Intel Brings Back Workers' Free Coffee To Boost Morale (oregonlive.com) 56
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Oregon Live: Intel told employees this week that it will bring back free coffee and tea at its work sites, one of many benefits the chipmaker eliminated last summer as it sought to slash $10 billion from its annual budget. "Although Intel still faces cost challenges, we understand that small comforts play a significant role in our daily routines," Intel wrote on its internal messaging forum, called Circuit. "We know this is a small step, but we hope it is a meaningful one in supporting our workplace culture." Intel declined comment. The company did not resume offering free fruit, another perk eliminated last summer. Employees say privately that morale has been devastated by Intel's poor financial performance and by cutbacks aimed at returning the business to profitability.
[...] Christy Pambianchi, Intel's chief people officer, told employees that Intel had been spending $100 million annually on free and discounted food and beverages and couldn't afford to keep doing that. "Until we get into a better financial health position, we need to be suspending those," Pambianchi said, according to an account of the meeting reviewed by The Oregonian/OregonLive. By Wednesday the company had reversed itself, committing to keep its employees caffeinated. In August, Intel announced plans to lay off over 16,000 employees, representing more than 15% of its global workforce. Its stock dropped to a 50-year low following the announcement. Starting November 8, Nvidia will replace the chipmaker on the Dow Jones Industrial Average.
[...] Christy Pambianchi, Intel's chief people officer, told employees that Intel had been spending $100 million annually on free and discounted food and beverages and couldn't afford to keep doing that. "Until we get into a better financial health position, we need to be suspending those," Pambianchi said, according to an account of the meeting reviewed by The Oregonian/OregonLive. By Wednesday the company had reversed itself, committing to keep its employees caffeinated. In August, Intel announced plans to lay off over 16,000 employees, representing more than 15% of its global workforce. Its stock dropped to a 50-year low following the announcement. Starting November 8, Nvidia will replace the chipmaker on the Dow Jones Industrial Average.
Yawn (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Yawn (Score:4, Informative)
TBH I was shocked to learn just now they DIDNT have free coffee in the breakroom. WTF?!?! I don’t think that I have worked for a single company that did not offer free coffee in the 54 years. I have been alive.
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Coffee is pretty cheap, unless you've got a row of keurigs and tub of coffee pods or whatever they use.
We've got a pot on the counter here but it rarely gets used. Most people here are more interested in energy drinks or caffeinated sodas. I personally keep my contigo topped with cold water from the nearly water cooler.
We're a relatively small group, and people will randomly drop off a box of donuts or other snacks to share when they arrive in the morning. If coffee was more in demand someone would proba
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At $0.5/each and considering 250 working days per year, providing two Keurig pods for each worker every day would cost Intel $32.750.000/year.
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I'd guess that more expensive initial machine + feeding beans rather than capsules would result in lower running costs too.
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In my area its pretty common to have those Braun coffee stations that tap into the water supply line. Im sure youve seen them. One side brews the coffee and there is a second element to keep a second pot warm. Very common in older breakfast restaurants. Businesses often get a subscription of supply delivered the way they get jugs of water for the cooler delivered. Of course with Amazon subscription deliveries you could probably go that route too. Seattles Best is a popular line of coffee to have in the off
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You're giving me horrible reminders about how bad American coffee is (and hard it was to get a decent cup of tea when I lived in the US). The coffee machines at our office are also plumbed in to the water supply, but they're filled with coffee beans and grind and brew on demand. It might not be as good as the espresso/flat white/whatever from the artisan kiosk outside, but it's way better than that watered down crap that's been sitting on the heater too long in an American office.
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American coffee is fine. Judging American coffee by your one office is silly.
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Re:Yawn (Score:4, Insightful)
The thing is you take it away when your want to get rid of employees without paying severance.
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In my youth I worked at a small riding school. Even THEY had free coffee in the break room.
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I like coffee but I don't even go to coffee chains like starbucks or dutch bros because their coffee is crap. (I went to Dutch Bros once, I got a double latte and I literally could not taste coffee in it.) Free office coffee will almost certainly be as bad or worse.
A vacuum-insulated klean kanteen pint coffee thermos was $30, which is a lot for one medium sized cup, but it brings me a portion of happiness every morning when I don't have to drink someone else's poorly prepared shit coffee.
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I went to Dutch Bros once, I got a double latte and I literally could not taste coffee in it.
That's why people like Dutch Bros.
Free office coffee will almost certainly be as bad or worse.
The taste of corporate nightmare. All you can drink.
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That's why people like Dutch Bros.
I wish I had known sooner. From the smell I thought they would be like starfucks where they burn the shit out of the coffee but at least you can taste it.
ofc I don't go there either, not since they got into bet with Nestle.
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I went to Dutch Bros once, I got a double latte and I literally could not taste coffee in it.
Double latte is literally (and I mean literally) double milk..
Re: Yawn (Score:2)
No, a double latte is literally a latte with two shots of espresso in it. Are you new?
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Ever ordered a "Latte" in Italy?
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I mean, it's all coffee beans.
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If you quit coffee, (wait a few months!) and get a good night sleep, you'll feel even better,
I was not on the coffee for over a year, but I didn't get any better sleep.
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I like coffee but I don't even go to coffee chains like starbucks or dutch bros because their coffee is crap. (I went to Dutch Bros once, I got a double latte and I literally could not taste coffee in it.) Free office coffee will almost certainly be as bad or worse.
A vacuum-insulated klean kanteen pint coffee thermos was $30, which is a lot for one medium sized cup, but it brings me a portion of happiness every morning when I don't have to drink someone else's poorly prepared shit coffee.
