When you lift that first cup o’ Joe this morning, give thanks to Kaldi the Ethiopian goat herder who made graveyard shifts possible. Without his accidental discovery centuries ago, 43 per cent of your colleagues at work would be less productive , and thirty million people would be doing something else for a living besides working in the coffee industry at whatever level, be it growing, processing, shipping, packaging or pouring.
Pause for a moment to take in the heady aroma of furans, pyrazines, carbonyl, and alicycliin compounds, and the other ingredients that give coffee its distinctive aroma. Then drink up, and just because it’s National Coffee Day, have a cup more than the statistical average of 3.1.
You’ll have plenty of company. The National Coffee Association says 56 percent of Americans drink at least one cup a day.
If you have a donut with that coffee, make it a Dunkin’ Donuts in recognition of the company’s work with CareerBuilder to unearth the coffee drinking practices of America’s workforce. Without its survey, how would you know that 40 percent of American workers aged 18 to 24 say they can’t concentrate as well without coffee. Or that 43 percent of 18 to 34 year-old workers have lower energy without that cup of coffee.
What types of workers most need coffee? Nurses, physicians, hotel workers, designers/architects, and insurance and financial sales people. The survey has 12 occupations listed.
So recruiters, especially those of you in healthcare, don’t neglect the coffee bean when talking company culture. Armed with this survey, and the finding from the National Coffee Association that recession or not, gourmet coffee consumption is on the rise, you might also use that seat at the table to pitch broadening the choices in the breakroom. Look what free coffee did for Starbucks.
Pause for a moment to take in the heady aroma of furans, pyrazines, carbonyl, and alicycliin compounds, and the other ingredients that give coffee its distinctive aroma. Then drink up, and just because it’s National Coffee Day, have a cup more than the statistical average of 3.1.
You’ll have plenty of company. The National Coffee Association says 56 percent of Americans drink at least one cup a day.
If you have a donut with that coffee, make it a Dunkin’ Donuts in recognition of the company’s work with CareerBuilder to unearth the coffee drinking practices of America’s workforce. Without its survey, how would you know that 40 percent of American workers aged 18 to 24 say they can’t concentrate as well without coffee. Or that 43 percent of 18 to 34 year-old workers have lower energy without that cup of coffee.
What types of workers most need coffee? Nurses, physicians, hotel workers, designers/architects, and insurance and financial sales people. The survey has 12 occupations listed.
So recruiters, especially those of you in healthcare, don’t neglect the coffee bean when talking company culture. Armed with this survey, and the finding from the National Coffee Association that recession or not, gourmet coffee consumption is on the rise, you might also use that seat at the table to pitch broadening the choices in the breakroom. Look what free coffee did for Starbucks.
Everyone remember to go to RiseUp today support a local business :)
ReplyDeleteI love Royal Farms coffee!
ReplyDeleteDon't care for Starbucks
Wawa coffee!
ReplyDeleteDunkin' Donuts has a contest starting today:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.itnewsonline.com/showprnstory.php?storyid=121452
What is rise up?
ReplyDeleteRoyal Farms is the bomb
ReplyDeleteIts either royal farm or wawa. Why go anywhere else?
ReplyDelete9:07 Rise Up Coffee on Riverside Drive. The Best. Two Thumbs Up
ReplyDeleteRoyal Farms - I was glad when they opened up on the West side of town. Now I don't have to go to that terrible 7Eleven any more or the Gordy Tiger Mart
ReplyDeleteRoyal farms is terrible. Although I like the new one on 50 alot better, i can't stand the one in princess anne. Nasty looking employees with bad attitudes. The type of people you don't necessarily want touching your food.
ReplyDeleteTea for me.
ReplyDelete