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An experienced HR professional has issued a clear warning to workers ahead of office Christmas parties, outlining four key mistakes that could seriously damage your career if you’re not careful.
According to Melissa Stone, an executive career coach and HR director with over 20 years’ experience, a single festive night out has the power to undo years of hard-earned professional credibility.
“It can take years to build a reputation at work, but only one night to undo it,” she warns.
While a Christmas party may feel like a safe space to speak freely, Melissa cautions against using it as a platform to air grievances.
“The Christmas party can sometimes feel like the perfect moment to say what you really think – it’s not,” she says.
Complaints about colleagues, managers, salary or working conditions can easily be overheard, repeated or taken out of context later.
“Show up with a positive mindset and interact in a way you’d want people to remember for all the right reasons.”
Alcohol is often at the centre of festive celebrations, but Melissa says overindulging is one of the quickest ways to land yourself in trouble.
“A few too many drinks and suddenly people overshare personal information, rant about colleagues, argue, or have emotional outbursts,” she explains.
Her advice? Pace yourself, alternate alcoholic drinks with non-alcoholic ones, and remember:
“People remember your behaviour, even if you don’t.”
Melissa stresses that workplace standards still apply, even outside office hours.
“Behaviour that matters at 10am still matters at 10pm,” she says.
Flirtation, touching, dancing too closely or even consensual moments can be misinterpreted and escalate into serious HR issues.
“If you wouldn’t pursue it sober in broad daylight, don’t pursue it after midnight with a drink in your hand,” she warns, noting that she has seen formal investigations and job losses arise from alcohol-fuelled encounters.
Her final warning is about something many people forget in the moment: you are not in control of what’s recorded.
With smartphones everywhere, photos and videos can surface long after the party ends.
“What happens at the Christmas party does not stay at the Christmas party,” Melissa says, adding that in today’s digital age, screenshots and recordings can resurface at any time.
Melissa urges workers not to be lulled into a false sense of security by the festive atmosphere.
“HR policies apply just as much outside office hours as they do at your desk,” she explains.
“Every January, HR departments deal with the fallout from decisions made after two glasses too many.”
Her message is simple: enjoy the night, but protect your reputation — because one evening shouldn’t cost you your career.