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Food

A corporate effort

We find out why cooking has become a popular choice for company team-building.

January 30, 2012 13:10
Personalities are laid bare in the stressful atmosphere of a commercial kitchen, says Food@Work's Robinne Collie

By

Lianne Kolirin ,

Lianne Kolirin

2 min read

According to South African-born Robinne Collie, who runs Food@Work, there is no better place than the kitchen to tackle difficult issues, particularly surrounding work.

She, her team of chefs and a group of learning and development professionals take corporate teams and throw them into a high-pressured cooking environment. "Restaurants, commercial kitchens and cooking provide an exceptional environment for assessing, analysing and reviewing people dynamics," says mother-of-two Collie.

She founded the company in early 2002. Explaining her inspiration, she says: "The team dynamics at my then job were challenging. At that time, I had a tiny kitchen, loved to cook and found it very difficult to do so with my husband… too many cooks and all that. I needed his help when we entertained and it made me realise that if I'd had the chance to get into a kitchen with my work colleagues, it would have been obvious how dysfunctional our team was. Your true colours come out in the kitchen - you are laid bare."

Today Food@Work runs events for household names such as HSBC, Tesco and Sony. The teams work in busy commercial kitchens, including Michelin-starred restaurants and upmarket hotels.