I understand why offices need to have office parties. I understand why offices need to have betting pools. No matter what the job, you need things to foster camaraderie and let off steam.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
What I don't like about office Christmas parties is looking for a job the next day.
Retaining a sense of control is really important. I like to do things in my own time, and in my own style, so an office with targets and bureaucracy just wouldn't work.
I don't have an office. I sit in a cubicle with everybody else. That's partly so no one can ask for an office, which in a fast-growing company isn't practical. But it's also so I can keep my finger on the pulse of how people are feeling.
When you get to play pretend for a living and do it with really talented people, it's really fun to go to the office!
Public office must not be a means to profit or become rich.
The office during the day has become the last place people want to be when they really want to get work done. In fact, offices have become interruption factories.
It is easier to appear worthy of a position one does not hold, than of the office which one fills.
There's always a great deal of business to be transacted in one's office. There are always visitors it seems to me, an unending stream of them, who come with letters of recommendation, or come actually on substantive business.
I do not have very much office experience.
No one goes into the office for fun. You go, and even if you love it, you're there to work.