Star Bucks Case Study
Star Bucks Case Study
http://www.ambaiuniversity.net/
Table of Contents
A) Introduction
- An unusual coffee encounter – 3
B) Starbucks: Past 3
B.1) Early days 3
- The original coffee shop: cofounders’ philosophy - 3
- Howard Schultz enters the picture - 4
- Collecting ideas - 4
- Expanding the vision and building the concept - 4
- Howard Schultz’s Il Giornale venture - 5
B.2) Shifting gears 6
- A shift in the company profile: Starbucks acquisition - 6
- Building the management team - 6
- Expansion and partnerships. Keeping the pressure - 7
- Building the workforce - 8
- Mission statement, Values and Principles - 9
- Innovation - 9
- Quality matters - 10
- Expansion strategy - 11
- IPO and Stock performance - 12
- Financing - 12
B.3) Starbucks historical growth analysis 13
C- Starbucks: Present 17
- Snapshot - 17
- Financial analysis - 18
- Competition - 19
- Macro environment - 19
- SWOT analysis - 20
- “Starbucks Haters, Inc.” - 21
D) Starbucks: Future 23
- Financial perspective - 23
- International expansion - 25
- Recommendations - 26
E) Conclusion 27
References 28
A) Introduction
- An unusual coffee encounter -
On a sunny Wednesday morning of April, my customer visit was scheduled for 10 am.
As usual, I was early and decided to get a cup of coffee and review my presentation material.
I pulled into the parking lot of the first mall, and walked into what I thought was a regular coffee
shop; I was in for a surprise.
At first, I went back to my car with my cup, and as I was going to turn on my laptop computer,
my cell phone rang: the meeting was postponed.
The strong fresh coffee aroma had already filled up my car, and I recalled the warmth of this
shop that I just walked out of; now that I had plenty of time, I decided to go back there and sit
down for a while.
This shop was unlike any other I had experienced; people there remembered me and greeted
me with a “Nice to see you again!”. Somehow, they must have known that I would come back.
I picked up a news paper and sat at the counter; I remember feeling captivated by the
atmosphere.
Looking around me in the shop, I noticed that many items were for
sale as well: cookies, teas and mugs. I grabbed my cup and
looked at the logo, and remembered that I had been in another
one of those coffee shops somewhere else in the US.
“That must be a chain of some sort”, I remember thinking.
Back at home that evening, I went onto the internet to look for it.
I discovered the Starbucks Corporation.
B) Starbucks: Past
B.1) Early days
- The original coffee shop: cofounders’ philosophy -
It all started in 1971 when English teacher Jerry Baldwin,
history teacher Zev Siegel, and writer Gordon Bowker opened
a store called “Starbucks Coffee, Tea, and Spice” in Seattle,
WA.
They shared a passion for quality coffee and exotic teas, and
named the shop after the coffee-loving first mate in Herman
Melville's Moby Dick. While they invested themselves $1,350
each, they had to borrow another $5,000 from the bank.
In the beginning, they purchased their coffee from Alfred Peet, a Dutch immigrant who had
started a coffee shop in the San Francisco Bay Area in 1950 (“Peet’s Coffee and Tea”). Alfred
Peet was a passionate for coffee, and he urged them to deepen their knowledge.
Soon, the Starbucks cofounders purchased a used roaster from Holland, and set up roasting
operations in a nearby ramshackle building.
Baldwin was keeping the books and developing a growing knowledge of coffee, and Bowker
was the "magic, mystery, and romance man.", in charge of maintaining the store ambiance.
By the early 1980s, four Starbucks store were in operation in Seattle, and while they have been
profitable since the first day, the roles and responsibilities of the cofounders underwent change;
Zev Siegel experienced burnout and left the company to pursue other interests.
The key in the original Starbucks success was the cofounder’s knowledge of the product and
service, and the carefully chosen location of the stores in Seattle.
The original Starbucks stores were very successful in Seattle, and this was apparently due to a
good mix in a deep knowledge for a high quality product, customer education and good
business sense.
However, anybody can get educated to good coffee, and a few small shops like Starbucks
would be eaten out by competition if they don’t plan on expansion; this is what Howard Schultz
understood right away.
Baldwin, Bowker and their partner in San Francisco, Alfred Peet, were kind of shy towards the
excitement of Schultz to open Starbucks stores all over the country. It took him a lot of time to
convince them that he should become part of them, and in September 1982, he started there.
Since then, history has shown that Schultz’s vision was the right thing to do.
Baldwin and Bowker trained him for several months before they let him do the coffee beans
roasting.
At the same time, Schultz knew that, in order to lead the people at Starbucks, he needed to
blend in the culture, and build trust and credibility. He made a strong point in acclimating himself
to this new life in the Pacific Northwest.
The seeds of the Starbucks Corporation were planted there: deep knowledge of the product and
service, trust and credibility, and the beginning of a vision for the future.
