It started with a faint scratching noise on the french doors that close off Brad Charron’s home office. Sometimes he would see a little nose poking in. Mr. Charron’s three daughters, stuck at home due to school shutdowns and canceled ice-hockey practices early in the pandemic, would pop into his work sanctuary, wanting to see what he was doing. So the CEO of Aloha, a maker of protein drinks and powders, started inviting them in to check out what he was working on.
Source: Wall Street Journal September 26, 2020 16:07 UTC