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andsoitis 16 hours ago

That amounts to just over $300,000 per year for all 5,000 employees. $200/12 x 5000 x 4 = $333,333.33

Depending on how long ago (inflation) and what other expenses got cut, the cost savings might actually be meaningful.

mb7733 16 hours ago | parent | next [-]

Your calculations are off unless it's assumed each employee eats an entire pizza. Not to mention bulk discount.

andsoitis 16 hours ago | parent [-]

They said they spend $200 to throw a party for the team of 12. It doesn’t matter whether or not everyone ate it. They spent the money.

You can also further assume bulk discounts are irrelevant because not all teams will have parties at the same time.

mikestew 15 hours ago | parent [-]

Read the original comment slowly this time, and notice what the “12” refers to. There’s only one “12”, should be easy.

Waterluvian 15 hours ago | parent [-]

Napkin math to get a feel for scale:

12 pizzas. Let’s say large. That’s 12 slices each? Average person eats let’s say 3 slices (some won’t eat, some have one, some have four, some, like me, have brains that are perpetually stuck on Grad School and will embezzle slices until there’s no leftovers). So 144 slices could do maybe 48 (let’s say 50 people). So that’s give or take $4 per person.

That’s one of those “a travel booking error worth of money brings a subjective amount of joy, and the only wrong move would be to stop unless the team wants it to stop” things.

Which is absolutely ripe for some Director of Couch Spelunking to earn their Golden Monocle award for making the spreadsheet show brackets around budgets and win a trip to Boise.

nobodyandproud 12 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

ChatGPT (I gave no hints in my prompt):

To estimate how many people the *12 pizzas* were for, we can use a standard rule of thumb:

### General pizza math:

* A *large pizza* usually has *8 slices*. * Most people eat *2–3 slices*.

So:

* *12 pizzas × 8 slices = 96 slices total* * If people ate:

  * **2 slices each** → feeds **48 people**
  * **3 slices each** → feeds **32 people**
### Most likely case:

Since this was for a *team* within a 5,000-employee company — probably a local team (not the whole company) — the number of people was likely in the *25–40* range.

### Final Estimate:

*12 pizzas would reasonably feed about 30 to 40 people*, assuming average appetites.

lostlogin 10 hours ago | parent [-]

Better than AI: ask someone who has ordered lots of piazza recently.

You need more than you think as not all pizzas will be the same flavour. The vegetarian ones will get eaten immediately by people who aren’t vegetarian. Then the complaints roll in.

Apply this to various other pizza type.

Order 1 pizza for every two people.

rkomorn 7 hours ago | parent [-]

Haven't ordered any piazza recently. Last one I saw was Mike Piazza at a Mets game, so it's been a while.

ipaddr 16 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Those calculations are off.

200/12 is the cost of a pizza.

Unless you are buying everyone a pizza divide a pizza by 6 or 7 and you end up at $50,000 plus this is a cost you can deduct.

You are buying that many pizzas you can get a huge discount.. probably get those costs down by half. $25,000...

andsoitis 16 hours ago | parent [-]

If you had to pay $200 for pizza for 12, then to buy pizza for 5,000 the cost is 200/12 x 5000.

You won’t get a bulk discount because you won’t be buying it for the entire company at the same time. Different teams have different team building events/times.

rkomorn 16 hours ago | parent [-]

You sure? OP says "Maybe 12 pizzas altogether from a national chain pizza place." and then says they spent $200 or so.

So about $16 per pizza.

There's no mention of how many team members were having pizza. Probably not one each though.

andsoitis 16 hours ago | parent [-]

The point is to have a party for a team of 12, they were spending $200. It does not matter whether it was all eaten, they spent that amount for the team.

We can thus assume that if all teams did something similar (why would you only allow some teams and not others), the dollars add up and that is how you look at it from a company perspective. Not the one team’s spend, but the overall spend.

mikestew 15 hours ago | parent | next [-]

The point is to have a party for a team of 12

Nobody said that but you. Everyone else reads “12 pizzas”, not people. rkomorn even quoted it for you, and you apparently read right past it…again.

rkomorn 15 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Maybe I'll try this as a question:

How do you know the team has 12 members? Are you basing that on the number of pizzas OP bought?

nobodyandproud 12 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

> The point is to have a party for a team of 12

Stop right there. This entire statement here is wrong.

marcusb 14 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

> Maybe 12 pizzas altogether

duxup 15 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

It was just a local tradition with one team.

Other teams got a lot more actually, others none.

andsoitis 15 hours ago | parent [-]

Cool. How big was your team?

lostlogin 10 hours ago | parent [-]

@duxup - if you say 12, it’ll be funnier.