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22 ideas to recognize, celebrate, and develop your admin team in ways that actually stick.
And it’s part of a bigger picture. 2025 survey by GroupTogether of 457 admin professionals across the U.S found 66% of admin professionals say their contributions are regularly underrecognized at work.
These are the people who manage your calendar, coordinate your travel, prep your meetings, handle vendor relationships, and absorb the thousand small tasks that would otherwise fall apart.
There are 3.5 million of them in the U.S. alone, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Most feel invisible. Stadium’s Administrative Professionals Day program is one way companies are starting to change that.
Admin Day 2026 falls on April 22. You have time to do this well.
This guide covers 22 concrete ideas across four categories: recognition moments, team experiences, professional development, and remote and hybrid options.
Use it to make your admin team feel genuinely valued this year.
39% of administrative professionals have never received anything on Administrative Professionals Day.
Survey by GroupTogether
Administrative Professionals Day 2026 falls on Wednesday, April 22.
It’s observed every year on the Wednesday of the last full week of April. The full Administrative Professionals Week runs April 21-25, 2026.
If you manage a larger admin team, spreading recognition across the whole week is far more meaningful than a single rushed gesture on one afternoon.
The holiday dates back to 1952, when it was called National Secretaries Week.
The title has evolved over the decades to reflect what these professionals actually do today: executive assistants, office managers, administrative coordinators, receptionists, and operations support roles that don’t fit a single job title but carry the same invisible workload.
A 2025 GroupTogether survey of 457 admin professionals found that 39% have never received anything on Admin Day, and 66% say their contributions go unrecognized year-round. A last-minute card or a box of chocolates from the lobby doesn't close that gap. What actually moves the needle is recognition that's specific, personal, and clearly meant.
Robert Half found that 73% of workers say recognition influences their decision to stay with their employer. Gallup and Workhuman's 2024 research puts it more directly: employees who receive consistent recognition are 45% less likely to leave. For administrative roles that are high-stress, high-volume, and often invisible to leadership, the connection between recognition and retention is especially strong.
Of those 457 admin professionals surveyed by GroupTogether, 97% identified as women. That makes the recognition gap not just a workplace culture issue but a gender equity one. For HR teams working on both retention and DEI goals, closing that gap starts with a concrete gesture on April 22 and continues with a recognition rhythm that runs year-round (GroupTogether, 2025).
The form of recognition also matters. A generic "thanks for all you do" email lands differently than a specific note from the CEO, or a public shout-out in front of the whole company. The 2025 State of Recognition Report found that 90% of employees say they're more likely to put in extra effort when their work gets noticed. So before you decide what to send or where to take them for lunch, think about what you want to say. And mean it.
Recognition moments are the highest-ROI, lowest-cost ideas on this entire list, and they're the ones most likely to be remembered six months from now. Gallup's research shows that recognition lands hardest when it's specific, public, and tied to real contributions. These seven ideas put that into practice.
Use your next all-hands or team meeting to name your admin professional publicly, and be specific. Don't say "Sarah does a great job." Say "Sarah rescheduled our board meeting three times in 48 hours last month while managing two separate office moves, and not one person noticed because nothing broke. That's what great support looks like."
Specificity is what separates recognition from a formality. If you're not sure what to mention, ask the people your admin team supports -- they'll have stories. The admin professional gets recognized in front of the colleagues they work hardest for, and the whole team gets a reminder of what's actually holding everything together.
A handwritten or personalized email from the CEO, COO, or a direct manager carries real weight. It signals that the person at the top of the organization knows who you are, what you've done, and why it matters. That doesn't happen by accident, and admin professionals know it.
Keep it specific and personal. Reference a project, a moment, or a skill you genuinely noticed. Skip the template language -- people recognize a form letter immediately. If senior leaders aren't sure what to write, give them three or four specific examples to draw from. The effort it takes to personalize the note is exactly what makes it land.
Set up a kudos board in the break room, a shared Slack channel, or a digital recognition program where teammates can post specific appreciation notes throughout the week. Give people a prompt: "Write one thing your admin professional did in the last 30 days that made your job easier."
