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How to Choose the Right Companion for Your Event

Tips on matching your occasion with the right profile—corporate dinners, weddings, travel, or a quiet evening. What to consider before you book.

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The kind of evening you're planning makes a big difference in who we suggest. A client dinner at a five-star is not the same as a house party with friends, and a weekend trip is different from a few hours at your place. Get the match wrong and you'll both feel it. Get it right and the evening goes smooth. Here's how we think about it—and how you can tell us what you need without overthinking it.

Say you've got a work thing. Client dinner at ITC or a do at a hotel in Guindy. People will be in formals, there might be small talk about deals or the industry. You need someone who can sit at that table without sticking out—dressed right, able to chat, not looking lost or bored. For that we usually point you to our model or celebrity-style profiles. They're used to being in rooms where everyone's a bit dressed up. They know how to hold a conversation, when to smile, when to step back. They won't show up in something too casual or say the wrong thing. That's the kind of thing that can mess up an important evening, so we don't take chances.

Now take a wedding or a birthday party. The vibe is different. People are drinking, dancing, introducing each other. You want someone who can laugh, mingle, and not act like they're at a board meeting. Our regular and college-girl profiles work well here. They're easy to talk to, they don't need to be "on" in a corporate way, and they fit in at social dos. If you bring someone too stiff or too glam for that crowd, it can feel off. So we match the occasion.

Sometimes you're not going to an event at all. You just want company for dinner—maybe at a quiet place—or someone to spend a few hours with at your hotel or home. No audience, no networking. In that case what matters is whether you get along. Can she talk? Is she relaxed? A lot of guys go for housewife or regular profiles for this. They're often older, calmer, good at listening. You're not trying to impress anyone; you just want the evening to feel nice. We'll ask you what you like—chatty, quiet, someone who knows the city—and suggest accordingly.

Travel is another story. If you're taking someone to Pondy or Goa for a couple of days, you're not just filling a slot. You need someone who's okay with being around you for longer, maybe trying new places, sitting in a car, dealing with a different routine. We have girls who do outstation. Not all of them, and not always at short notice. When you tell us it's a trip, we'll check who's free and who's actually up for it. We also need to know basics: where you're going, how many nights, what kind of stay. Then we fix someone who won't bail or act bored halfway through.

Language can matter too. If your crowd speaks mostly Tamil or Telugu, you might want someone who can follow and chip in. If it's an English-heavy crowd, that's different. We're not mind-readers—tell us if you care about the language. Same with age and look. Some guys have a clear idea: "someone who looks a bit older" or "young, fun." Some don't. Both are fine. The more you say, the closer we get on the first try. If you're not sure, say that too. We'll suggest two or three and you pick.

One more thing: how long do you need her? A few hours for dinner is different from "I need her from 8 till 2." Overnight is different again. Duration affects who's available and what we quote. So when you message, give us the occasion, the rough timing, and anything you care about—language, vibe, formal vs casual. We'll come back with options. If the first list doesn't hit, tell us what's missing. We'd rather you get the right person than rush into a booking.