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Starbucks CEO urges office return but avoids mandates: ‘We’re all adults here’

Starbucks CEO urges office return but avoids mandates: 'We're all adults here'


New Starbucks Corp. Chief Executive Brian Niccol thinks his employees should be wherever they need to be to get their jobs done. More often than not, he said, that place is the office.

In Niccol’s first staff address after taking the top job this month, he extolled the “power in having everybody together” but said he wouldn’t tell them what specific days to badge in at the company’s Seattle headquarters or at what time, according to a transcript of his Sept. 10 remarks obtained by Bloomberg News.

Niccol’s own work arrangement, which allows him to live in California and travel 1,000 miles to Seattle on the company’s corporate jet, sparked initial backlash by some workers and outside critics who said he was getting special treatment while the rest of the firm was required to be in the office three days a week. Other workers said they didn’t care where the CEO was based, so long as he didn’t upend anyone else’s remote or hybrid arrangements. 

Starbucks said Niccol will spend most of his time at the office and visiting the chain’s stores around the world. A Starbucks spokesperson confirmed there have been no changes to the company’s three-day in-office policy.

“This is not a game of tracking. This is a game of winning,” said Niccol, who was hired to turn around the company as it reels from sales declines. “I care about seeing everybody here succeed, and if success requires us being together more often than not, let’s be together more often.”

At the forum, he listed amenities such as an on-site gym, a daycare and a Starbucks store as elements that should encourage workers to go to the office. The company also offers subsidized transit, free electric-vehicle charging, bike lockers, and shuttles to nearby public transportation. 

Dangling the carrot to lure people back into the office stands in contrast to the stick wielded this week by fellow Seattle corporate giant Amazon.com Inc., which ordered workers to return to the office five days a week beginning in January. 

Amazon CEO Andy Jassy said in a note to employees that it had become harder to get things done at Amazon and that working from home has been part of the problem. To hammer the point home, he said the company also would reinstate permanent desk assignments. 

The decision prompted frustration among some workers, who said the decision isn’t backed by data that shows people are productive outside the office, too. 

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