, cleanup, and departure – Breakdown happens after the agreed service window, based on the event schedule and venue rules. Shared items are cleared, surfaces are wiped down, and the space is left tidy. If the building has a strict end time or needs the room reset quickly, that timing is planned upfront.
Service Area
CG Boards’ core service area is within roughly a 30-mile radius of Londonderry, which typically covers most of Southern New Hampshire and the Merrimack Valley. Corporate events are often in towns like Londonderry, Derry, Hudson, Windham, Salem, Lawrence, Methuen, Andover, North Andover, and Haverhill, with some requests reaching into Lowell, Dracut, or Tewksbury, depending on timing. Events outside the core area may still be possible for an additional travel fee. If your office is farther out, share the location and the schedule window, and it can be assessed early.
FAQs
Meeting schedules slip all the time, especially when a session runs long or a speaker goes over. Food timing can usually flex within a reasonable window, but it helps to have one point person who can text updates as soon as the agenda changes. If the space is shared with another group after you, access windows become tighter, so earlier notice matters. For longer events, it can also help to plan food around two smaller waves instead of one big rush.
Many offices require vendor check-in, badges, or entry through a specific door, and some only allow loading during certain times. The easiest approach is sharing the building rules, the contact at the desk (or facilities), and the best arrival window. If early access isn’t possible, boards or smaller staged setups can reduce on-the-spot build time. Knowing elevator size and the route from unloading to the room also prevents surprises.
A two-hour open-house style event behaves differently than a 45-minute lunch break where everyone eats at once. Grazing tables are planned for steady snacking and repeat passes, while boards can be split across departments or floors if the group is spread out. The most useful details are guest count, total event length, and whether there are scheduled “everyone breaks at 3:00” moments. That’s what drives pacing and how the spread is structured.
Conference rooms usually need a quieter, faster flow so the room doesn’t turn into a line. Boards placed along a side table or at the back of the room work well during breaks because people can grab something and return quickly. If the training has multiple sessions, it’s often better to refresh between breaks than to put everything out at once. Sharing the break schedule (two 10-minute breaks vs one 30-minute break) helps shape the plan.
Offices often already have a coffee station, water, and sometimes a bar setup competing for counter space. A dessert cart works best when it’s treated as its own station and timed for later — after the main food rush, or once the room shifts into mingling. Placement matters; it shouldn’t block an exit corridor or sit right at the doorway where people are arriving. If the event has a hard stop time, dessert is usually timed so it doesn’t come out too late.
Roaming cannoli works best when guests are standing, circulating, and not tied to a seated presentation. It’s a strong fit for holiday parties, client receptions, and “networking hour” events where there’s room to move through the crowd. Tight conference rooms, narrow aisles, or heavy seating schedules make it harder, so timing and layout matter more than the headcount. A simple floor plan or description of the space helps confirm whether it will flow well.
The most useful info is the stuff that affects getting in, getting set, and getting out without drama: the exact address, where unloading is allowed, and which entrance vendors are supposed to use. If there’s a security desk, badge check-in, or a point person who needs to meet someone at the door, that matters more than most people think. For upper floors, elevator access (size, hours, whether it’s shared with the public) plus any tight turns or narrow hallways helps plan timing. It also helps to know whether the room has a hard reset window right after your event, or if there’s breathing room for breakdown.
Before peak, the focus is on having food fully ready before people hit the space all at once — especially when a meeting ends, and everyone spills out at the same time. During the busiest stretch, the goal is to keep the flow smooth: avoid one crowded pinch point, keep the approach path clear, and make it easy for people to grab something and move on. After things calm down, it’s more about keeping the setup tidy and balanced without constantly rebuilding it. Breakdown timing is coordinated around the schedule (next meeting, cleaning crew, security rounds) so the room can reset without a scramble.