- Collecting ideas -
Schultz was bubbling over with ideas; his brightest one came in 1983 while he was attending an
international house ware show in Milan, Italy. As he walked in several espresso bars, the
counter worker (“barista”) cheerfully greeted him, while serving other customers and calling
them by their name.
Different espresso bars had different ambiance, each one with its own character, and gathered
different style of customers, but always featuring a high energy barista performing as if in a
great theater.
Schultz soon understood that something was missing at Starbucks: creating an atmosphere and
bonding with customers around a cup of coffee.
He came back with the recommendation for Starbucks to serve fresh brewed coffee, espresso
and cappuccino in addition to coffee beans and equipment.
Coffee would be only the vehicle for a place where people want to stay for a while, a sort of
place-like-home, in between home and office. That should become the differentiating factor of
Starbucks.
Baldwin and Bowker had a different strategy: they intended to purchase Peet’s Coffee and Tea
enterprise in San Francisco, and pursue along the line of local stores providing high quality
coffee beans and teas.
The cost of this acquisition would leave very little for Schultz’s plans anyway.
But the operations didn’t go smoothly after that for Baldwin and Bowker; managing the stores
back and forth between Seattle and San Francisco caused the employees to feel neglected,
even more as their bonus was not paid due to the tight financial situation of Starbucks at that
time.
Starbucks suffered from a lack of confidence from its employees, and the business was in
danger, calling for an action from the management to regain trust.
Schultz kept pressuring Baldwin to let him do a market test of selling beverages in one
Starbucks store. Although the experience was a success, Baldwin perceived it as moving into
the path of a place to get a quick cup of coffee to go, and this was not in line with the original
strategy for Starbucks.
Meanwhile, Howard Schultz had experimented at that time a key tactic in the history of
Starbucks: there was no pre-opening marketing blitz, and no sign announcing that espresso
was now served at Starbucks. It was part of a deliberate experiment to see what would happen.
Despite this first success, the experience was not pursued, and Schultz’s growing frustration
made him leave Starbucks in 1985, to start his own venture.
Another key move from Schultz in expanding the business was to redefine the target, as the
expansion was taking place. The execution was ahead of the plan, and in order to maintain a
certain pressure to keep challenging the organization, the target was raised to 161 new stores.
Starbucks mail order business was re-centered: the target market was defined as well-
educated, relatively affluent, well-traveled connoisseur interested in the arts and cultural events,
and usually a loyal buyer of Starbucks’ products. This refocusing of the mail order targets also
helped in identifying the location of the stores to be opened next.
Howard Schultz’s plan for expansion was based on three pillars: attracting a management team
ahead of expansion needs, building a world-class roasting facility and a computer based system
to keep track of sales in hundreds of stores.
Forecasting losses during the early years allowed him to keep investors confident, and by 1991,
he had raised a total of $32.4 million.
Here was another smart move: the whole infrastructure was being built ahead of the growth, in
order to be ready to sustain it.
In 1990, Starbucks became profitable again, and its profits had increased every year thereafter.
In order for its customers to have a positive experience, Starbucks employees needed to be
knowledgeable about the company’s products, be eager to communicate the company’s
passion for coffee and have the skills and personality to provide upscale customer service.
During a board meeting, Schultz presented the employee’s request to have healthcare benefits
extended to part time workers as a core strategy to win employee loyalty and commitment to the
company’s mission.
Improving the support to employees would build confidence, reduce turnover, and in turn would
reduce hiring and training costs.
In order to attract and retain Starbucks employees, Schultz pursued another program from 1991
in the form of a stock option plan for all employees. The initial plan was based upon a 12% of
the base pay, and the value of the shares was fixed at $6. The plan increased to %14 of the
base pay in the following year, and shares went as high as $132 in 1996.
Board members were however concerned that granting shares to employees would dilute the
value of the shares of investors who had put up hard cash.
Howard Schultz took the opportunity to nail down even further the employee-management
relationship by calling “partners” all Starbucks people.
At the end of 1997, 8.7 million shares in outstanding options were granted at an exercisable
price of $19.92, while the current stock price was $43.50.
Starbucks complemented with an employee stock purchase plan in 1995, by which employees
could contribute up to 10% of their base earnings to purchases of the company’s common stock
at 85% of the going stock price.
Recruitment and training has also been an important key success factor for Starbucks.
"We want passionate people who love coffee . . . We're looking for a diverse workforce, which
reflects our community. We want people who enjoy what they're doing and for whom work is an
extension of themselves." (as cited in Thompson and Gamble. “Starbucks Corporation” -
http://www.mhhe.com/business/management/thompson/11e/case/starbucks-2.html )
Every employee received classes in the Starbucks Coffee School in San Francisco on coffee
history, drink preparation, coffee knowledge, customer service and retail skills. The training was
efficient at educating new employees to use the cash register, weigh beans and open the bag
properly, capture beans without spilling them on the floor, and affixing labels at exactly one-half
inch over the Starbucks logo.
