Was Our Holiday Party Too Lavish?

Beverly Flaxington is a practice management consultant. She answers questions from advisors facing human resource issues. To submit yours, email us here.

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Dear Bev,

As we close out 2022, we have had one of our best years ever despite the many challenges we’ve faced with market and economic turmoil. We had our holiday party this past week and had a great turnout with several clients and most of our staff (we have two people out with COVID). At the end of the party, which was a nice time with a sit-down dinner and a great outside speaker, one of my longest tenured advisors (who has some ownership in the franchise) came up to me to say how appalling he thought it was that we held such “an expensive party” given how many of our clients had such ups and downs in their portfolios this year.

I asked if he was speaking on behalf of clients who had said this to him. He immediately backtracked and said the clients “loved” the event and everyone seemed happy. He said he should have never brought it up.

But since he did it has been gnawing at me. I know optics are important and I respect this. But we planned this event with the full team knowing what we were doing. I had a three-person committee who spearheaded most decisions. I thought they did a great job communicating to the rest of the team what we were doing and why. We circulated cost information so everyone knew the investment. We had probably the best turnout we’ve ever had with clients who told us they were so happy to be out given the constraints of the last two-plus years.

I need to address this but I’m not sure how. I know if I let it rest it will bother me. But I don’t want to cause upset that isn’t necessary. This advisor had not had a lot to drink. He is dieting and self-proclaimed he was going to stick with water all night. I don’t know if he did, but I didn’t sense he was out of control when he spoke to me. I’m terribly bothered by this but unsure of my next step.

J.G.