Coffee shop staff are working from home

WFH Coffee

WFH Coffee published on No Comments on WFH Coffee
Coffee shop staff are working from home

Looks like even coffee shops have joined the remote work trend.

Working from home has become one of the most divisive topics in recent years.
For some, it’s a genuine enabler of productivity and balance. For others, it’s simply not an option, as certain roles need to be done in person, no matter how creative we get.
I vote we just start making more robots so we can all Work from Home when we want/need to.

Does AI WFH?

Does AI WFH? published on No Comments on Does AI WFH?

The human staff are gone, but the real concern now is whether the company can still preserve the culture“.
After all, nothing undermines a company’s values quite like ‘staff’ that won’t work on-site to ensure they are seen by upper management, or attend morning huddles.

“Culture” has become a convenient excuse draped over hollow policies, half-empty offices, and leadership denial.
Real culture isn’t built on swipe-ins, pizza parties, or being able to pop over to a co-workers desk to collaborate.
It comes from trust, autonomy, and how people are treated – not how often they’re seen. People can actually be even lazier in the office, than what some people thing they are when WFH.

The reality is that many RTO mandates have less to do with fostering collaboration and more to do with justifying long-term commercial real estate commitments.
It’s not about people or performance – it’s about sunk costs and occupancy metrics. As long as someone (or something) is physically present, executives can maintain the illusion of culture, innovation, and engagement, even when the office itself has become little more than an expensive prop.