Comments
Cat-O-Tonics t1_iyddayc wrote
The best holiday party work could provide is to just let us go at lunch, instead of using the second half of the day as a "party"
hello_imshellyduvall OP t1_iydo4yq wrote
You understand this meme completely.
hello_imshellyduvall OP t1_iydo8lw wrote
Tell me you don't work close to the company higher-ups without telling me.
TheRealOgMark t1_iydqjmt wrote
I'm paid by the hour.
4dogs2kids t1_iye0yp1 wrote
Me, thinking about how I'd get mixed up and pull the trigger when I tried snapping the photo.
Euphoric-Bit1969 t1_iye80rr wrote
“We’re hosting an Employee Appreciation Holiday Event in a city 2 hours from your home at 6pm on a Sunday. Don’t forget to share this with your teams. Can’t wait to see you all there!”
hello_imshellyduvall OP t1_iyeihnb wrote
Lol, I might consider that lucky.
hello_imshellyduvall OP t1_iyeim5o wrote
Runyc2000 t1_iyejd63 wrote
Yes. I’m all for trying to build camaraderie and good will but forcing people together to “have fun” is counterproductive. If our personalities didn’t align at work what makes you think they will magically do so at a work “party” and we will be besties? My job sometimes forces us to go to multi-day events that force people to work together in team building exercises. Instead of that it actually just widened the gap by showing people exactly who can be trusted to be competent or not.
hello_imshellyduvall OP t1_iyenfja wrote
This makes too much sense. And literally no manager will ever find around to this way of thinking. Maybe when younger millennials take over? I'm furiously googling articles on dealing with appropriateness of these "holiday"events in a multicultural workplace.
savvitosZH t1_iyf8l2e wrote
Wait until I tell you that we have to pay the cost of participation in holiday company events and if you don’t come you are not a team player
FeanorFury t1_iyfd8dh wrote
Do you have this template I can’t find it but I love it
TheRealOgMark t1_iydd2w6 wrote
Just don't go. They can't force you if you're not paid.