Skip to Content »

Skills for Living » Office or Home Business Holiday Etiquette

 Office or Home Business Holiday Etiquette

  • November 30th, 2009
  • 9:59 am

The holidays can be the perfect time to boost your career, whether for your home business or your office. Between gift-giving and office parties, you have plenty of opportunities to show people who you are and where your career interests lie. Here are some  opportunities:

Office party. Many companies will hold still hold holiday parties this year despite the financial down-turn. They may more necessary than ever to boost company morale. If your office is holding a party, attend, (it may not be mandatory, but…-I’m just saying) remember these three things:

  1. Don’t booze it up.
  2. Don’t talk shop the entire time.
  3. Don’t over- or under-dress.

If you are a home business owner, the same rules apply, perhaps more so.

Cards. Sending holiday cards is a great way to acknowledge those who’ve helped your career in the past year and to reconnect with business associates. If you’re uncertain about religious affiliations, send cards that eliminate any religious references. Choose cards with beautiful generic holiday graphics and state ”Happy Holiday”; send the cards out early in December. This may feel like a cop-out, but in the last few years, people seem to be more sensitive to who they are and the holidays they celebrate.  This is the one time you want to go ahead and follow the pc (politically correctly) bunch.  

If you are a home business owner, it is fine to send a holiday greeting as above. Your contact information should not be the focal point, but it should be on the card.

Gifts. A little caution is needed. Determine whom you want to give a gift to (clients, co-workers, bosses) but first make sure they’re allowed to receive gifts. (Some federal positions, for example, are banned from accepting gifts from groups or individuals that could constitute a conflict of interest.) Use your best judgment on getting an appropriate gift that serves as a token of appreciation. It does not need to be expensive, but it should show that some thought went into purchasing it. Do not expect a gift in return, this should be from the heart, not because you are hoping for a reciprocal gift. One year our office manager gave everyone paper weights. I still have mine.

If you have a home business, something from your business with a short note of thanks and appreciation would do nicely. If that is impossible, think of something that will help to say to your client or customer, “thank you for your business.”  You will have to make up your mind, will you give a holiday gift to everyone or your returning clients?  I do not give gifts to my Watkins customers, but I do acknowledge them on my Watkins turn-key site. See Watkins

Digital-Women home
Join digital women

Digital Women | Membership | Newsletter | Business Resources | Loans for Women | Grants for Women
Digital Women ®, an International online community-for-women in business, businesswomen, and all women entrepreneurs. Find free business resources and tools including information about business grants for women, loans and funding, cash advance loans, free business tips, small home business ideas, free marketing tips, how to write a mission statement, free daily planner, how to business articles and an opportunity to join and promote your woman-owned business Over 1000 pages of business resources including business grant and small business loan information.