From venue to inclusivity: everything you need for a successful event
Introduction
The annual workplace holiday party occupies a peculiar position in organizational life. It is meant to be a celebration of the team and the year just completed, a moment of genuine human connection outside the task-oriented context of daily work. Yet it is also a potential minefield: the source of well-documented HR incidents, the event that half the team dreads and the other half looks forward to, and the venue where cultural assumptions about who the party is 'for' become most visible.
With thoughtful planning, it can be the former. Without it, it risks being the latter.
Setting the Right Frame
Call it what it is: a year-end celebration, a team appreciation event, or an end-of-year gathering. Framing it around the team's achievements and the year ahead rather than any specific holiday Observance makes it genuinely welcoming for everyone. This is not about stripping out all seasonal festivity — it is about making the occasion's center of gravity the team, not the calendar.
Venue and Format
Match the venue to your team culture. A formal sit-down dinner may be appropriate for a traditional professional services firm; a team activity followed by casual drinks may work better for a younger, more informal team. Always ensure there is a non-alcoholic format option — either a separate event segment or a format that does not center alcohol.
Remote and Hybrid Teams
For distributed teams, the challenge is creating genuine connection across screens. Options include: a structured virtual event with games or team activities, a stipend for employees to have a local celebratory dinner on the same evening, or regional in-person gatherings coordinated around the same date. Whichever format you choose, ensure it is accessible to employees across all time zones without requiring attendance at an unreasonable hour.
Catering and Dietary Inclusion
Dietary accommodation is non-optional. Collect dietary requirements — halal, kosher, vegetarian, vegan, gluten-free, specific allergies — at least three weeks before the event and confirm with the caterer that these will be met with equivalent food quality, not just an afterthought side plate.
Ensure non-alcoholic beverages are presented with the same care as alcoholic ones. A glass of sparkling water in a disposable cup while everyone else has a champagne flute is not inclusion.
Managing the Alcohol Question
Alcohol at work events is one of the most reliably contentious planning decisions. The considerations are: legal liability for employees who drink and drive, cultural and religious Observance norms that preclude alcohol consumption, and the statistical reality that most documented workplace party incidents involve alcohol.
Options range from alcohol-free events to limited service windows (e.g., drinks served only during dinner) to drink ticket systems that limit consumption. Whatever policy you choose, document it, communicate it in advance, and ensure managers model the expected behavior.
Conclusion
The best workplace holiday parties feel like celebrations of the specific people in the room, not generic seasonal events. Achieve this through thoughtful planning, genuine dietary and cultural inclusion, and a format that centers team connection rather than obligation or obligation-avoidance.