Agreed - I have no idea why Starbucks is so popular. Overpriced, brewed a tad too strong - I could take that if the swill didn't taste moldy and muddy. Terrible coffee.
I think you are out west, so it might not be available in your area - but I'm a big fan of Lacas coffee. First time I had it was in New Jersey, then I was excited to find it at home in one of our Restaurants. Smoothness adjustable by brew strength, and flavorful without the weird mudtaste. They seem to have roast perfected. https://www.la [lacascoffee.com]
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Starbucks is popular because they jam an insane amount of caffeine into their coffee, and sugar into most of their drinks. "Oh, it makes you happy? It has 50 grams of sugar and 500 mg of caffeine, of course it does."
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Sometimes lack of coffee can just be an oversight, sometimes bringing it in can be a sign that the place is floundering and you aren't getting a lost-of-living pay rise this year.
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Speaking as an employer, good coffee is going to be 100% free for my staff, always, because (a) it is a stimulant and increases their productivity, and (b) having it freely available within the office means they aren't going out to get it and spending time elsewhere. And the same goes for me: if I can get my shot of high-test in 5 minutes by a quick walk to the breakroom rather than spending 15 or 20 minutes going to the closest coffee shop, then I'm more productive.
It's management 101 to have good coffee
Whoa there buddy! (Score:1)
Careful with the luxuries, you may bankrupt the company!
Free Coffee Lake? (Score:4, Informative)
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Workplace culture (Score:5, Funny)
This morale boosting gesture might be too little too latte.
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Lol, ouch, nice.
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I mean...in this tech job market are Intel engineers going to quit?
Lol, benefit? (Score:1)
Over here you'd be laughed out of the room if you had your employees pay for coffee.
Wasted Work and Inefficiency. (Score:5, Insightful)
Forcing a worker who has already validated their WFH efficiency and capability back on congested roadways to drive that hour long commute to that free-coffee office, amounts to an entire 40-hour workweek wasted every month sitting behind a steering wheel.
You want to save millions on coffee, save thousands of wasted work hours, AND not look like a raging hypocrite? Let people get their own fucking coffee. Working from home.
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Even though many Intel workers can't work from home, I generally agree with you. Every employee who could work from home, should do it. That's probably the single best action the company may take in order to boost morale AND save costs.
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I'm a big WFH proponent but I'm guessing some jobs you really need to be in the office a fair amount, and that includes chip design and manfuacture.
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Seems like a weird choice to have made originally (Score:2)
Free drinks? (Score:2)
If the company provides drinks for employees then it can buy in bulk to receive volume discounts, as well as companies being exempt from sales taxes in most places.
If the company does not provide drinks, the employees are not going to voluntarily commit suicide by dehydration so they are still going to drink, but they will be buying those drinks individually and paying sales tax on top.
What used to cost the company $100 million will collectively cost the employees $200 million, and that will ultimately cost
Free coffee in a toilet bowl (Score:2)
Company is swirling down the toilet in a long painful death spiral.
Management's solution is free coffee.
That's why Intel will eventually be bought by AMD or their tech divvied up by an industry coalition so everyone can use their old patents.
New question to ask when being interviewed... (Score:2)
Remember when being interviewed and you hit that point where they ask if you have any questions - apparently you need to ask if there will be coffee.
I think I've always taken having coffee and safe drinking water as a given - but apparently I may be wrong.
Coffee = employee productivity boost (Score:2)
Cutting out the free coffee at any company is a sure sign that they are circling the drain. Coffee is really cheap and it's basically an expected thing at any company - taking it out is a sign of managerial shortsightedness and a desperate attempt to save not that much money to impress your shareholders. Is this what you really want to convey to everyone?
It's also a legal way to boost productivity of employees. That may be harder to quantify but take away coffee from a regular drinker and see what happens a
LOL (Score:2)
Free coffee won't get me back into an office no matter how good it is.
It could be the finest coffee in the world, served by horny, naked supermodels and there's still zero chance that it would tempt me back into an office. ZERO.
Pay me $10K a day and I'd go back in, but otherwise, to make a long rant short, "No."
Managers either just don't get it, or they get it and choose to ignore it. I'm not going back into an office, period, end of story.
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Free coffee won't get me back into an office no matter how good it is.
It could be the finest coffee in the world, served by horny, naked supermodels and there's still zero chance that it would tempt me back into an office. ZERO.
Pay me $10K a day and I'd go back in, but otherwise, to make a long rant short, "No."
Managers either just don't get it, or they get it and choose to ignore it. I'm not going back into an office, period, end of story.
I'm curious - will you refuse to work at a jerb that requires you to work anywhere but home, even if looking at homelessness or bankruptcy? A lot of work - perhaps the majority of work in this world, requires going somewhere and doing something.
And I have a job now that pays me quite well. I do half at home because I can and that works out well. The other half, there is no choice. I'm onsite. And that's fine by me - OTOH, some of us are better when humans are not in our vicinity.
And I might be an outli
Hand waving nonsense (Score:2)
Or: vending machines (Score:3)
I worked for a large American company both in the UK and the USA. At both sites, coffee wasn't provided -- in fact, all that was provided were vending machines -- the company actually made a profit from its employees' coffee habits.
The REAL story (Score:2)
It's not just coffee. They're selling INTEL COFFEE Schwag -- T-shirts, mugs, baseball caps , the whole nine yards.
It's not just for their workers, mind. The C-levels can get INTEL coffee key fobs for their cars, so you know everybody's in it.