All Content from Business Insider 09月21日 02:52
星巴克杯身笔记政策引发争议
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星巴克近期推行一项要求咖啡师在每个杯子上写手写笔记的政策,并规定了严格的纪律处分,包括解雇。该政策旨在提升顾客体验,但一些咖啡师认为执行不力且增加了工作难度。内部指南详细说明了笔记规则及违规的惩处措施,从口头指导到书面警告,直至解雇。尽管公司声称此举是为了增强顾客连接,但有员工表示,在压力下完成笔记缺乏真诚,反而增加了等待时间,并可能导致门店内的紧张氛围。政策的严格执行和模糊的界定,使得该措施在实践中面临挑战。

📝 **强制性杯身笔记政策**:星巴克要求所有咖啡师在售出的每一杯饮品上添加手写笔记,并将其作为“回到星巴克”计划的一部分。此举旨在重塑顾客体验,但其严格执行和潜在的纪律处分,包括解雇,已引起员工的广泛关注和讨论。

⚖️ **严格的纪律处分体系**:内部指南将违规行为分为轻微、中度和严重等级。轻微违规如未在杯上写字,可能导致口头指导、书面警告直至解雇。中度和严重违规则有更直接的惩处措施。此体系旨在确保政策一致性,但也增加了员工的压力。

🤔 **执行与员工反馈**:尽管政策目标是增进顾客连接,但多名咖啡师反映,政策执行不一,且在高峰期增加了工作负担。他们认为,在管理层监督下被迫书写的笔记缺乏真诚,反而可能影响服务效率和门店氛围。

💡 **政策背景与目的**:该政策旨在恢复过去手写笔记的传统,以期为顾客带来“有意义的时刻”。公司表示,自新标准推出以来,员工敬业度和顾客连接分数有所提升,但员工的实际体验和感受与此存在一定差距。

Part of the "Back to Starbucks" initiative includes mandatory notes on every cup. Failure to follow the rules means baristas face write-ups or even termination.

The viral video of a Starbucks barista declining to put "Charlie Kirk" on a customer's cup, citing corporate policy, has brought scrutiny to the company's requirement that staff write on every beverage.

The mandate, intended to improve the customer experience, is a source of frustration for some baristas — because failing to do it, or writing the wrong thing, can have consequences.

Internal guidelines reviewed by Business Insider outline specific rules for notes and disciplinary guidelines for infractions. A serious infraction of the rules, like a profane message or repeatedly forgetting to mark a customer's cup, can lead to termination.

"Starbucks prohibits the writing or printing of content on items that is inappropriate, offensive, or otherwise does not align with our Mission & Values," a page from the Starbucks store operating manual reads.

"Partners should also not write or print content on items that advocates for a political, religious, or personal issue, even if requested by a customer."

Business Insider spoke to 14 baristas from Starbucks stores across the country about the policy. They had varying interpretations of what notes are permitted under the company guidelines, and said that the enforcement of rules around cup notes has intensified in recent months.

"I have witnessed a couple of dozen verbal coachings, including me, because I didn't catch two cups that the barista making the drinks forgot," a Minnesota-based barista who has worked with Starbucks for seven years told Business Insider.

Starbucks declined to comment.

Discipline for not writing on cups — or writing the wrong thing

It's not unusual for a company of Starbucks' size — with more than 350,000 employees worldwide — to set clear standards for how staff should interact with customers and represent the brand. Businesses often have detailed rules with corresponding disciplinary structures to ensure consistency, efficiency, and a welcoming environment, particularly in large organizations where practices could otherwise vary widely across locations.

The guidelines reviewed by Business Insider indicate that "minor" rule infractions include not writing on every customer's cup, using a pen other than a Sharpie to write a note, marking the lid of a cup, or pre-marking cups before a customer places their order.

Medium infractions include writing pop culture or political references, drawings of animals, or generational slang.

"They say no animals, because it might be taken the wrong way. But when kids would come in, I used to write a little cat or a dog on their cup and, you know, they loved it," a barista in California told Business Insider. "Now I can't do that anymore. I might get written up."

Serious violations of the rule are those that would likely violate other store policies or offend a reasonable person — like a barista writing "Diabetes here I come!" on a customer's order.

Following the video of the barista declining to put Kirk's name on a cup after the conservative activist was murdered, Starbucks clarified that the company does not restrict what names customers can request on their orders, even if the name is political. Any other political messaging remains prohibited.

"We aim to be a community coffeehouse where everyone feels welcome, so we have previously provided guidance to our partners to respectfully ask the customer to use a different name when attempting to use political slogans or phrases in place of their name," Starbucks said Wednesday. "We are clarifying with our team now that names, on their own, can be used by customers on their café order, as they wish."

According to the guidelines reviewed by Business Insider, the first warning for a minor infraction, so long as a barista has had appropriate training and received no other recent corrective action, is verbal coaching. A second warning leads to a write-up. A third and final warning is issued before termination upon a fourth infraction.

Medium offenses automatically receive a written warning, and serious violations receive a final written warning upon their first offense.

The guidelines show that if a staff member makes a minor or medium infraction and has received a final written warning any time in the last year for any reason, they will be terminated from the company. Automatic termination may also occur if the infraction is so severe that a reasonable person would be "highly offended," such as a profane or lewd remark.

But, as with many corporate rules across companies, whether a barista is getting a verbal or written warning could depend on their manager and their interpretation of the guidelines, six baristas told Business Insider.

"My manager is more understanding, like, she's actually working with us," a California-based barista who has been at the company for a year, told Business Insider. "A lot of managers, when I've worked in other stores, don't really work with the employees and just kind of sit in the back and wait for you to mess up."

Three baristas told Business Insider they've seen fellow staff members be fired or quit this year over the cup note policy.

An attempt at customer connection

Starbucks' cup writing guidelines were implemented as part of the company's "Back to Starbucks" campaign. In the company's Q3 earnings report, CEO Brian Niccol said that employee engagement and customer connection scores have improved since the new customer service standards were rolled out.

In a memo to staff, previously reported by Business Insider, Niccol described the return of cup notes — which were more prominent on Starbucks orders before the company began using printed order stickers nearly a decade ago — as part of his effort to bring "meaningful" moments back to customers' days.

Michelle Eisen, a spokesperson for the Starbucks Workers United union and a 15-year barista veteran, told Business Insider that when she began at the company, the handwritten notes were used so that the barista knew what beverage to make. Once order stickers started being used, she said the company did "lose some of the personality" that made it popular.

Eisen said that mandating baristas to write on every cup without exception makes the job harder, especially during peak hours, when staff attempt to get drinks in customers' hands in under four minutes. She said that the threat of discipline removes the chance for meaningful connection with customers since baristas are only writing the notes "under duress."

"There's no sincerity in that," Eisen said. "Now you've got a manager staring you down while you're making drinks to make sure you stop in between every single drink to write some sort of message with a Sharpie. It's only increasing wait times, and it is not helping with just the overall environment within these stores."

Michael Goldberg, a professor of entrepreneurship and finance at Case Western Reserve University's Weatherhead School of Management, previously told Business Insider that Starbucks' policy is an example of a company rule that aims to better connect the business with its customers but is tough to roll out at the individual or store level.

The increased visibility around the viral incidents, Goldberg said, behooves Starbucks executives to consider the question: "How committed are you to doing these notes? Because I think they're just going to keep having these moments of tension."

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星巴克 咖啡师 政策 顾客体验 员工管理 Starbucks Barista Policy Customer Experience Employee Management
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