Six huge mistakes to avoid at your work Christmas party

Recruitment and workplace expert Roxanne Calder says work parties ain’t what they used to be. (Source: Getty/Roxanne Calder)

For something supposed to be fun, work Christmas parties can be surprisingly high stakes in the modern workplace. It used to be a harmless night out, a couple of drinks, a few dance moves and a half-remembered story for the next day.

Now, it resembles a social experiment: part celebration, part networking roulette and yes, part unspoken performance review. Add the habitual filming and posting to socials, and you have an event where your reputation unravels faster than the night unfolds.

Twenty years ago, a Christmas party faux pas stayed in the room. Or at worst, lived on as a foggy nextday memory, mercifully free of evidence. Today, it’s broadcasted, viewed, and shared. No fog here, just a filtered soft lens blur.

RELATED

This week, an executive at National Australia Bank’s online lender UBank was reportedly sacked after behaving inappropriately including being photographed in a mock terrorism act at the work Christmas party.

Celebrations and parties are important physical manifestations or artefacts of an organisation’s culture. And the Christmas party remains a significant event and ritual. So how do you celebrate without courting office infamy or worse? A few guiding principles can help:

One of the great myths of the Christmas party is that hierarchy levels out. The boss is wearing a novelty jumper and reindeer ears, colleagues are laughing more loudly than usual, and the whole event feels looser. But alcohol does not cancel power dynamics; it simply dims the lights.

It can make the hierarchy more visible. People reveal how they really relate to authority once their guard lowers. Hybrid work has made this more complicated. After years of reduced in-person interaction, people are socially rusty. Judgment slips not because people are reckless, but because their social reflexes are not being fully exercised.

Remember: the Christmas party is not a night off from workplace dynamics. Respect for roles, boundaries and authority should be maintained.

Phones have become the hidden guests at every workplace event. No one means harm; they are filming a toast, a joke, or the office limbo competition, but context rarely survives the camera roll. A harmless moment can look vastly different when cropped, shared, or viewed by someone who wasn’t there.

Continue Reading