With a mission to inform, empower, celebrate and advocate for British Columbia's current and aspiring business leaders, BCBusiness go behind the headlines and bring readers face to face with the key issues and people driving business in B.C.
Issue link: http://digital.canadawide.com/i/473896
aBoVE: aDaM BlasBErg; BEloW: istoCk april 2015 BCBusiness 25 B C.'s growing tech sector has had a lot of meaning- ful influences on the local economy, but perhaps none hits closer to home (hits you in the gut, actually) than the free lunch (or snack or juice). Across the province, the stodgy cafeteria lunch is slowly giving way to in-house bars— touted for their added health benefits—and subsidized meal cards. According to a recent sur- vey, 45 per cent of respondents said that free lunches would strongly influence their decision to accept a job offer. Few workplaces can afford to offer perks like Facebook's resort-like buffets for staff, which cost the company around $15 per employee per day. When it comes to meals, credit at local restaurants has emerged as a popular alternative. Foodee, a Vancouver startup, allows offices to order in meals from local restaurants with the help of a simple online menu and a phone concierge. o f f i c e C u l t u r e There is Such a Thing as a Free Lunch and it may make your employees more productive by Jacob Parry WHAt yOu gEt At tHE fOllOWing b.C. OffiCES… Facebook an in-house chef sAP pre-paid lunch cards for yaletown restaurants including the Blue Water Café and yaletown Brewing Co. Bull Housser a full espresso machine AbeBooks a hot soup bar Best Buy a 20 per cent subsidy at the cafeteria, which includes a salad and noodle bar united Front Games Beer on tap eA Free meals for employ- ees who work overtime or evenings. Chicken lasagna is popular Hootsuite Cereal bar and cold- pressed juice fountain According to a recent survey, 45 per cent of respondents said that free lunches would strongly influ- ence their deci- sion to accept a job offer While Foodee's primary market is one-off corporate catering (the domain of mixed-bag sandwich platters), companies including Mozilla and Sony Image Works offer employees credit for office deliveries. SAP, in Yaletown, also runs a similar meal credit program for its employees, launched when it scrapped its cafeteria in 2011. Cody Irwin, founder of Natu- ral Sources—which has installed snack bars for companies includ- ing Plenty of Fish and Kabam Games—makes the pitch that free snacks can save a company money on lost productivity: if an in-house lunch keeps an employee making $30 an hour in the office even just a half- hour longer, then a company can save $2.50 to $4.50 per employee per day, for a $15 lunch; snacks or juice, even less. (Worth noting, however, is another study from 2011 that found 50 per cent of employees either don't take lunch or eat at their desks.) But if you're introducing food to save employees time, you're probably doing it for the wrong reason, according to Cori Maedel, president of Jouta Performance Group, which has advised small businesses looking to introduce food programs into the office. The question manag- ers should ask: does a free meal fit with the company culture? "The idea of breaking bread carries a lot of significance," she says. "A meal can become a social endeavour to bring your employees together." It can also calm nerves. A 2015 study from Cornell and Dartmouth found that people who are hungry are more likely to feel entitled; food in the office, then, could prevent conflicts—or so argue the study's authors. There is, how- ever, one rule that employers should keep in mind, says Maedel: it's a lot easier to intro- duce free food than it is to take it away. Something to chew on. ■ nited Front ted Front ted Front Games Games Beer Beer on tap on tap Hootsuite Hootsuite Cereal bar Cereal bar and cold- and cold- pressed juice fountain Hootsuite pressed juice