Workplace Culture
By Ariel Parrella-Aureli
Oct. 30, 2017
“Ohana” is what Intel Corp. calls its employees. The word means “family” in Hawaiian, and in creating the “freelance nation,” it also created a family-style culture that has reaped benefits for its network of employees. The program was designed to help internal employees find employment elsewhere that needed their specific skillset. Building off the gig economy model, Intel gave its employees quick work while still working full time, which allowed them to use their skills as freelancers and remain engaged in their daily tasks.
Vikki Mueller Espinosa, senior HR manager and talent champion, said the team is honored to be recognized with an Optimas Award. “Creating an internal gig economy enabled Intel to move faster, optimize our specialist and generalist services, retain intellectual property and enable our most valuable resource — employees — to contribute in the most efficient and most cost-effective way possible,” Mueller Espinosa said. “When employees get to do what they do best every day, everybody wins!”
For Intel’s efforts providing connections and development opportunities for employees, it is the 2017 Optimas Award Silver winner for Innovation.
Schedule, engage, and pay your staff in one system with Workforce.com.
Compliance
Minimum Wage by State (2024)federal law, minimum wage, pay rates, state law, wage law compliance
Staffing Management
4 proven steps for tackling employee absenteeismabsence management, Employee scheduling software, predictive scheduling, shift bid, shift swapping
Time and Attendance
8 proven ways to reduce overtime & labor costs (2023)labor costs, overtime, scheduling, time tracking, work hours