Quantcast
« Will Sketchcast Leave Its Mark? | Main | Forward of the Week: Rejection Rules! »

Office Birthdays: A Necessary Evil?

cube_streamer.jpgNo one likes to be ignored.  Yet everyone claims to dread the annual ritual of your co-workers acknowledging the fact that you're one year older - which means another year gone by with a  measly 3% raise.

I was recently interviewed by the fine folks at the Globe and Mail about office birthdays.  While fresh in my mind, here are the variations I've experienced.  Please share your experiences in the comments section below and you could win our comments contest.

Individual
The folder goes around.  Everyone signs your card and chips in $3 - $5.

Pros: You get to feel special.

Cons: The spotlight is on you, meaning 20 forced minutes of age-related jokes and fielding generic questions.

Notes:
The problem with this model are months like April, when it appears everyone was born!

Once a Month
Simple.  Everyone's birthday for the particular month is celebrated at once.  

Pros: Many birds, one stone.  Variety of cakes.

Cons: Where's the love? Gives new meaning to being nothing but a number.  Super sugar shock.

Notes: Makes the occasion an "event," putting extra focus on you if you call in sick or happen to go "missing."

YOU Make Something

Pros: Less guilt about people catering to you. Could poison entire office.

Cons: Pressure to make something that won't suck or get the office sick.

Notes: This model is apparently popular in Holland. Hutspot, anyone?

Banned Birthdays

Pros:
Higher productivity, less awkwardness.  Control your caloric intake.

Cons: Pressure to celebrate outside of work.

Notes: This is a growing trend.  The Jobacle crew is not sure where we stand at this point.

Final thoughts.  There appears to be one consistent with office birthdays, and that's the fact that hard-working cube dwellers always pay for these affairs.  God forbid someone utter the words petty cash.

Please share your thoughts on office birthdays below. I'm particularly interested to hear from our international friends. Extra points for the person who can answer this age old question:  How long do you have to awkwardly stand around talking once you've finished your cake?
Posted on Monday, September 24, 2007 at 08:48AM by Registered CommenterAndrew G.R. in | Comments3 Comments

PrintView Printer Friendly Version

EmailEmail Article to Friend

Reader Comments (3)

A few years ago our company stopped having the whole birthday soiree. Instead, a pile of swag is left on the birthday person's chair. Nothing like some promotional pens and key chains with company logos to usher in a another year on Planet Earth.
September 24, 2007 | Unregistered CommenterJens
In Australia we have a once a month generic birthday bash. This maximizes office productivity for the rest of the month. The boss reads out funny things in history about the days of people's birthdays, and celebrities who share their birthdays. As for the awkward stand-around after the cake, well I usually do it as long as the boss does it, any longer is just risky.
September 26, 2007 | Unregistered CommenterJuiced
I agree with Juiced that you stay as long as your boss does.
September 28, 2007 | Unregistered CommenterME

PostPost a New Comment

Enter your information below to add a new comment.

My response is on my own website »
Author Email (optional):
Author URL (optional):
Post:
 
All HTML will be escaped. Hyperlinks will be created for URLs automatically.