Save Money… Carry A Thermos
Has your employer, perhaps done like mine did a couple of months ago, decided that the tanking economy was a good excuse to stop supplying Free Coffee for everyone (except the office boffins, of course… what’s good for the goose is NOT good for the gander in this case).
For the record it was running around $500 a month for coffee and the supplies every month for around 225 employees (actually a VERY cheap price for that many people according to a friend of mine in the business… he said normally it would run about 3 times that) since almost everyone is gone from the base driving they “might” have gotten one cup in the morning before they left but most everyone subsists on what they can find in the field.
Granted the 60 drivers at the sub-location I work out of had more access and tended to drink a lot but still everyone was very unhappy when they stopped providing it… even though we supplied out own coffeemaker and all the drivers chipped in to make sure we had plenty of sugar and creamer. The lady in charge at the main base seemed to be under the impression that two handfuls of sugar packets was more than sufficient for 60 people for a week.
Surprisingly after the company stopped the service our Union stepped in and is subsidizing part of the cost for my work location… smart thinking.
So a lot of us, even before that, had the habit of carrying a thermos (I keep mine filled with iced tea usually).
Despite the high initial outlay (about $35, check out all the offerings at www.thermos.com and look at the stainless steel food carrier bottles as well… indestructible and worth the money) for a good Stainless Steel 1 liter bottle I saved that back in less than a month. If I stopped at the local Seven-Eleven and got a large coffee I would have paid for the bottle in less than three weeks. And the Seven-Eleven would let me refill the thermos for the cost of a large cup… but the thermos holds twice what a large cup holds… so three guesses where their biggest expense is… Yes the cups and supplies… not the coffee itself.
As it is, I make tea or coffee at home and the cost is way less even when buying top quality tea of coffee… not to mention I’m not wasting all the Styrofoam cups and lids, stacks of napkins, all the little plastic creamer cups, paper sugar packets and stirrer sticks. So it’s an environmentally friendly thing to do as well besides the saving money part.
There is the small bother of washing the thermos out at the end of the day but a minute with a bottle brush and it’s done… worth saving $2-3 dollars over stopping at the convenience store.
So how many of you are getting the short end of the coffee stirrer… Is your employer cutting back on beverages for the office?
Any of you carry a thermos as well?
Thought about doing so?
Or think it’s too much of a bother?
Photo credit: stock.xchng.
My employeer can’t pay for the coffee and tea because we are a government entity. But employees can either pay 35 cents per cup (honor system) or $10 a month (again, honor system) for unlimited coffee or hot water and tea bags. I think that’s a pretty good deal.
I make my own iced tea from loose leaf tea, then bring it to work in a small nalgene bottle and add ice when I arrive to make it iced tea. It saves on the cups and lids and is cheaper and better than buying it at the canteen.
I do something similar. We have a water club that costs about $2-$3 a month bit makes hot water which I use for instant coffee. I do miss the free coffee at my college job, but my salary is twice as much now.
Roland: I work remotely, so I brew my own pot every morning… and of course, it’s not a reimbursable expense.
There was a recent article in the Wall Street Journal on the disappearance of office perks:
Interesting observation…
Nina:
It wouldn’t have been so bad on the morale if the coffee hadn’t been the ONLY perk they gave to the drivers and if the office boffins had sacrificed as well…as it is they still get free coffee and the drivers don’t.
And some have complained that the coffee is a “Safety Issue” as it helps wake them up and keep them alert….that part I don’t buy as studies have shown adequate Sleep is more important.
I’m with Nina, Roland. I work from home, so no “free” coffee for me. But back in the day when I worked in an actual office, we had free coffee. If that had nixed that, I probably would have just brought a travel mug from home. But that doesn’t help the mid-day caffeine urge. Do Debra’s system of contributing to a coffee fund seems to be the compromise.
Roland,
I love your posts on conserving resources and rocking the thermos is something I’ve done for a while. I can’t stand coffee but I love tea (and am occasionally kind of a snob about it). I usually keep bags of tea with me for whenever the mood strikes. I also recently invested in a mug with a built in filter. It was made for brewing coffee in the mug–the idea being you press the grounds to the bottom with the filter when it’s done brewing–and while it doesn’t work for all types of loose leaf tea, it’s a nice alternative for loose leaf on the go.
Things like thermoses and siggs need about 800 uses to offset the impact of their creation, so I’ll keep rockin my thermos for a good long time.