Managers attended much deeper training, including the details of store operations, practices
and procedure, information systems, and basis of managing people.
These plans, combined with an above average pay scale, allowed Starbucks to attract
motivated people with above average skills and good working habits, and turned out to be
successful: turnover rates were relatively low, and it was obvious that Howard Schultz’s
approach, values and principles were having the intended effect on the company’s performance.
This in turn had a positive effect on customers, and some of them asked if they could come to
work at Starbucks.
However, in 1989, Schultz fell in the same trap as did Baldwin and Bowker years ago: resisting
changes suggested by one of their employee. Customers have requested that nonfat milk be
proposed, and it took one of the store manager’s persistence to convince Starbucks
management to do a market test.
This event signaled another turn in Starbucks history: Schultz and the management team had to
surrender somehow to what their customer’s perception was with regard to the company’s
product quality. Schultz remembered that Starbucks customers were “voting with their wallet”,
and by 1997, about half of the lattés and cappuccinos were made with nonfat milk.
- Innovation -
Since the beginning, innovation has been a constant value at Starbucks: Schultz introduced the
place-like-home between the home and the office, where people would gather around quality
coffees and teas, and later on research and development efforts were conducted with partners
such as PepsiCo for the cold Frappuccino drink, for the coffee flavored ice cream with Dreyer’s
and for coffee flavored beer with a Seattle based brewery.
Starbucks formed a “stores of the future” team in 1995 to study the next generation of store
design; "an authentic coffee experience that conveyed the artistry of espresso making, a place
to think and imagine, a spot where people could gather and talk over a great cup of coffee, a
comforting refuge that provided a sense of community, a third place for people to congregate
beyond work or the home, a place that welcomed people and rewarded them for coming, and a
layout that could accommodate both fast service and quiet moments." (as cited in Thompson
and Gamble. “Starbucks Corporation” -
http://www.mhhe.com/business/management/thompson/11e/case/starbucks-2.html )
The team came up with four templates, one for each of the four stages of coffee making, and
combined colors, lighting scheme and materials. They also created the brevebar, a store-within-
a-store for supermarkets or office-building lobbies, and the doppio, a self-contained 8-square-
foot space that could be moved from spot to spot.
These innovations allowed Starbucks to significantly reduce the store-opening costs and match
them with the sales that each store format would allow.
Starbucks product line was also the display of its innovation capabilities.
The company stores had offered a choice of regular or decaffeinated coffee beverages, Italian-
style espresso drinks, together with a wide selection of fresh-roasted whole-bean coffees.
- Quality matters -
Schultz always kept in sight the quality of the products and services, and the perception of it
from the customer’s point of view.
Strict quality control was implemented all along the coffee process.
Each store detail (fixtures, merchandise displays, colors, artwork, banners, music, and aromas)
was closely studied to enhance the mood and ambience of the store, and that it reflected the
personality of the community and the neighborhood.
Starbucks banned smoking and asked employees to refrain from wearing perfumes or colognes,
and prepared foods were covered in order to keep the coffee aromas pure.
The company was recognized for its sensitivity to neighborhood conservation with the Scenic
America's award for excellent design and "sensitive reuse of spaces within cities.”
The company designers came up with artwork for commuter mugs, and T-
shirts were created along with different cities personality.
Starbucks
Commuter Mugs
- Expansion strategy -
In 1992 and 1993, Starbucks developed an expansion strategy based on targeting areas with
favorable demographic profiles together with the company’s infrastructure to support and
service them.
For each region, a large city was selected to serve as a hub where a team would support the
goal of opening 20 or more stores in the first two years.
One of the key success factors in this operation was to recruit professionals with extensive
operating and marketing experience in chain-store retailing as new zones vice presidents.
This strategy was also built upon the growing reputation of the Starbucks brand, which, in some
instances, had reached new markets even before stores opened.
Another key success factor in the expansion strategy was the real estate team which had a
sophisticated system allowing Starbucks to identify the most attractive individual city block and
the exact target store location.
In 1991, the company had formed a group to create a store development process based on a
six-month opening schedule. Each store was to be different in shape and size, but would
convey the appropriate image and character, contributing to strengthen the company’s
reputation and image throughout the regions being expanded into.
Cost reduction was achieved by centralized buying, by standard contracts development and
fixed fees for certain items, and by consolidated work under contractors with good cost-control
practices.
Starbucks expansion strategy also relied on a limited number of licensing agreements for areas
where it did not have the ability to open its own outlets.
Licensees such as Marriot Host International and Aramark allowed opening of Starbucks stores
respectively in airports and university campuses.
Others like Horizon Airlines and United Airlines had Starbucks coffees served on commercial
flights, while agreements with Nordstrom’s, Barnes and Noble and Well Fargo opened even
more opportunities.
In 1997, the specialty sales division of Starbucks generated sales equal to 12.2% of total
revenues.