The results are usually surprising. Teammates notice things managers don't see: the extra hour spent fixing a meeting room booking, the calm they bring to a chaotic afternoon, the way they handle a difficult vendor. A board that collects those moments is something your admin team will actually revisit. You can print it out and frame it.
Post a genuine spotlight on your admin professional's LinkedIn profile or your company's social channels. Keep it professional but human -- include their name, role, a specific accomplishment, and why the team values them. Tag them so they can see it.
This does double duty. It makes the person feel seen externally, not just inside the organization. It also signals to your wider network that you treat support roles with the same visibility as leadership roles. That's a culture statement worth making publicly.
Coordinate a short video where teammates and leaders each record a 15-30 second clip saying one specific thing they appreciate about the admin professional. Stitch them together with a tool like Loom or Canva, then share it privately or play it at a team lunch.
It doesn't need to be polished. The value is in the volume: hearing from eight or ten people who each noticed something different is more powerful than any single well-produced message. Give contributors a clear prompt: "Tell them one specific thing they did that you still think about."
Design a custom certificate or have a small trophy made, give it a real name, and present it with a real speech. Even five minutes at the start of a team lunch can become a genuine moment if it's handled with sincerity rather than a script.
Done right, this feels less like a participation trophy and more like an induction. The admin professional gets a moment in front of their team, something physical to keep, and a clear signal that their work has been formally recognized by the organization.
Organize a note-writing campaign where every person on the team writes a short, handwritten thank-you note to the admin professional. Collect them in a card, a journal, or a small book and present it together.
The impact scales with team size. A collection of 12 specific, handwritten notes from people across every level of the organization is genuinely hard to top. Give teammates three days' notice and a simple prompt: "Write two or three sentences about something specific they did that helped you." You'll be surprised what people remember.
When you're not physically present, it's easier to be overlooked, and it's easier for managers to assume someone else is handling it. These four ideas work just as well across a screen as they do in person, and two of them work better.
Cover the cost of a meal delivered to your remote admin professional's home through a delivery app or restaurant credit. Then block time on the calendar and eat together over video. No agenda, just lunch.
This works consistently well for distributed teams. The admin professional gets a real meal, the team gets dedicated social time, and the gesture is personal without requiring anyone to be in the same city. It also avoids the awkwardness of an in-office celebration that remote employees watch from a corner of their screen.
Same approach as idea five, adapted for distributed teams. Ask teammates and leaders to record short clips using Loom, then have someone compile and share it privately or play it on a group call. For remote admin professionals, this kind of visible acknowledgment from the full team often means more than in-person gestures, because they spend far less time in rooms where recognition naturally happens.
A curated snack box fulfilled to their home address is one of the most universally appreciated gestures for remote workers. It's personal, it's unexpected, and it works regardless of time zone. Platforms like Stadium can fulfill snack boxes to 170+ countries with no minimum order -- which means you can send to one remote admin professional or an entire distributed team without turning it into a logistics project.
Book a virtual escape room, a hosted trivia session, an online cooking class, or a game show-style team event during Admin Professionals Week. Several platforms specialize in virtual experiences with professional hosts who handle the energy and the logistics, so you don't have to.
For hybrid teams, look for formats that work equally well on a laptop and in a conference room. That way, remote admin professionals aren't watching from the corner of a screen while the in-office group gets the real experience.
Experiences become part of who you are, not just something you own. These six ideas give your admin team something to look forward to, talk about afterward, and genuinely remember.
Don't pick the restaurant yourself. Let the admin professional choose. It sounds small, but it matters. It signals that today is actually about them, not about what's convenient for you or familiar to the group.
Book it in advance, block everyone's calendars, and make it clear that phones stay put for an hour. This is one of the most universally appreciated ideas on this list because it combines a social gesture with real deference. You're saying: "Your preferences matter today, and your time is worth protecting."
Bring in a full breakfast spread on Admin Day morning. Coordinate with a local restaurant or caterer, set it up before people arrive, and let the admin professional walk in to something already prepared for once.
It's a small reversal of roles that lands well. The person who usually coordinates events for everyone else walks in to find it already done. If your team has multiple admin professionals, run this on the first day of Administrative Professionals Week so the energy carries all the way to April 22.
