Employee Appreciation Gifts by DiSC Style

Employee Appreciation Week
is March 2 - 6!

One-size-fits-all recognition is easy, but it rarely hits the mark. Your employees bring different personalities, needs, and preferences to work every day, and their DiSC styles highlight what makes each of them feel genuinely appreciated.

This gift guide turns Everything DiSC insights into practical gift ideas for every style, helping you celebrate Employee Appreciation Week in a way that feels thoughtful, tailored, and motivating for every member of your team.

Dominant Style: Direct and Results-Focused

People with a D-style value productivity, autonomy, and visible impact.

Include a brief note that says:

"Thanks for driving results on our toughest projects. Your decisiveness and willingness to take change make a real difference for our organization."

Goal & Habit

Tracker

Portable Fast

Charger

Problem Solving

Travel Mug

Influence Style: Outgoing and Innovative

People with an I-style love energy, recognition, and connection.

Personally deliver the gift or give them a call and say:

"Your energy and positivity make work more fun and keep our team connected. Thank you for the way you bring people together."

Inspiring Idea

Journal

Mood Boosting
Desktop Game

Positivi-Tea

Affirmation Mug

Steadiness Style: Helpful and Supportive

People with an S-style appreciate stability, collaboration, and feeling genuinely cared for.

Personally deliver the gift or give them a call and say:

"Thank you for being the steady, reliable presence our team can count on. I appreciate your kindness and support."

Gratitude
Journal

Affirmation

Paperweight

Warm and
Cozy Candle

Conscientious Style: Analytical and Quality-Focused

People with a C-style value expertise, accuracy, and high standards.

Include a hand-written note that says:

"Your attention to detail and commitment to quality raise the bar for all of us. Thank you for the thought you put into getting things right."

Meeting & Note
Taking Journal

Spreadsheet

Mug

Here's a quick & insightful team building exercise!

  • Log on to www.Catalyst.EverythingDiSC.com

  • Click on Groups & Create Group to build your team's DiSC composite DiSC profile

  • In your next team meeting, click on Group Insights to explore your team's profile

  • Use the Conversation Starters to get to know your team, make better decisions together, and communicate more clearly

Hi. I'm Amy Pearl.

Thank you for visiting our website. I hope you find some great employee appreciation gift ideas here. You'll find Amazon affiliate links on this page, meaning we earn a small commission if you buy through these links at no extra cost to you. We appreciate your business.

Need more ideas for recognizing and building your team? Let's hop on a call and brainstorm ideas.

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Get ready for a great new year.

5 Things to Do While It’s Quiet at Work 

December 22, 20254 min read

5 Things to Do While It’s Quiet at Work

Welcome to that brief window every year when the pace slows just enough for you to hear yourself think.

Emails trickle in. Meetings get postponed. Decision-making pauses. And for once, the urgency eases.

For many business leaders, this quiet time feels uncomfortable. You’re used to reacting, solving, supporting, and staying two steps ahead. When things finally slow down, the instinct is to fill the space or to just kick back and relax.

This year, instead of powering through all the unfinished work or conversely, laying low through the holidays only to make January 5th the start of a new race, try some of these intentional activities to reset your energy, sharpen your focus, and set yourself up for a steadier start to the year ahead.

1. Clean Up the Invisible Work

Take time to review the behind-the-scenes responsibilities that quietly drain your energy.

  • Audit recurring meetings: Which ones can be shortened, delegated, eliminated?

  • Clean up email rules, folders, and notifications.

  • Review standing commitments (e.g., committees, task forces, projects) and decide what no longer aligns with your role or priorities.

  • Update or delete outdated documents, processes, or trackers that demand mental space.

  • Clean off your desktop so it looks like your first day on the job.

Why it matters: Mental and physical clutter is exhausting and leaders carry a lot of it!

2. Strengthen the Foundation, Not Just Your To-Do List

Most leaders plan the new year like a sprint with big goals, aggressive timelines, and zero white space. Instead of jumping straight into goal-setting, focus on how you want to work and lead.

  • Define your personal mission, vision, or purpose statement and how you want to show up this year.

  • Define what success will look like beyond output (e.g., energy, focus, sustainability, leadership).

  • Decide where you need stronger systems (e.g., delegation, communication, boundaries).

  • Clarify your top 3 priorities for the first quarter.

  • Plan your first 90 days with margins that intentionally leave space for the unexpected.

  • Identify skills or mindsets you need to develop, not just tasks to complete.

Why it matters: Strong foundations prevent reactive leadership and constant firefighting.

3. Reset Your Energy, Not Just Your To Do List

Quiet seasons are ideal for restoring energy without pressure.

  • Reflect on this past year: Where were you stretched too far? Where did you thrive?

  • What adjustments can you make to feel capable, confident, and energized in the new year?

  • During this quiet time, reintroduce something that brings joy or creativity into your life.

  • Block time on your calendar (like meetings with yourself) for the next year to maintain that joy, chase creative pursuits, and fuel your energy tank on a regular basis.

Why it matters: Energy fuels performance. Without it, even the best plans fail.

4. Capture Leadership Lessons Learned (Before You Forget Them)

Take time to reflect so you make better choices next year:

  • What leadership approaches worked well for you during the past year?

  • What felt harder than it needed to be?

  • What 2 or 3 leadership behaviors do you want to repeat consistently next year?

  • What 1 or 2 habits do you want to build or change?

Why it matters: Reflection turns into wisdom. Wise leaders inspire others.

5. Prepare Your Team for a Strong Start

Use this time to make next year even easier for everyone, including you.

  • Clarify expectations and priorities during the first week of January so the team is ready to hit the ground running.

  • Create your scoreboard so the team can self-manage their progress and results.

  • Identify one responsibility that you can delegate more fully next year.

  • Plan one meaningful conversation that you’ll have with each team member to start the year right.

Why it matters: The more clarity your team has, the less pressure you carry.

A Final Thought

Quiet seasons at work aren’t gaps to fill. They’re opportunities to reset, realign, and recharge. When leaders use these last 2 weeks of the year intentionally, they refuel their energy tanks, increase clarity, and create momentum that lasts far into the new year.

As this year comes to a close, I would like to thank you for your business and your friendship. I am grateful for the opportunities I've had to get to know you, to learn more about your business, and to help you achieve your goals. I wish you a new year full of health, wealth, and great joy!

Merry Christmas!

Amy Pearl

Time ManagementAnnual PlanningHoliday Reset
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Amy A. Pearl

Amy Pearl is Work Ignited's Chief Optimizer, bringing strategic solutions and simple tools to your workplace.

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