Frederic Lee, Agenda, July 21, 2025

Starbucks is the latest big company to ramp up in-office requirements for corporate staff, as chief executive Brian Niccol issued a directive to workers last week raising the time required on-site to four days per week, rather than three.

A number of different work philosophies have emerged in recent years, said Davia Temin, president and CEO of management consultancy Temin and Company Inc. Temin said that when she first started working, she had one answer for every request from bosses: Yes.

But now, work-life balance concerns are shifting some workers’ approach. One such example is when workers reject certain job tasks because of personal responsibility, such as having to pick up their children from school.

Meanwhile, the debate over the benefits and drawbacks of remote and hybrid work has roiled the corporate world since companies moved large swaths of their workforces off-site during pandemic-induced social distancing measures in 2020 and 2021. When and how often to bring them back has been a matter of intense debate ever since.

Many employees at traditional industrial companies and those that produce a physical product don’t have the option of not being present, said Temin. CEOs may want white-collar workers at those companies to also come in out of a sense of fairness.

Meanwhile, CEOs of more white-collar sectors initially seemed inclined toward a flexible work setup for employees that could involve remote work, said Temin. […read more]