This seems really inefficient to me. Whoever typed and sent the email could have just done it themselves in a shorter amount of time.
I disagree. In my former life a takeout menu and post-it would be passed around the conference table while a meeting would take place. Each person would jot down their order and then the meeting coordinator would shoot out an email on his/her tablet to an admin in the other building. No one involved in the meeting ever had to leave the conference room and the meeting continued without interruption.
With that said, I also can understand how OP would make such a silly mistake. It sounds like she was multi-tasking and very distracted when she rec'd the email. We've all been there. (Says the SAHM who poured apple cider over DS' cereal this morning because I was too distracted answering his questions about the daily forecast).
I mean, you offered to pay for it, so, yeah you'll be teased...but I guess I don't understand how this is a WORK f-up? Like...unless ordering pizza is in your job description, you shouldn't be reprimanded (especially since you offered to pay).
I mean, you offered to pay for it, so, yeah you'll be teased...but I guess I don't understand how this is a WORK f-up? Like...unless ordering pizza is in your job description, you shouldn't be reprimanded (especially since you offered to pay).
Where I used to work we had monthly pizza parties. One pie would cover 4 people. So, 15 pies, by my calculations, would cover 60 people.... my guess would be if you had known how many people were attending the meeting (say, 10 vs 50), you would have maybe questioned the pizza order.