The company’s international expansion started in 1995, and was based on two strategies: to
provide licenses or to create a joint venture with a reputable and capable local company with
retailing know-how in the target host country.
Starbucks Coffee International (SCI) was created in 1995 to coordinate the international
expansion, which started in Japan, Hawaii, Singapore, Philippines, Taiwan and Korea.
Starbucks expansion strategy was well thought: the offensive was to take place in the Pacific
Rim in order to gain momentum and strength, far away from Europe and Latin America where
coffee shops competition is very strong.
- Financing -
Until 1996, Starbucks avoided debt, and financed its growth entirely with equity capital and
profits, reducing overall costs.
This was made possible by the fact that the market growth allowed for the company to grow at
its own pace without major threat from competitors.
But as the coffee shops market expanded, the need for high volume financing lead Schultz to
accept debt as a legitimate financing vehicle starting from 1996.
Starbucks financial statements show that, as the number of stores increased, the revenue
increased in the same range; this is typical of an infrastructure which has been well planned for
growth:
Year 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997
Total stores 165 272 425 676 1006 1381
Total stores change 65% 56% 59% 49% 37%
Revenue 103,000 176,000 284,000 465,000 696,000 966,000
Revenue change 71% 61% 64% 50% 39%
By turning to debt, Starbucks managed to fuel its major expansion stages: first across the US in
1992-93, then overseas starting in 1995:
US Expansion
Overseas expansion
Year 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997
Total assets 91,000 201,000 231,000 468,000 726,000 850,000
Total assets change 121% 15% 103% 55% 17%
Long term debt 1,360 82,000 80,000 82,000 168,000 169,000
Long term debt change 5929% -2% 3% 105% 1%
Finally, the high initial Starbucks’ P/E (Price/Earning) ratio shows that investors had a high
degree of confidence in the company in the early years of its public life (1992 and early 1993).
Its P/E ratio then decreased gradually until 1995 to stabilize around 60 where it stands today.
The carefully crafted strategy is based on an accurate product positioning and target market.
Defining early on Starbucks business as a social gathering place helped Howard Schultz to
visualize a long-term growth opportunity, in a market much wider than purely the coffee market.
Starbucks strategy to saturate rapidly key geographic areas was (and still is) very instrumental
in neutralizing its local competitors, especially in an industry with low entry barriers.
Starbucks competitive advantage is not limited to the product, but is extended to its expansion
capability as well.
Superior people recruitment, training and management also gave Starbucks a significant
advantage over its competitors.
The value chain was well identified since the very beginning, and was kept consistent all along
the growth path (for instance the store location choice and installation is a value item in the
chain, leading Starbucks to create Real Estate Group to support it).
Continuous improvement has been a constant at Starbucks, at all levels (stores organization
and design, coffees and teas).
All the main external forces that constitute the marketing environment are addressed (economic,
political, legal, social, institutional, technological, and competitive factors), and in many cases
Starbucks knew how to leverage them to its advantage.
Setting the perception of the product at a high quality level gave the company more negotiating
power for store implementation; local authorities of small or low-image regions are asking for
Starbucks stores to open in order to improve their image.
Starbucks implemented a Community Relations Project in the form of the Starbucks Foundation
in order to enhance community relations and reinforce a positive image of the organization.
The company is an example of vertically integrated organization; the supply chain goes from the
agreements with the producers to the delivery to consumers.
Starbucks organization is an M-Form type of structure, better suited to its strategy of words-of-
mouth advertisement (one single company brand all the way through).
Another key success factor in the company’s steady and rapid growth is its functionally
organized marketing structure to address all aspects of its expansion (real estate group, store
development group, retail operation group).
Howard Schultz’s vision matched with consumers expectations, and he managed to attract early
on key people who would help overcome his weaknesses (like the hiring of Dave Olsen, who
knew how to form and communicate a vision, raise money, find good store locations, build a
brand name and plan for growth).
The successful growth has been orchestrated by duplicating a proven recipe for each target
region and store:
- maintain a deep knowledge of the product,
- carefully monitor the quality of the product,
- carefully chose the stores locations,
- recruit only knowledgeable management members at all levels,
- maintain a high level of employee performance,
- match the store capabilities with the store location,
- adopt aggressive growth tactics to maintain pressure and stay ahead of competition,
- avoid over-mediatization to prevent competitors early counteractions,
- leverage and grow the Starbucks brand through the introduction of new products and the
development of new distribution channels.
Using this approach, the company managed to stay ahead of the game since the beginning.
Acceptability:
Starbucks coffee shop was a new concept for US consumers, and filled the gap between
family and work. The Starbucks Experience was defined as “be yourself”, whether doing
individual activities, or socializing with friends.
The high quality of the products and services together with a broad range of products
(coffee, teas, other products related to their use) increased the level of acceptance from the
consumers.
A key factor in developing acceptability was to educate the consumers to the quality of the
products.
Affordability:
Starbucks’ genius was to redefine the meaning of affordability regarding coffee.
