An office exchange has three failure modes — a pushy organizer who assigns pairs, an awkward gift that reads wrong, a reveal that loses half the team to a scheduling clash. A good tool and a clear rule set remove all three.
Four ways Cuchumbo fits an office
A sealed draw, even from the organizer
The person running the Secret Santa cannot see who drew whom. That matters more than it sounds — it removes the suspicion that the manager engineered the pairs, and protects the organizer from accusations.
No accounts for the team
Everyone joins through a single invitation link. No corporate email, no sign-up, no password. That lowers participation friction — contractors and interns join as easily as full-time staff.
Ten languages in one exchange
Cuchumbo runs in English, Spanish, French, German, Italian, Dutch, Japanese, Russian, Chinese and Portuguese. An international office can let each colleague use the language they prefer, all drawing from the same exchange.
Optional opt-out, handled quietly
People who cannot participate — for religious, financial or personal reasons — can decline the invitation without public comment. The organizer knows; no one else does. The result is a draw that nobody feels coerced into.
A clean launch in five minutes
Create the exchange with the office name, add the team by email or share a single join link, set a clear budget and a reveal date at least two weeks out. Paste the rules into the same email — opt-out silent, budget is a ceiling, no alcohol or body products. Then step back.
Create the office exchange now
Free, no account for your team, draws in under a minute. Share the invitation link in your group chat and the rest runs itself.
