Aspect Survivor Challenge: When You Pit Coworker Vs. Coworker

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Can you build a sturdy bridge? Make a beautiful-looking meal? Balance random objects on top of each other? These were just some of the challenges that Aspect staff took on this spring during the first “season” of Aspect Survivor.

The idea came from Principal Geotechnical Engineer Henry Haselton, whose extended family did a Survivor-style challenge as a way to stay connected during COVID. Henry was curious to see how Aspect staff would rise to similar challenges. He recruited his nephew to devise a series of tests that would pit coworker against coworker.

Aspect Survivor started with 21 people on three teams – Geo, Aqua, and Terran. Over 8 weeks, participants faced 16 challenges, formed and fractured alliances, and voted each other out until just ONE contender was left standing: newly hired Staff Engineer Rachel Cornwell.

Aspect Survivor winner Rachel Cornwell talks about her winning strategy

The Challenges

Challenges ranged in complexity. There were games of skill (variations on sudoku and chess), games of chance (a virtual hunt for an immunity idol through the San Juan Islands), and some games that required a bit of both – like the “3 Truths and 2 Lies” challenge, where competitors had to review statements from their colleagues and guess which were true and false (would you be able to guess which of your coworkers once travelled through Ireland in a milk truck?)

Several challenges focused on physical health, pitting teams against each other to see who could exercise the most, eat the most vegetables, and drink the most water. That last challenge was won by Staff Engineer Baxter Call, who in just two days drank 800 ounces of water— the equivalent of 100 cups of tea.

Stack it Up

This challenge brought random objects out of the house, garage, and even the Aspect Field Office to see how high they could be stacked and remain standing.

Food Appeal

This challenge focused on beautiful meal presentation. There was homemade ratatouille, Southeast Asian red lentil Dahl, and a Lion-and-Bear breakfast comprised of a whole-wheat English muffins with peanut butter and strawberries orange slices, and coconut rice pudding served cocktail style with pineapple, maraschino cherries, and toasted coconut.

Love Thy Neighbor

This challenge asked contestants to perform a random act of kindness for someone outside their immediate family. Contestants cleaned up their streets, made care packages for friends, and baked cookies for neighbors.

The Coordination

With everyone working virtually and participating from across our offices, the majority of the official presentations – including councils where participants were voted out – were done over Microsoft Teams. There was one official Aspect Survivor channel where challenges were announced and Council was held each week. While we’ll never know the details of all the scheming, strategic alliances, and back-alley negotiations, we have heard rumors of the extent to which trust was forged, tested, and broken as the field of contenders thinned.

For those of us not participating, we followed along to track each week’s challenge, stay current on the winners and losers, and make our bets about who would be voted out. There were also video recaps from the Aspect Sports Desk to bring everyone up to speed on competition standings.

The Winners

In the end, the Final Three were Accounting Assistant Allison Watt, Senior CAD Specialist Caroline Van Slyke, and Staff Engineer Rachel Cornwell. The grand finale was a live presentation where they pitched their case to a jury of previously eliminated contestants. In the end, Rachel was voted the winner.

“My main strategy was to make as many friends as I could”
- Rachel Cornwell

Rachel, who started at Aspect in July 2020, had only ever met a handful of her coworkers in person. Having watched some seasons of Survivor before, she knew a proven strategy was to lay low and go along with the majority at the start, then form alliances once the field had narrowed. She banded together with the few staff she’d crossed paths with at the Aspect Field Office, and stayed true to that alliance to the end.

Happy Holidays from the Aspect Kitchen!

Click above for a look at a few selected recipes!

At Aspect, we knew we had Engineers and Scientists among us. However, it turns out we also have Bakers, Chefs, Pâtissiers—even Mixologists!

To celebrate the holidays (and really just as an excuse to eat more delicious desserts), we put a call out for our staff’s best dessert recipes.

Boy did they deliver – with 30+ recipes for cakes, pies, tortes, cookies, sweet breads, and even a vegan Whiskey Sour (that’s right, that’s not a typo). As good as the recipes are, the stories about why these treats are meaningful to the cooks are just as great. They bring the joys of cooking for one another to life.

Our marketing team put all the recipes together in a cookbook for our staff, and now we are sharing some excerpts with you!

Interested in the whole cookbook? Send us an email and we’ll send you back a PDF of the whole cookbook.

Happy Holidays to you and yours!

Aspect Team Joins the Friendly Crowd

For the fifth year, Aspect hosted a group at the Seattle Sounders annual 'friendly' match with Europe's top teams. This year it was the Tottenham Hotspur FC. The Aspect fun started with an extra friendly spread of snacks in our Pioneer Square office located in the shadows of the soccer pitch. We then enjoyed the game where the Sounders made it an exciting match by twice taking the lead. The Hotspurs, using two penalty kicks, salvaged a 3-3 tie.

Earth Day 2013: Mulching for the Duwamish

Workdays Aspect is focused on environmental restoration and protection of our region’s earth and water. But our environmental and community engagement doesn’t end Friday at 5. Environmental stewardship permeates our off-hours –- as it did on a recent Saturday when Aspect staff shouldered shovels and pitchforks for a Duwamish Alive!-sponsored Earth Day project at T-107 / Herring’s House Parks.

Joining 95+ fellow volunteers from Women in Environment (WIE), Boeing, Microsoft, Starbucks, and other groups, Aspect helped remove sod and spread mulch to prepare park areas for the installation of native plants. The two lower Duwamish shoreline areas provide public access at one of the last oxbows remaining from the original river. The historic marsh/channel previously had been filled and developed as an industrial site, but restoration in the early 2000s removed industrial debris and contaminated soil, and restored intertidal habitat.

The 13,000 square feet (sf) of invasive plants removed, 8,000 sf mulched, and 125 native plants installed for Earth Day by Aspect and others will help maintain this section of the restored river for years. The 13 bug bites, 8 blisters, 4 bruises and 2 sore backs on Aspect staff healed in days.