Target consumers were identified with regards to their living environment, level of income
and education. They were convinced to pay premium prices for the experience, service and
quality they were getting.
The company was able to capture the changing consumer behavior since the 1980’s: more
out-of-home entertainment, more self gratification from consumers toward a good movie, a
good glass of wine and a good cup of coffee.
By increasing the perceived value of the product in the eye of the consumer, Starbucks was
able to raise its prices while keeping the product affordable.
Creating brand loyalty through quality and innovation was also an important factor in
decreasing the price elasticity of this commodity product.
Availability:
The company’s availability strategy relies on two approached driven at the same time:
horizontal expansion and vertical growth.
The horizontal expansion of Starbucks was planned since its very beginning, and consists of
increasing the number of stores (either by ownership, by licensing or by specialty sales).
Stores are clustered in the prime locations to maximize their market share in areas identified
as having the highest volume potential. This in turn allows building a regional reputation (low
profile regions and rural areas see Starbucks as a status symbol that upgrades the area’s
image).
The vertical growth strategy consists in creating a whole range of coffee drinking occasions
such as in-store, on-the-go, at home, at work and travel, and by penetrating consumption
places like offices, hotels, restaurants, catering services, campus cafés and home (by mail
and online distribution).
Awareness:
While small coffee shops would benefit from local awareness, Starbucks leveraged its size
and location strategy to reach high brand awareness, mainly by word-of-mouth.
Another way that Starbucks increases awareness is through agreements with leading
retailers, wholesalers, restaurants, airlines, bookstores to carry Starbucks coffee,
associating Starbucks brand with the high quality and premium image of its partners.
Finally, awareness was completed by selling coffee related and unrelated high quality items
like coffee-makers, mugs, stationary and souvenirs bearing the Starbucks logo.
46%
26%
18%
91%
49% -7%
32% 24%
156% 60%
C- Starbucks: Present
- Snapshot -
Starbucks is today a $5.3 billion business operating in 30 countries in the service sector of the
restaurant industry.
The company is today the only global chain in a commodity market originally dominated by
single or small chain retailers.
The market is characterized by a global demand for the core product (coffee). Due to the high
price that the company charges its customers for, demand for Starbuck’s coffee is more price-
elastic than demand for “coffee”, which is more elastic than the demand for “beverages.” (coffee
drinkers can easily switch to other brands of coffee, and to other beverages).
Proposing substitutes to coffee allows Starbucks to be less sensitive to the price elasticity of
demand for coffee.
As of December 2004, a total of 8,337 stores were in operation around the world, the US
accounting for 75% of them, according to the company’s web site.
The Company’s business is subject to seasonal fluctuations, and significant portions of its net
revenues and profits are realized during the first quarter of the Company’s fiscal year, which
includes the December holiday season.
About 30 million customers visit a Starbucks cafe each week, according to the company.
"We continue to believe that the North American market is much, much larger than anyone is
giving us credit for," Chief Executive Orin Smith told analysts during a conference call. "Frankly,
we don't have enough stores in the market right now."
“We’re not a mass marketer. This business is based on repeat purchase and loyalty. Given that
we don’t do advertising or traditional marketing, we depend very much on the in-store
experience and building loyalty that way.” says Peter Maslen, president of Starbucks Coffee
International.
Since the beginning, Starbucks has been loyal to its approach of spending very little money in
advertising, preferring to build the brand cup by cup with customers, and depend on word-of-
mouth and storefronts appeal.
“The essence of Starbucks is not about the coffee, although it’s great coffee. It’s about the
coffee-drinking and the coffee house experience”, says Hayes Roth, vice president of marketing
at Landor Associates, a consultancy that has advised Starbucks on branding strategy.
The Starbucks Foundation was created in 1997 and is actively engaged in the
support of local community programs that promote youth leadership through
the power of literacy and respect for diversity.
- Financial analysis -
Some of the company’s historical ratios show departure from the industry average (as cited in
“Financial Analysis, Starbucks vs. Java the Hut”, Starbucks Project from Gregory Tabar
http://www.tabarsphere.com/Projects/Starbucks/index.htm):
Starbucks outlook
Parameter Industry average
(1999-2001)
Beta 1.24 0.51
Cost of Capital 10% 8%
Market Rate 6%
Return on Equity (ROE) 19% 13%
Market to Book Ratio 10.55 2.23
Net Profit Margin 7% 5%
Gross Profit Margin 58% 40%
Financial Leverage 2.09 1.98
Interest Coverage 17.10 4.46
Current Ratio 1.33 2.25
Asset Turnover 1.19 1.49
Days Receivable 11.49 32.19
Inventory Days 69.36 43.19
Payable Days 33.06 31.93
Operating Cycle 80.85 75.37
Cash to Cash 47.79 43.45
Return on Asset (ROA) 9% 10%
Starbucks Corporation appears strong today, with financial parameters well above the average
of the industry. Financial analysts recommend to either hold on to the stock (53%), or buy
(40%):
Recommendation (December 2004)
Starbucks Stock (SBUX)
(Source: Yahoo Finance and Vanguard)
Strong Buy or Buy 40%
Hold 53%
Strong Sell or Sell 6%
- Competition -
Hoover Online (http://www.hoovers.com/) lists three major companies competing with
Starbucks, plus a list of 21 other competitors:
Caribou Coffee owns and operates the second largest non-franchised coffee chain in the US
(behind Starbucks), with more then 290 stores in nine states.
