Discretion & Privacy
Some clients tell us things they haven’t told anyone else yet. The question hasn’t been asked. The date isn’t set. The family doesn’t know. That’s where confidentiality stops being a policy and starts being the job.
The surprise stays secret
Proposals involve logistics that have to be invisible to the person being proposed to. Reservation names, arrival windows, ring coordination, backup plans — we manage all of it without leaving a trail your partner might stumble across.
We’ve handled proposals for clients whose partners follow us on social media. That’s not a problem. It just requires care, and we’re practiced at it.
What we keep to ourselves
Your name, your event, your guests, your budget, your travel dates — none of it leaves our team without your permission. We don’t share client details beyond what a supplier needs to do their specific job, and we don’t reference past clients in any context without consent. If we’ve worked with you, that’s between us.
You’re also not required to share full identifying details before you’re ready to proceed. Anonymous initial enquiries are welcome.
Imagery and sharing
We handle event imagery with care. How images may be used is set out in your client agreement. If you want tighter restrictions on sharing — including a full NDA and media blackout — tell us before the event, and we’ll build that into the plan.
We don’t tag your name, your partner’s name, or your venue in a way that creates avoidable exposure around a live event. For proposals, timing and privacy come first.
Some events stay private by design. When that’s the brief, we treat it that way from the start.
Vendors and our team
We work with a trusted network of florists, jewellers, private chefs, and venue contacts built over more than a decade in Paris. Access to your information is limited to the people who need it to do their job. We don’t pass your contact details to suppliers after the event, and we don’t make introductions on your behalf without asking first.
Everyone who works on your event — coordinators, day-of staff, any specialist brought in — operates on the same basis: client information stays internal, always.
High-profile and privacy-first clients
Some clients need more than standard discretion — executives, public figures, and anyone for whom being publicly linked to an event carries real consequences. We handle these engagements regularly.
Where required, we can structure your planning process to include a formal NDA, a full media blackout across all channels, vendor briefings limited to logistics with your identity withheld throughout, use of a preferred or alternative name, and all communication routed exclusively through us from first contact. These arrangements are documented before booking so there’s no ambiguity later.
If this applies to you, raise it at the outset. All pre-booking discussions are treated as confidential.
Press and media
Kiss Me in Paris has been covered by Reuters and Agence France-Presse — wire reports that reached 80+ outlets across 25 countries in February 2026. We’ve also been featured in Tatler, Barron’s, TIME, ELLE, and more than 80 additional international outlets. None of those features include client names, faces, or identifying details without explicit written permission. If a media request comes in and your event is relevant, we won’t respond without speaking with you first.
Communication
We adapt to how you want to work. If you have a preference — a particular channel, something you’d rather handle by phone — tell us. We’ll work around it.
For the legal details on what we store, where, and for how long, see our Privacy Policy.
Questions
Kiss Me in Paris — Est. 2013. Full-service planning since 2017.