Company Culture

Cringe Fest or Catered Feast? How Workers Really Feel About Office Thanksgiving Events

Written by evan waters • November 12, 2025

Cringe Fest or Catered Feast? How Workers Really Feel About Office Thanksgiving Events

Thanksgiving in the office might sound warm and fuzzy — until someone suggests going around the room to share what they’re thankful for.

A new survey of 1,000 full-time employees from CaterCow found that while food brings people together, forced gratitude and potluck coordination tears them apart.

When asked to rate common corporate Thanksgiving traditions on a scale from “absolutely hate it” to “absolutely love it,” the Thanksgiving catered feast came out on top — scoring a 4.05 average, the highest of all options. Every other activity lagged behind, often by a full point or more.

“Quality catering lets people actually relax instead of stressing over what to bring,” highlighted Erik Jones, CTO of Chimo.ai. “And honestly, your team deserves to be fed well after the year they've put in.”

The “What I’m thankful for” roundtable, on the other hand, came dead last with a 3.13 average — even lower than pretending to work from home while skipping festivities altogether

The findings paint a picture of employees who are happy to gather over good corporate catering but increasingly allergic to anything that feels forced, performative, or awkwardly emotional.

NYC's Mighty Quinn's Barbeque Catered Thanksgiving Feast

The winners: food, simplicity, and giving back

At the top of the list were activities that centered on comfort and convenience. After the catered feast (4.05), charity drives (3.83) and simple gestures of gratitude from leadership (3.55) earned strong marks. A turkey raffle (3.47) and office potluck (3.48) performed moderately well but still trailed behind events that didn’t require employee labor or coordination.

“Find a way that co-workers can celebrate without extra work, or just give them flexibility around travel that week–most people value that a lot more than sharing two batches of green bean casserole” notes Product, Marketing and Growth executive Barron Ernst.

The message seems clear: employees appreciate generosity over participation. Corporate catering or charitable donation reads as a benefit; a mandatory potluck reads as unpaid work.

Potlucks add work to strained teams--opt for catering instead.

The losers: performative gratitude and forced fun

While many employers see Thanksgiving as a chance to foster connection, employees often experience these efforts as uncomfortable or inauthentic.

The “What I’m thankful for” circle ranked lowest (3.13), with more than a quarter of respondents saying they “dread” or “hate” it. Others cited team volunteer days (3.39) and holiday trivia contests (3.38) as well-intentioned but unmemorable.

These kinds of activities are designed for community connection,but if your team’s already stretched thin, being asked to get sentimental or perform enthusiasm just adds stress.

Even desk decorating contests (3.45) didn’t fare much better, with many employees saying they’d rather use the time to get work done before the long weekend.

A surprising favorite: doing nothing

In a sign of shifting workplace culture, “skipping it entirely while pretending to work from home” earned a surprisingly high 3.53 — higher than several official company events.

That result may reflect lingering post-pandemic preferences for flexibility and autonomy. For many employees, a light workload and early sign-off before the holiday beats any office gathering, no matter how well catered.

Ernst adds, “don’t make Thanksgiving something that employees have to work to be a part of. They already have the stress of travel, family, and planning that week.”

Catered Feasts are employees' favorite Thanksgiving tradition

Feed people, don’t force feelings

The data reinforces a broader trend emerging in office culture: workers want less performance, more practicality.

Gestures that feel like perks — meals, time off, donations — land far better than activities that require vulnerability, preparation, or staged enthusiasm.

If companies want to spread gratitude this season, they might skip the speeches and head straight to the buffet table.

In short: generosity scales, sincerity resonates — and nobody wants to share what they’re thankful for at a 2 p.m. Zoom meeting.

View CaterCow's Selection of Thanksgiving Catering Packages