Diedrich Coffee is the second coffeehouse company (behind Starbucks) with 515 coffeehouses
in the US and 13 in other countries.
Dunkin’ Brands (formerly Allied Domecq Quick Service Restaurants) franchise more than
12,000 quick-service eateries in the world, including Dunkin’ Donuts, Baskin Robins and Togo’s.
Other retail companies like AFC Enterprises, New World, Panera Bread Co. and Tulley’s are
also competing against Starbucks.
In Asia, five major companies compete with Starbucks (as cited by Valerie Darguste, Ana Su,
Ai-Lin Tu, and Peggy Wei of Stern School of Business at New York University and Sonia Ketkar
of the Fox School of Business and Management at Temple University - 2003):
Spinelli Coffee Company: licensed by Equinox, a joint venture between Golden Harvest and
Singapore Technologies Industrial Corp.
Suntec Dome Holdings: modeled on European, with a growth strategy based on expanding into
several Asian countries (Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand, Hong Kong and China)
Coffee Club: a sixty years old trading company which opened its first outlet in 1991.
Coffee Connection: the latest and trendier incarnation of Suzuki Coffee House, started in 1980.
Burke’s Coffee: a Seattle-style café in Singapore.
Other international competitors like Java the Hut (http://www.javathehut.co.uk/) propose online
coffee beans and equipment.
Counteracting competition, Peter Maslen, president of Starbucks Coffee International says “It’s
very easy to copy the superficiality of the brand; in other words, the look and feel of the store,
but it’s very hard to get beyond a few stores and retain the experiential part of our brand. The
most important thing is how welcome people feel and the connection they make. It’s really a
contradiction in terms – intimacy on a mass scale. But Starbucks is a very intimate brand.”
- Macro environment -
In the US, Starbucks evolves in a macro environment characterized by an aging population,
increasingly diverse with significant Hispanic origins. Although the US per capita coffee
consumption is on the rise (with specialty coffee consumption increasing as well), the income is
on the decline, and the gap between the “haves” and the “have nots” is widening.
The disposable income is at risk in the current economy, and consumer spending on the
decline.
Asia sees a high growth in disposable income, and increased Western beverages consumption.
European macro environment is characterized by an overall sluggish economic growth;
disposable income increases in certain countries, while it decreases in others.
"Europe is losing out in terms of growth and living standards," said Erkki Liikanen, the European
Union commissioner responsible for enterprise policy. He blamed the situation on low
employment levels and low productivity, particularly among the union's biggest members,
France, Germany, Italy and the United Kingdom. "The big EU member countries have not been
performing well," he said.
On a global scale, a rampant international coffee crisis (overproduction, rising stocks, declining
prices, elimination/neglect of coffee farms, further commoditization of specialty coffee) may
result in a threat to supply of specialty coffee.
- SWOT analysis -
Strengths Weaknesses
Product diversification Size
Established logo, developed brand, Lack of internal focus (too much focus on
copyrights, trademarks, website and expansion)
patents Ever increasing number of competitors in a
Company operated retail stores, growing market
International stores (no franchise) Self cannibalization
High visibility locations to attract customers Cross functional management
Valued and motivated employees, good Product pricing (expensive)
work environment
Good relationships with suppliers
Industry market leader
Globalized
Customer base loyalty
Product is the last socially accepted
addiction
Widespread and consistent
Knowledge based
Strong Board
Strong financial foundation
Opportunities Threats
Expansion into retail operations Competition (restaurants, street carts,
Technological advances supermarkets, other coffee shops, other
New distribution channels (delivery) caffeine based products)
New products US market saturation
Distribution agreements Coffee price volatility in developing
Brand extension countries
Emerging international markets Negative publicity from poorly treated
Continued domestic expansion/domination farmers in supplying countries
of segment Consumer trends toward more healthy
ways and away from caffeine
Fragile state of worldwide production of
specialty coffees
Alienation of younger, domestic market
segments
Corporate behemoth image
Cultural and Political issues in foreign
countries
Key problems:
• Perils of expansion; there is a risk of strategic myopia.
• Due to its size, Starbucks becomes a less special place for employees.
• The quality of customer service decreases.
• Rampant crisis in the coffee industry.
• Perception of being a bully may impair foreign expansion capabilities.
