A bunch of people who have laboured together all year in an office environment,however,will naturally assume there will be a Christmas knees-up. It has always been one of the perks of working in an office.
Taken from the old-fashioned word “perquisites”,perks are offerings by an employer that go beyond the basic salary and benefits package. Ah,but several large employers have recently announced that those who work from home risk having their bonuses cut if they don’t comply with office-attendance rules. And with staff numbers divided between office and home,enthusiasm for supplying free booze and Cheezels at the office Christmas party is waning.
This is not only sad,it’s wrong. We’re all feeling our way towards a balance between work and home,connection and productivity. And Christmas is a time to bring people together,no matter the differences.
As two food writers who have worked from home for many Christmases,my wife and I tackled the issue head-on decades ago by insisting on an office party. Yes,just for the two of us. With no chief financial officer to say otherwise,we award it a disproportionately large budget.
The agreed strategy is to book a table for two in the restaurant we would both most like to go to,once we have stopped arguing about which restaurant that will be.
This year,it could be the intriguing newKing Clarence modern Asian or the charmingUrsula’s in Sydney.