×

Starbucks isn’t lukewarm on a return to the office, at least when it comes to its workers. As always, CEOs tend to be privy to a different lifestyle. A company memo seen by Bloomberg indicated as much, as Starbucks outlined a “standardized process” to ensure employees are heading to hybrid guidelines. Otherwise, corporate employees might risk getting fired.

The coffee corporation is set to start said process in January. The ramifications of not following the hybrid policy are “up to, and including, separation,” Bloomberg said of the email.

“The expectations for our hybrid partners has not changed,” a Starbucks spokesperson wrote to Fortune. “We are continuing to support our leaders as they hold their teams accountable to our existing hybrid work policy. We’ve made updates to our workspaces to make sure they work for the teams who use them.”

Early last January, Starbucks announced that support-staff employees would have to work in-person at least three days a week. That was an increase from previous expectations to be in the office once a week. In March, some corporate employees signed a petition that called out the RTO mandate as well as the company’s handling of the union negotiations. 

Starbuck’s newly minted executive, CEO Brian Niccol, has a different set of guidelines. His arrangement made some waves, as it was announced that Niccol was allowed to live in California and commute to the headquarters in Seattle. And the company is willing to roll out the red carpet, as Niccol was allowed to use a corporate jet when heading in.  

Even so, Niccol praised the value of working in person. He celebrated the “power in having everybody together” when first addressing staff, according to Bloomberg. Not truly bringing down the iron hammer yet, Niccol said “this is not a game of tracking. This is a game of winning.”

Starbucks added that Niccol will also be where he needs to be to ensure success—that includes stores, the headquarters, and other locations. 

Abstaining from telling employees when to come in the office, he added that his “point of view is we should be together as much as possible. You need to figure out where you need to be to get your job done, then do that,” he concluded. “We’re all adults here.”

Upcoming event:
Join business’s brightest minds and boldest leaders at the Fortune Global Forum, convening November 11 and 12 in New York City. Thought-provoking sessions and off-the-record discussions feature Fortune 500 CEOs, former Cabinet members and global Ambassadors, and 7x world champion Tom Brady–among many others.

See the full agenda here, or request your invitation.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Author

980410647@qq.com

Related Posts

Exclusive: Former Jeff Bezos advisor believes Trump-Elon alliance likely motivated ‘cowardly’ Washington Post endorsement ban

A longtime advisor to Jeff Bezos at Amazon criticized as “cowardly” the last-minute decision by Washington Post leadership to abandon presidential endorsements...

Read out all

TikTok’s founder is now China’s richest person

TikTok’s wild popularity has helped Zhang Yiming, the 41-year-old cofounder of the social network’s parent company ByteDance, become China’s richest person. According...

Read out all

What technologists need to know to become CIO

Sharon Mandell’s full-time role is chief information officer at Juniper Networks. But she says the hardest job she’s ever had is her...

Read out all

Sheriff of Wall Street praises Kamala Harris as a ‘fierce warrior’ with the ‘courage to take on the big banks’

From shouting matches with JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon, to increasing housing affordability, Vice President Kamala Harris and Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.)...

Read out all

Baby boomers say they don’t need to retire now that they can work from home—and they’ve got side hustles on top of their 9-to-5s

Baby boomers are increasingly working for longer—causing a ripple effect on the supply of jobs available for up and coming workers. Some,...

Read out all

Peloton taps Ford executive as new CEO to lead turnaround effort

Peloton Interactive Inc. named Ford Motor Co. executive Peter Stern as its next chief executive officer, entrusting him to lead a turnaround...

Read out all