I expected the recognition thing to be corny because, honestly, most workplace shoutout tools feel like another chore, but the first week changed my mind when a supervisor called out one quiet employee after a rough shift and people actually reacted like it mattered instead of doing the fake thumbs-up routine.
The setup still needs rules or it turns into noise!!!, but when managers use it for real moments and not corporate wallpaper, it helps people who normally stay invisible get noticed, and I was weirdly glad to see that even though I was ready to roll my eyes at the whole idea, especially because one person told me later it made a bad shift feel less like a private failure for the rest of the day.