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Dinner Lab Drops Its Membership Paywall as It Looks to Triple Attendance The fast-growing dinner party startup will no longer require an annual membership fee.

By Catherine Clifford

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

KatieBird Photography

Dinner Lab wants to make more room at the table -- and it's taking a big leap to get there.

The New Orleans-based startup, which arranges pop-up dinner parties in underutilized spaces across the country, announced today that it's dropping its annual membership fee. Previously, to attend a Dinner Lab event, a customer had to have an annual membership ($125 to $175 depending on the city) and then pay for the cost of the individual dinner (about $60 for food, booze, tax and tip). That meant that a person could spend as much as $230 to walk in the door that first time.

In removing its membership fee, Dinner Lab is hoping to significantly expand the number of customers it reaches. The company currently hosts between 25 and 30 dinner parties each week across the country. By the end of 2016, it wants to triple that number.

Image Credit: Brittany Purlee | Britography

"Obviously, membership fees are great for a business's bottom line because it is pretty free cash flow," says Brian Bordainick, Dinner Lab's founder and CEO. "Getting more people in the door is 100 percent the focus for us."

Related: This New Orleans Food-Tech Startup Is Turning the Tables on the Restaurant Industry

Still, the paid membership model is not completely going away. For $175 a year, a customer can now pay to be a Dinner Lab Select Member, which allows them to get advance notice of events, early access to sign-up and discounted ticket costs.

Having two levels of participation in the Dinner Lab community means that there can be both an open-door policy and a more exclusive category of Dinner Lab aficionados. The Dinner Lab Select Membership includes offers to events that the general public will not have access to, including chef demonstrations and classes, seasonal parties, happy hours and special wine dinners.

Image Credit: Debby Wolvos, Food Stylist: Sarah Seddon

But the real focus for Dinner Lab is getting people outside of its circle of evangelists to try the experience on for size. "All you have to do now is go to the website and click and you will be notified of those events and I think the product will speak for itself," says Bordainick.

As Dinner Lab throws open its doors, it is simultaneously doubling down on finding brand partnerships that enhance the dinner party experience, like local artisanal breweries and craft small-batch goods. The company has a healthy, growing corporate events business, but in an effort to keep the brand authentic and spontaneous, it's focusing on bringing customers new and unique experiences.

Related: Stress, Anxiety, Loneliness: How This Entrepreneur Lost Himself and Bounced Back Stronger

"We have reoriented our sales energy and team toward actually local sponsorships," he says. "Where before they were trying to find someone who could host 30 events and we were trying to lock down those deals, now what they are doing is they are trying to find cool breweries and they are trying to find cool spirit companies, cool micro-green producers, cool glassware companies, interesting artists."

Image Credit: Dinner Lab

Bordainick knows that keeping Dinner Lab fresh, exciting and underground-cool while growing it at a healthy clip is a delicate task. But he's determined to stick closely to the singular mission that set the company in motion in the first place.

"We need to stay true to who we are. And who we are is a bunch of weirdos that enjoy throwing dinner parties in random locations," says Bordainick. "My goal for our team, as our team has grown, is that if you tap any one of our employees on the shoulder and you say, "What's the focus?' They are like, "Throwing one hell of a party.'"

Related: Lessons from a Food-Tech Startup: Big Data Isn't Just a Buzzword -- It Can Be Your Secret Weapon
Catherine Clifford

Senior Entrepreneurship Writer at CNBC

Catherine Clifford is senior entrepreneurship writer at CNBC. She was formerly a senior writer at Entrepreneur.com, the small business reporter at CNNMoney and an assistant in the New York bureau for CNN. Clifford attended Columbia University where she earned a bachelor's degree. She lives in Brooklyn, N.Y. You can follow her on Twitter at @CatClifford.

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