I bought a pack of coasters (I think there were 6 in a pack) and gave each coworker one. All of us have a coffee mug or water bottle on our desk all the time, so I knew they would be useful. They all know I'm Disney obsessed, so they didn't think I was rubbing their nose in my vacation etc.
Disney coasters? While the thought is nice and it is something useful, I still wouldn't personally want something like that. If I am going to have something "decorative" in my office I would want it to be something that reflects my interests and tastes, not someone else's. No different if someone was a fan of say, NASCAR, and gave everyone a coaster. I would appreciate the thought, but it wouldn't be anything I'd really "want" on my desk.
Reminds me of something that happened in the office I worked in a few years ago. There was a lady that brought back these mugs for everyone, they were souvenirs from some trip she took to New York (they all had big red apples on them lol). That was nice of her but one day she jokingly scolded a co-worker because he had a different mug on his desk and he snapped at her something like "I dropped it on purpose because I am sick of reading I love NY everyday. I hate New York! And I hate apples!" LOL. Granted, there may have been other issues at play there lol.
Disney coasters? While the thought is nice and it is something useful, I still wouldn't personally want something like that. If I am going to have something "decorative" in my office I would want it to be something that reflects my interests and tastes, not someone else's. No different if someone was a fan of say, NASCAR, and gave everyone a coaster. I would appreciate the thought, but it wouldn't be anything I'd really "want" on my desk.
Reminds me of something that happened in the office I worked in a few years ago. There was a lady that brought back these mugs for everyone, they were souvenirs from some trip she took to New York (they all had big red apples on them lol). That was nice of her but one day she jokingly scolded a co-worker because he had a different mug on his desk and he snapped at her something like "I dropped it on purpose because I am sick of reading I love NY everyday. I hate New York! And I hate apples!" LOL. Granted, there may have been other issues at play there lol.
I'd skip the Disney themed stuff- and just bring in donuts to thank them for their effort while you were out. SOMEONE in a group that large is likely to think you are rubbing their noses in your "expensive Disney vacation," question how you can afford it (you must make a LOT more!) and just be a general spoilsport about the whole thing. If morale happens to be bad because of a bad week, it could backfire.
I think the appropriate way to show appreciation is to cover for someone else on their vacation. I work locally, so I always let my co-workers know I'll cover on holidays so that they can go home. I think food is really only they way to go if you work in an office where people regularly bring in food or pass out baked goods or something. I've had plenty of jobs where it would have been awkward given how the office was run.Agree with the it is a horrible idea to bring back FREE Disney crap some people might not want. If you get extra soap or shampoo give to a shelter, buttons offer to a teacher for kids in school to celebrate something. Why would an office staff want Disney soap or 'celebration button' from their supervisor's trip. The way to show appreciation is food or something like that. It is tacky to bring back crappy soap and buttons expecting them to say thanks. Now if it were kids that would be a great gift (maybe teachers returning from a trip and getting buttons for some kids in class, etc but not working adults).