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DJ Services and Photo Booth for Young Living's Corporate Event in Lehi
Corporate events exist on a spectrum. On one end, you have the obligatory company gathering — a rented room, a cash bar, and a playlist running off someone's phone. On the other end, you have an event that actually reflects the company's culture, gives employees something to look forward to, and sends people home feeling like their employer invested in the experience.
Young Living's corporate event at their Lehi, Utah headquarters landed firmly on the right end of that spectrum. Flipside Fun provided DJ services and a full photo booth setup for the evening — and the energy the team brought made it one of the more memorable corporate events we've worked in the Salt Lake Valley.
The Company and the Setting
Young Living is one of the more recognizable names in Utah's business landscape. Their headquarters in Lehi sits within one of the state's most active commercial corridors, and the company itself has built a culture that takes recognition and celebration seriously. When a team like that decides to throw a party for their employees, the expectation isn't low.
Working a corporate event at a company's own headquarters comes with a specific dynamic. The space is familiar to everyone in attendance — these are people who walk those halls every day. The goal of a good entertainment setup in that context is to make the space feel different, to signal that tonight is not a normal Tuesday. Music and atmosphere do that work. A properly set up DJ and photo booth in a space people know transforms the room in a way that a simple decoration change doesn't.
DJ Setup and Crowd Management
The DJ set for this event was built around the energy a corporate crowd needs at the end of a workday — high enough to move people, calibrated to the room rather than a club. There's a real difference between DJing a nightclub and DJing a corporate party, and it comes down to crowd reading.
Corporate guests arrive at different energy levels. Some are ready to go from the moment they walk in. Others need time to decompress, have a drink, and settle into the evening before they're anywhere near a dance floor. A DJ who opens at full tilt in that environment loses half the room before the night has a chance to build. The approach here was a deliberate build — music that worked for mingling and conversation early in the evening, with the energy climbing as the crowd warmed up and the floor started to fill.
The sound system was sized appropriately for the venue — clean, clear, and loud enough to feel like an event without making conversation impossible. That balance is something that gets overlooked in corporate entertainment planning more often than it should. People need to be able to talk to each other. The music supports the energy of the room; it doesn't compete with it.
DJ JJ managed the flow throughout the evening, reading the floor and adjusting in real time. When a song landed and people moved toward the dance area, the set followed that momentum. When the floor needed a reset, it got one. That kind of active management is what separates a working DJ from a human jukebox — and it's the difference between a corporate party that stays flat and one that builds through the night.
The Photo Booth
The photo booth ran alongside the DJ set from early in the evening through the end of the night. For a corporate event, a photo booth serves a function that goes beyond entertainment — it gives people something to do together, it creates a shared experience for coworkers who might not interact every day, and it produces something tangible that guests take home.
The setup was fully customized to fit the event. Custom overlays matched the occasion, and the booth was designed to be clean and approachable — the kind of setup where someone walking by feels invited to step in rather than uncertain about how it works. Guest experience at the booth is about more than the hardware. It's about placement in the room, how the attendant manages the line, and making sure every guest leaves with a quality image they actually want to keep.
Throughout the night the booth stayed active. Groups of coworkers cycled through, individual shots happened, and the kind of candid, unguarded moments that define a good company party found their way into the prints. By the end of the evening, every guest who wanted a memento from the night had one.
Why Corporate Events Deserve Serious Entertainment
There's a tendency in corporate event planning to treat entertainment as a line item rather than a priority — something to check off the list rather than something to actually invest in. The result of that approach shows up in the event itself: a flat room, guests who leave early, and a party that nobody talks about on Monday morning.
The companies that get corporate events right understand that the entertainment is the event. The food, the venue, the logistics — those are the container. What actually happens inside that container, the energy in the room, whether people dance or just stand around, whether the photo booth line is ten people deep or empty — that's determined by the quality of the entertainment setup and the people running it.
Young Living's team came ready to celebrate. That energy is genuine and it's real, and credit goes to the company for building a culture where people actually want to show up to something like this. But that energy also needs somewhere to go. A well-run DJ set gives it direction. A photo booth gives it a focal point. Together, they create the conditions for a night that people remember because they were actually present in it rather than just attending it.
What Flipside Fun Brings to Corporate Events
Flipside Fun has worked corporate events across the Salt Lake Valley and along the Wasatch Front — from small team celebrations to large-scale company parties. The approach is consistent regardless of size: understand what the client actually needs, build a setup that fits the space and the crowd, and execute cleanly from the first song to the last print out of the photo booth.
For corporate bookings specifically, that means being professional in every interaction before and during the event. It means showing up on time, set up ahead of schedule, and ready before the first guest walks in. It means dressing the part for the client's environment. And it means being adaptable when the evening takes a direction that wasn't on the run-of-show — because it always does.
The communication that happens before the event is just as important as the execution on the night itself. Understanding the company culture, the demographic of the guest list, any music preferences or restrictions, the flow of the evening's program, and what success looks like from the client's perspective — all of that shapes how the DJ approaches the set and how the photo booth is positioned and operated.
Young Living's event came together because the team had a clear vision for the night and Flipside Fun came prepared to deliver against it. That's the model.
Planning a Corporate Event in Utah
If your company is planning a celebration, holiday party, team event, or employee appreciation night in Lehi, Salt Lake City, or anywhere along the Wasatch Front, the entertainment conversation is worth having early. The right DJ and photo booth setup can define the difference between a night your team talks about for years and one they've forgotten by the following week.
Reach out to Flipside Fun to discuss what your event needs. No templates, no packages that don't fit — just an honest conversation about what's going to make your company's event worth showing up for.





