Employer Worst Gifts ever

Given that Christmas is fast approaching.. most businesses have organized what they are giving their people now, but sometimes I shake my head in disbelief as people share with me how thoughtless or simply dumb some employers are about giving a gift. People have worked harder this year than they have in years – and for most there will be no Christmas bonus. So a well thought out gift will make the difference.

Recently we surveyed 3000 employees about the “best” and “worst” gifts they had ever received and why.

Here’s what NOT to do:

Effort versus reward imbalance and offensive to employees

  • “A sparkly nail file for working hard, my manager’s heart was in the right place but it was a strange ‘reward’ to receive for working my butt off”
  • “A mars bar for the anniversary of working with the organisation. It made me feel unappreciated”
  • “Microwave popcorn and one bottle of sparkling to share amongst 10 people to celebrate major account resigning”
  • “For my five years of service – a choice of a wallet, a $5 bottle of wine, a plastic picture frame, playing cards and 2 other pieces of garbage – what an insult”

Tacky

  • “A taco bell watch for 5 years of service and a letter misspelling my name”
  • “Being told at Christmas time that I should be giving my employer a Christmas present to demonstrate my gratitude for working for him”
  • “A pen that didn’t work”
  • “$5 Itunes Gift Card for Christmas”
  • “Herb sachets from a channel promotion”
  • “20c pay rise”

Not so much the reward but the way it is delivered

  • Certificates with misspelled names
  • Sarcasm
  • Little thought
  • Obvious mistakes and generalist one size fits all approach

Standardised clutter

  • “Gold spoon – who needs that?”
  • “A magnetic trophy with paper clips – it can destroy a hard drive in seconds”
  • “A kettle – the qualification criteria was too strict just to win a kettle”
  • “A video history of the company – not personalised, again focusing on the company and not focused on you"
  • “Bath salts, don’t have a bath and they smell awful”
  • “A daggy cap, it was pretty ugly and not really my thing. I couldn’t even give it away”

No recognition/ reward at all feel like another number or disregarded

  • “Christmas Ham – I am a known vegetarian”
  • “Box of chocolates – I am a diabetic”
  • “Tickets to footy - don’t use them”
  • “Dinner at boss’ house”

Please take a moment to think about what employees (and family and friends) really want... And authentic gift that shows true appreciation will make the new years employee engagement so much easier.

What is the worst gift you ever received from your boss (or best if you want to tell someone how great they are)

Subscribe to Naomi Simson's Blog by Email

This entry was posted in Input Please and tagged , , , , . Bookmark the permalink. Post a comment or leave a trackback: Trackback URL.

2 Comments

  1. Greg
    Posted December 16, 2009 at 12:20 pm | Permalink

    I worked for an aged care organisation which bought a coffee mug (the ones you take in your car with you) with the company logo on it for all it's employees...and this was after months of arguing at management level if anything would be bought at all!

  2. Jean Schirle
    Posted January 23, 2010 at 6:48 am | Permalink

    For a Christmas gift from a national import store, where my husband is employed, employees received a handful of leftover Halloween items that had been thrown in the clearance bin after Halloween and marked down to 90% off the day. Items included an eraser shaped as a bat, a drinking straw with a plastic ghost, edible creepy teeth and a 4" long plastic rat. There was also a package of Halloween marshmallow cookies that had been expired. A Christmas card would have been more valued.

One Trackback

  1. [...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Naomi, Robert Half AU. Robert Half AU said: What's the worst gift you've received from your employer? RT @NaomiSimson: Employer Worst Gifts ever: http://bit.ly/4GORMX [...]

Post a Comment

Your email is never published nor shared. Required fields are marked *

*
*

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>