Anonymous wrote:Avoid unusual (ethnic) food for starters. People already don't want to be ther, but then when they have to navigate unusual food, it's just that much harder to be jazzed about being there. Maybe that's just me. I'd be thinking how much of this do I have to pretend to eat and enjoy before I can stop eating. Where's the water so I can wash it down. How long do I have to stay before I can politely leave. How do I make a graceful early exit. I hate functions like this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it a STEM crowd?
yes
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How much alcohol was at the first dinner? How about at yours?
essentially the same. 4-5 bottles of wine and beer at both.
Approximately 1.3 glasses of wine per person? That seems very low. I bet you don't know the real amount at the first party. I would start with a round of cocktails.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1.) it was a WORK dinner
2.) it was a weeknight
Its not meant to be a jolly good time. You did our hosting dinner and be happy with yourself! Honestly its fine!
pp here: this was suppose to be "you did your hosting duty"
Anonymous wrote:How about a dark chocolate tasting? It could be a topic conversation. Buy some bars from around the world.
Anonymous wrote:I'm sorry, OP. I really like my coworkers for the 45ish hours a week I am paid to spend with them. But, Force me into a play date on a Tuesday night with them, at someone's house to boot, I'm going to be much less than my normal and gregarious self. I could think of about 86 places I would rather be, and root canal would be right up there.
I know team building is important, but doing it at someone's house in dinner party format is not going to fly with most people, who would probably rather be at their own home eating dinner. Dinner events like this are better spent on more neutral territory - eg. restaurant. Our team events usually center around sporting events - eg. We get a box at a baseball or hockey game, or do something ridiculous like go play paintball. It gives people something to DO, which releases the tension, and doesn't remind people that they would rather be at home. They do tend to be a lot of fun, even though our team is a bunch of really mixed demographic.
It sounds like you did the best your could with a situation that really isn't ideal from the start. Your menu sounds lovely, and it sounds like you were as gracious as could be expected.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I have been in similar situations and think I know how you feel, but after reading these details, trust me when I say you are being WAY too hard on yourself. You are confusing a work dinner event, and the tone that will inevitably take, with a friends event, which is a real social event.
No matter how much you guys like each other, no matter how much everyone loves boss, job and company, the dinner you had last night was work. It was Mandatory Fun. Everyone Must Be There. Totally different expectation as compared to a dinner party that you have for your friends, people of your own choosing, who are there because they want to be.
Relax. You are judging the dinner by unrealistic standards. If you told us that a dinner party you had for your neighborhood gang turned out this way, there may be reason to be concerned.
An BTW, you do not "owe" this group a brunch in the spring to make up for anything. They would just view that as another obligation.
+1