Critics are numerous, and among them are the usual anti-
corporate arguments, like the ones published on
IHateStarbucks.com, a dedicated web site for Starbucks haters:
http://www.ihatestarbucks.com/
“The vast majority of the coffee is grown using underpaid third world labor”
“Starbucks is spreading across the world like a virus, infecting cultures with their formula
of what a coffee shop should be”
“They are everywhere”
“They have predatory business practices. Common practices are things like paying
landlords to not renew leases for coffee shops so that they can move in”
“They sell fake corporate responsibility”
“Their coffee is always bitter”
“The gross profit margin per store is, on average, 59.1%, therefore there is plenty of
wiggle room for the company to pay more than a dollar a pound for coffee. (read: livable
wage for their slave labor)”
“Faux ecologic responsibility””
“False employee benefits. They give part time workers (20 hours per week) health
insurance. However, I have received hundreds of emails from employees that
consistently receive 19.75. 15 minutes shy of earning those costly benefits”
“What they sell is incredibly unhealthy. Get the nutritional information, from their website
it is appalling. The Caramel Pecan Sticky Roll (which has more fat than a Big Mac) or
even better (worse), the Eggnog Latte are so bad for you it is astounding”
Further on this same web site, disappointed employees vent their frustration, while others,
apparently more fortunate, react by praising the company they work for.
Like other American firms such as McDonald’s, Starbucks is finding that global fame carries a
price. Growth is sometimes seen as corporate colonialism. An American company is often seen
as an evangelist of all things American. The international expansion of Starbucks is seen as the
outright hijacking of foreign cultures.
"It's very American ... and is seen as this very aggressive attempt to grow that business," said
Greg Carpenter, the James Farley-Booz Allen Hamilton professor of marketing strategy at
Northwestern University's Kellogg Graduate School of Management.
Starbucks haters’ motivation seems to range from the sentimental (squeezing out independents)
to the practical (increased parking and litter problems), to globalization evilness.
Global Exchange (http://www.globalexchange.org/), the activist organization operating from San
Francisco, California, claims that the company has been less than cooperative in implementing
Fair Trade policies in the coffee market.
The resentment against Starbucks is for the least curious, as coffee shops have already existed
for a long time around the world, and are known for having a minimal impact on the
neighborhood. They don’t create any dependence on a proprietary technology, and a large
corporation like Starbucks is probably no more exploitive than any other large corporation
buying commodities from lesser developed markets.
In Canada, for instance, there is a Tim Hortons outlet approximately every 500 feet, and around
2,300 stores feeding a nation of 32 millions Canadians, i.e. one store for 13,900 people there.
Starbucks, with more than 5,500 stores nationwide in the US, goes by the average of one store
for every 54,000 Americans. And yet, there doesn’t seem to be “Tim Hortons haters” in Canada.
What seems to bother people most is that Starbucks is not so much selling coffee, but a
particular brand of lifestyle called the “Starbucks Experience”, a kind of philosophy highly
susceptible to criticism.
In May 2004, Starbucks’ workers at the 36th and Madison store in Midtown Manhattan organized
the first Starbucks Barista’s Union in the US, complaining that the starting age was not a living
wage in the city.
Although one cannot deny that Starbucks may take advantage of its position in certain
circumstances, and entertain aggressive business practices, the general perception of the
company is good and appears to have a positive impact on the society; wealth is created,
trailing behind new jobs and discovering new talents, around the world.
D) Starbucks: Future
Although Starbucks profits have increased significantly over the years, there are reasons for the
company to be vigilant.
Sales are still growing rapidly, but the rate of growth is slowing at existing stores.
Many analysts attribute this to store cannibalization, as Starbucks has been known to open
stores within one block of each other in hopes of saturating the market.
This approach may also exacerbate competition among close Starbucks stores and damage the
company culture within the workforce, resulting in a decrease in employees’ performance.
Growth has been hurt by poor merchandising efforts, which leaves many products, like mugs
and coffee makers, on display for years.
- Financial perspective -
Starbucks intends to pour in millions of new shares as options to employees and managers.
If approved by investors, this plan would push options-related dilution to more than 19% of
outstanding shares, far above the level at which many institutional investors might be expected
to balk.
“By some measures, the plan would essentially double the company’s options dilution. This just
seems like it’s excessive potential dilution” says Kent Hughes, Managing Director of Egan-
Jones Proxy Services, an advisory firm.
"The board has long believed that employee ownership in the company serves the best interest
of all shareholders, by promoting a focus on long-term increase in shareholder value," answers
Starbucks board of directors.
While some believe that Starbucks business focus may shift (like its new venture with Hewlett-
Packard to let customers burn CD from a selection of songs), this is unlikely to happen;
Starbucks is likely to diversify, but not refocus.
- International expansion -
“Based on the company’s strong international growth, customers are voting with their wallet and
buying Starbucks. We're not taking our success for granted, we also understand that the burden
of proof at times is on us given the fact that a lot is being written and there's more
sensitivity than ever before about America and American companies. These are
the very early days for the growth and development of the company
internationally. Clearly there's a big world out there for Starbucks to expand in."
