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Microsoft manages commutes for a workforce that equals the population of its HQ city

Microsoft had five routes when it launched the Connector shuttle program to bring its headquarters employees to work in 2007. Sitting in the front row of one of a Connector bus, John Trujillo said the shuttle service has grown to be the second-most popular way employees get to work, after driving alone. In 12 years it’s expanded to 23 routes spanning from Kent to Lake Stevens, with the highest demand in Seattle and particularly in Capitol Hill, which houses a growing cohort of Microsoft employees. Read More...

Microsoft manages commutes for a workforce that equals the population of its HQ city

Microsoft had five routes when it launched the Connector shuttle program to bring its headquarters employees to work in 2007. Sitting in the front row of one of a Connector bus, John Trujillo said the shuttle service has grown to be the second-most popular way employees get to work, after driving alone. In 12 years it’s expanded to 23 routes spanning from Kent to Lake Stevens, with the highest demand in Seattle and particularly in Capitol Hill, which houses a growing cohort of Microsoft employees.

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