A spa day, massage appointment, meditation session, or fitness class credit gives admin professionals dedicated time to decompress. These roles involve constant context-switching, last-minute requests, and the invisible labor of anticipating what other people need before they ask. That takes a toll.
A wellness gesture works best when it's tailored. If you know they love yoga, book a class at their studio. If they've mentioned wanting a massage, book a session somewhere they'd actually go. Giving a wellness gift card and letting them choose is also perfectly fine. Autonomy is almost always the right instinct.
An escape room, cooking class, axe-throwing session, or trivia night gives the whole team a chance to celebrate in a context where the admin professional isn't the one organizing anything. They just show up and participate.
This works especially well spread across Administrative Professionals Week rather than compressed into a single afternoon. You can even let the admin professional pick the activity from a short list, which is itself a meaningful form of recognition.
Time is one of the most meaningful things you can give someone. A half day off -- or even a genuine, uninterrupted two-hour lunch break -- signals that you value their time as much as their output.
If a full half day isn't feasible, protect a two-hour window and make it real: no Slack messages, no quick questions, no interruptions. The admin professional gets a genuine break, which is often what they want most but rarely get.
Simpler than a full lunch but still meaningful: bring in specialty coffees, pastries, or a dessert spread and block 45 minutes on the team calendar. No agenda. No work talk. Just a genuine pause in the day.
This works well for teams where a full lunch isn't realistic, or as an add-on to another recognition gesture. Keep it low-key and let the admin professional set the tone for how it goes.
66% of admins feel underappreciated. Make Admin Day different. 40 curated gift ideas under $25, $50, $100+, plus remote-ready options for HR teams
Investing in someone's growth is one of the strongest signals that you see them as more than their current role. Admin professionals aren't in holding patterns. They're building careers, developing skills, and paying close attention to whether their employer is doing the same. A professional development investment says clearly: we see where you're going, not just what you're doing today.
Cover the cost of a course directly relevant to their role or their career goals. Project management certifications (PMP, CAPM), Microsoft Office specialist credentials, and courses in data analysis, communications, or executive assistance are all strong options for this audience.
Ask them first. "Is there a course or certification you've been meaning to take?" is one of the most effective questions you can ask before Admin Day. You get a genuinely meaningful gesture. They get something they actually wanted.
Send them to an industry event, in person or virtual. The American Society of Administrative Professionals (ASAP) runs conferences and training programs built specifically for this audience. Industry-adjacent conferences in operations, project management, or business administration are also strong fits depending on their career direction.
The message is clear: your career development is worth a budget line. That's not something every admin professional hears often.
Connect the admin professional with an internal mentor or an external career coach. A single well-matched session can open real doors: a clearer career path, a stronger professional network, or a skill gap they didn't know how to address.
If your organization doesn't have a formal coaching program, a three-session engagement with an external coach is a reasonable investment. It's also the kind of recognition gesture that comes up in employee appreciation conversations years later.
A platform subscription gives admin professionals ongoing, self-directed access to hundreds of courses in skills that matter to them: leadership, communication, software tools, time management, and more.
This is one of the most versatile options on the list. It's not tied to a single course or event. It's an open investment in wherever they want to take their learning over the next twelve months. For earlier-career admin professionals especially, it signals that you're genuinely invested in their trajectory.
Pay for a year's membership to a professional association like the American Society of Administrative Professionals (ASAP) or the International Association of Administrative Professionals (IAAP). These organizations offer networking opportunities, training, certification pathways, and a professional community built around this specific role.
Many admin professionals don't pursue memberships because they're not sure the organization will cover it, and they don't want to ask. Offering it directly removes that friction. It's a modest cost with a meaningful signal: you belong in a professional community, and we'll back that.
Stadium’s Automation Dashboard allows HR teams to build exactly this kind of recognition infrastructure
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Stadium helps companies operationalize exactly that by building recognition programs, automating milestone moments, and delivering rewards to intern cohorts anywhere in the world, all from one platform.
Whether you’re running ten interns or a hundred, the workflows scale without the administrative lift.
Recognition runs through all of it. Not as a bonus layer added at the end, but as a practical engagement tool that keeps interns feeling connected, valued, and motivated throughout a program that moves quickly.
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