Coffee badging
In human resources, coffee badging refers to the act of employees going to the office after clocking in for a brief period, typically long enough to grab a coffee, before departing to work from elsewhere.[1] This is done to fulfill office attendance requirements by hybrid and remote workers which arose following the return to in-person work following the COVID-19 pandemic.[2][3][4]
Coffee badging highlights that employers struggle with attractive, productive and stress-free office environments where employees willingly gather and reflects an erosion of trust between employees and their employers.[2][5] Coffee badging has been described as a challenge to organic office participation.[6]
Coffee badging has been criticized for incentivizing participation over productivity and contributing to empty office space.[7][8][9] Coffee badging is a form of impression management in response to employee surveillance.[10]
The term was coined in June 2023 by Owl Labs in a workforce management report.[2][11]
References
- ^ Banerjee, Rohan (5 March 2024). "Three-minute explainer on… coffee-badging". Raconteur. Retrieved 30 June 2024.
- ^ a b c Robinson, Bryan. "'Coffee Badging,' New Coping Trend To Get Around In-Office Mandates". Forbes. Retrieved 30 June 2024.
- ^ Liu, Jennifer (5 October 2023). "Bosses want people back in the office, but employees are finding a workaround—it's called 'coffee badging'". CNBC. Retrieved 30 June 2024.
- ^ Giacovas, Richard (23 October 2023). "'Coffee badging' is new return-to-office trend". FOX 5 NY. Retrieved 30 June 2024.
- ^ Mayne, Mahalia (March 8, 2024). "Another buzz phrase is brewing: so what is 'coffee badging'?". www.peoplemanagement.co.uk. Retrieved 30 June 2024.
- ^ Jackson, Ashton (20 February 2024). "Why a CEO says bosses should embrace 'coffee badging': 'I don't hire people to watch them work'". CNBC. Retrieved 30 June 2024.
- ^ Morel, David (April 30, 2024). "Is 'Coffee Badging' A Legacy Of The Pandemic Or An Economic Threat?". Forbes. Retrieved 30 June 2024.
- ^ McGovern, Michele (7 November 2023). "Who's 'Coffee Badging' -- and 6 reasons HR should worry about it". HR Morning.
- ^ Benson, Rhianna (28 June 2024). "Why 'Coffee Badging' can actually be dangerous as new trend takes over young people". Tyla. Retrieved 30 June 2024.
- ^ Torres, Monica (24 June 2024). "In Defense Of 'Coffee Badging,' The Controversial New Office Trend". HuffPost. Retrieved 30 June 2024.
- ^ Stone, Lillian (December 26, 2023). "Ten work buzzwords that took over in 2023". Retrieved 30 June 2024.
See also
- Absenteeism
- v
- t
- e
- Abbie Hoffman
- Edward Bellamy
- Alfredo M. Bonanno
- André Gorz
- Bob Black
- Günther Anders
- Guy Debord
- Heinrich Böll
- Ivan Illich
- Mikhail Bakunin
- Paul Lafargue
- Walter Benjamin
- Antonio Negri
- Bertrand Russell
- Friedrich Nietzsche
- Henry David Thoreau
- Herbert Marcuse
- Jerry Rubin
- Josef Pieper
- Karl Marx
- Max Stirner
- Max Weber
- Pierre-Joseph Proudhon
- Raoul Vaneigem
- Renzo Novatore
- Zo d'Axa
- 996 working hour system
- Absenteeism
- Abusive supervision
- Aktion Arbeitsscheu Reich
- All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy
- Autonomism
- Bare minimum Monday
- Bullshit job
- Coffee badging
- Corporatocracy
- Cycle of poverty
- Dolce far niente
- Effects of overtime
- Employee ghosting
- Extermination through labour
- Career cushioning
- Careerism
- Flextime
- Forced labour
- Four-day workweek
- Funemployment
- Ghost job
- Uberisation / Gig worker
- Happiness economics
- Hush trip
- Job crafting
- Job cuffing
- Jobless employed
- Karoshi
- Loud quitting
- Neijuan
- Occupational burnout
- Occupational safety and health
- Occupational stress
- Orange S.A. suicides
- Overwork
- Post-work society
- Precariat
- Professional abuse
- Protestant work ethic
- Quiet quitting
- Quiet thriving
- Refusal of work
- Resenteeism
- Right to rest and leisure
- Sampo generation
- Sunday scaries
- Six-hour day
- Tang ping
- Technological unemployment
- Toxic workplace
- Wage slavery
- Work ethic
- Workaholic
- Working poor
- Work–life interface
- Anekdote zur Senkung der Arbeitsmoral
- Bartleby, the Scrivener
- Bonjour paresse
- Bullshit Jobs
- The Conquest of Bread
- Critique of Economic Reason
- Fight Club
- Future Primitive and Other Essays
- In Praise of Idleness and Other Essays
- Inventing the Future
- Manifesto Against Work
- New Escapologist
- On the Poverty of Student Life
- The Society of the Spectacle
- Steal This Book
- The Abolition of Work
- The End of Work
- The Human Use of Human Beings
- The Idler
- The Revolution of Everyday Life
- The Right to Be Lazy
- The Soul at Work: From Alienation to Autonomy
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