The Specific Event
Croux, a Birmingham-based workforce technology company, announced this week that it is expanding to seven markets across the American Heartland, serving hotels, country clubs, stadiums, convention centers, and catering companies. The headline number driving the announcement is a 96% worker show-up rate. In hospitality staffing, where no-show rates routinely devastate event operations, that figure is being positioned as proof that algorithmic matching produces reliably better coordination outcomes than traditional staffing agencies. The expansion press release frames this as a technology story. I think it is a coordination theory story, and the distinction matters considerably.
What Show-Up Rate Actually Measures
A 96% show-up rate is an output metric. It tells you that workers arrived. It does not tell you how the platform produced that outcome, whether through algorithmic matching, reputation scoring, behavioral nudging, financial incentive structures, or some combination of all four. This ambiguity is not a minor empirical inconvenience. It sits at the center of what the Algorithmic Literacy Coordination framework identifies as the variance puzzle: when platform workers with identical access produce dramatically different outcomes, the explanatory variable is rarely the one the platform advertises (Kellogg, Valentine, and Christin, 2020). Croux's show-up rate is a population-level average being used to tell a platform-level story, and those are not the same thing.
The classical coordination literature would treat a 96% show-up rate as evidence that the matching mechanism works. Markets clear, hierarchies direct, and in this case, the platform coordinates. But classical coordination theory assumes ex-ante competence on both sides of the transaction. It assumes that workers already know how to participate effectively and that employers already know how to evaluate participation quality. Hospitality staffing at scale, across seven heterogeneous markets, almost certainly violates both assumptions simultaneously.
The Invisible Cage Problem at the Worker Level
Rahman (2021) introduced the concept of the invisible cage to describe how algorithmic control structures constrain worker behavior without making those constraints transparent. In Croux's model, workers are presumably rated, ranked, and filtered through some form of reputation or reliability scoring that feeds back into future job offer eligibility. The 96% show-up rate likely reflects, in part, the behavioral adaptation of workers who have learned that non-appearance carries algorithmic consequences they cannot fully see or appeal. This is not the same as reliable coordination. It is compliance under opacity, and the two produce the same output metric while generating entirely different organizational dynamics.
Schor et al. (2020) document how platform dependence reshapes worker behavior in ways that look like preference alignment from the outside but function as structural constraint from the inside. A hospitality worker who shows up at 96% reliability across a platform may be doing so because the platform genuinely matches their preferences well, or because the alternative is algorithmic invisibility. The show-up rate cannot distinguish between these two cases, and Croux's expansion announcement does not try to.
The Training Gap the Survey Did Not Ask About
A separate item in this week's business news is worth reading alongside the Croux announcement. A recent survey on workforce readiness found that front-line training gaps are consistently thwarting practical skill development. The survey frames this as a content problem: training programs are not delivering the practical skills employers need. I would argue the more precise framing is a schema problem. Workers who receive procedural training on how to perform specific tasks within a specific platform context develop routine expertise. They can execute the procedure they were trained for. When the platform changes its matching logic, its reputation weighting, or its notification structure, that procedural knowledge fails (Hatano and Inagaki, 1986).
Croux's seven-market expansion will almost certainly produce platform-specific behavioral norms that differ across markets. A worker who learned to navigate the platform's reward logic in Birmingham may find that the same behaviors produce different outcomes in a stadium-focused market in Indianapolis. If Croux's training infrastructure, to the extent it exists, is teaching workers what to do rather than why the platform responds the way it does, the 96% show-up rate is a fragile number. It reflects current behavioral adaptation, not durable coordination competence.
Why This Matters for Platform Theory
The ALC framework makes a counterintuitive prediction: general schema-based training should produce better transfer than platform-specific procedural training, even when the procedural training produces faster initial performance. Croux's expansion offers a natural test case for this prediction across markets. If show-up rates and worker tenure vary systematically across the seven new markets, and if those variations correlate with how much each market's worker population understands the structural logic of algorithmic reputation systems rather than just the surface behaviors that worked in another context, that would be meaningful evidence. The 96% headline number, however impressive commercially, is the wrong unit of analysis for answering that question.
Platform coordination is being sold to the hospitality industry as a reliability solution. The more interesting question is whether it produces durable coordination competence or optimized short-term compliance. Those are different products, and the distinction will matter when the platform scales into environments where the matching logic faces genuinely novel conditions.
References
Hatano, G., and Inagaki, K. (1986). Two courses of expertise. In H. Stevenson, H. Azuma, and K. Hakuta (Eds.), Child development and education in Japan (pp. 262-272). Freeman.
Kellogg, K. C., Valentine, M. A., and Christin, A. (2020). Algorithms at work: The new contested terrain of control. Academy of Management Annals, 14(1), 366-410.
Rahman, H. A. (2021). The invisible cage: Workers' reactivity to opaque algorithmic evaluations. Administrative Science Quarterly, 66(4), 945-988.
Schor, J. B., Attwood-Charles, W., Cansoy, M., Ladegaard, I., and Wengronowitz, R. (2020). Dependence and precarity in the platform economy. Theory and Society, 49(5-6), 833-861.
Roger Hunt