Howard Schultz says.
Operating in current volatile political or economic situations could introduce a lot of risk for the
company, experts say.
"It is typically the market leader that attracts the attention of activists," said Prashant Malaviya,
associate professor of marketing at INSEAD business school in Fontainebleau, France. "Both
because of people's political views ... but also in countries where there is not so much a political
backlash but where they may have messed up."
Starbucks further expansion in Asia should continue at a sustained rate because the region is
full of emerging markets. Asian consumers’ disposable income is increasing as their countries’
economies grow, and most of all, people over there are open to Western lifestyles.
However, the company is likely to encounter difficulties in Europe due to fierce competition.
The coffee culture in the Old Continent has deep roots, and the current political discord between
the US and Europeans may exacerbate the already problematic anti-Americanism sentiment
over there.
An American brand is very likely to face a strong resistance, and unless a new brand is created
that matches with the European culture and perception, Starbucks’ growth will be slower in
Europe than in Asia, and much slower than what it experienced in the US.
For instance, many Europeans are still used to smoke when drinking coffee, which seems
opposed to the original approach of Starbucks to ban smoking in their coffee shops; others
would be looking for non-smoking coffee shops as a new developing trend.
Europeans associate coffee with Italy, and the most likely successful approach to the European
expansion would be to propose coffee shops “al Italiano” or “il senso Italiano” (the Italian way),
and come up with a new brand name with an Italian consonance.
Needless to say, the quality of the coffee served in European outlets will need to be as good as
the local brands (i.e. better than the current Starbucks American coffee quality).
- Recommendations -
In an attempt to better address the current issues and strengthen its foundations, the following
recommendations can be made:
E) Conclusion
Starbucks strategy is fairly simple: increase the perception of high quality of a commodity
product, adapt stores to the consumers’ lifestyle, and blanket areas completely, one after the
other, even if the stores cannibalize one another business.
The company’s approach cuts down on delivery and management costs, shortens customer
lines at individual stores, and increases foot traffic for all the stores in an area.
A typical Starbucks US customer stops by 18 times a month, much more frequently than in any
other coffee shop.
Even more amazing is that Starbucks has been generating this formidable growth from a
commodity product, with virtually no marketing, spending just 1% of its annual revenues on
advertising, while retailers usually spend 10%.
Critics on Wall Street believe that the US market will be saturated by 2006, while Howard
Schultz restates that "Those who talk about saturation obviously don't understand our business
strategy."
There will be protectionism developing abroad as Starbucks gains market share, but as the
company has already shown its ability to blend in a culture and a neighborhood, it won’t stop the
expansion; at worst, it’ll slow it down, forcing the company to adapt, which it knows how to do
already.
“The most important thing Starbucks must keep in mind is that no brand expands in a vacuum.
Every brand is rooted in popular culture. That’s the difference between advertising and
branding. Advertising grabs their minds; branding grabs their hearts.” says Rob Frankel, a
branding consultant.
Starbucks demonstrated in the past its strength and ability to sustain growth even during
recession, and while analysts believe that Starbucks growth will slow down with regard to its
past, the company is here to stay.
Howard Schultz:
“We aren’t in the coffee business, serving people.
We are in the people business, serving coffee”.
(Fortune Magazine, Vol. 149 No. 2)
From coffees to teas, to T-shirts, mugs, music CD, internet access, store locations and
ambiance, Starbucks is a People Shop and there is indeed an ever growing market for this.
References
“Starbucks Corporation”, Arthur A. Thompson, The University of Alabama, and John E.Gamble,
University of South Alabama
http://www.mhhe.com/business/management/thompson/11e/case/starbucks.html.
“Financial Analysis, Starbucks vs. Java the Hut”, Starbucks Project from Gregory Tabar
http://www.tabarsphere.com/Projects/Starbucks/index.htm.
Irina Ganzha, Marketing Seminar of Spring 2000, Goizueta Business School, Emory University
http://www.fc.bus.emory.edu/~Irina_Ganzha/starbucks.html.
“Starbucks Coffee: Expansion in Asia” by Valerie Darguste, Ana Su, Ai-Lin Tu, and Peggy Wei
of Stern School of Business at New York University and Sonia Ketkar of the Fox School of
Business and Management at Temple University – 2003.
“The Starbucks Brandscape and the Discursive Mapping of Local Coffee Shop Cultures” by
Craig J. Thompson and Zeynep Arsel, University of Wisconsin – Madison, Department of
Marketing.
“Call it Starbucking, the Fine Art of Hating Your Local Outlet of the Seattle Coffeehouse Chain”
by James Sullivan, San Francisco Chronicle, August 2003.
“Starbucks Options Plan Puts Dilution on Menu”, by Troy Wolverton, TheStreet.com, December
2004.
“Lattés for all: Starbucks plans global expansion” by Helen Jung, The News Tribune, April 2003.