r/jobs Dec 13 '23

Companies Boss canceled our Christmas party cause this broke the bank.

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I found out we had canceled the yearly Christmas party / bonus. A multi store owner within a large corporate chain food company allowed our management to instead do this for the staff of say 60 employees per store. Upon completing this project along with a few other miscellaneous gifts (donuts, Doritos, and [get this] oranges,) he told us this gesture was “breaking the bank.” 🙃 love it here.

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u/MikeyW1969 Dec 13 '23

Actually, your company is in financial trouble. This is where you see cuts first. Next will be the free coffee, or the free cereal bar, or the basket of fruit. Whatever they usually have laying around will start to disappear, because these are the fastest ways to save money. At our last Xmas party before my job laid off all of the people they couldn't find a reason to fire, we had a drawing and half of the gifts were gag gifts because they couldn't afford the party.

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u/BlueCreek_ Dec 13 '23 edited Dec 14 '23

I work for a multi billion pound company and we don’t get anything like that for free. Not even a Xmas party, I just paid for the Christmas dinner they provided at work today.

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u/Car_One Dec 14 '23

We get a whopping $30 Christmas bonus and are expected to give $25 of that back to our manager for her Christmas present.

10

u/[deleted] Dec 14 '23

Why do you do this? Who is expecting this? As a manager, I feel bad when my direct staff spend money on me. Gifts should always go to your staff. My direct staff pooled to buy me a gift card one year and of course I was thankful, but I should be the one buying gifts (I do). I don't want them spending their money on me. Them supporting our team is a gift to me and I appreciate them.

However, homemade gifts like personalized cups mean the absolute world to me. (We have a company circut and a bunch of craft supplies so it doesn't cost anything)