...STARBUCKS SUBMITTED TO: SUBMITTED BY: Dr. R. SUJATHA SHIVANGI SRIPAT A0102311058 MBA-HR, B-09 Starbucks Corporation is an American global coffee company and coffee house chain based in Seattle, Washington. Starbucks is the largest coffee house company in the world, with 20,366 stores in 61 countries, including 13,123 in the United States, 1,299 in Canada, 977 in Japan, 793 in the United Kingdom, 732 in China, 473 in South Korea, 363 in Mexico, 282 in Taiwan, 204 in the Philippines, and 164 in Thailand. Starbucks sells hot and cold drinks, coffee beans, salads, hot and cold sandwiches, sweet pastries, snacks, and items such as mugs and tumblers. Through the Starbucks Entertainment division and Hear Music brand, the company also markets books, music, and film. Many of the company's products are seasonal or specific to the locality of the store. Starbucks-brand ice cream and coffee are also offered at grocery stores. From Starbucks' founding in 1971 in Seattle as a local coffee bean roaster and retailer, the company has expanded rapidly. In the 1990s, Starbucks was opening a new store every workday, a pace that continued into the 2000s...
Words: 1064 - Pages: 5
...How Starbucks Coffee changed the Coffee Industry Submitted by JAVIER SEPULVEDA Prepared for Jeffrey Bramlett BUSN 6120, Managerial Economics Spring 1 semester, 2013 Section OF Webster University March 2, 2013 CERTIFICATE OF AUTHORSHIP: I, xx, certify that I am the author. I have cited all sources from which I used data, ideas, or words, either quoted directly or paraphrased. I also certify that this paper was prepared by me specifically for this course. Javier Sepulveda 03/02/2013 Signature Date ABSTRACT The importance of coffee to the world economy cannot be overstated. It is one of the most valuable primary products in world trade, in many years second in value only to oil as a source of foreign exchange to producing countries. Its cultivation, processing, trading, transportation and marketing provide employment for hundreds of millions of people worldwide. Coffee is crucial to the economies and politics of many developing countries; for many of the world's Least Developed Countries, exports of coffee account for more than 50 percent of their foreign exchange earnings. Coffee is a traded commodity on major futures and commodity exchanges, most importantly in London and New York. In my research Paper, I would like to review and analyze the impact of Starbucks Coffee in the coffee industry as it growth has become synonymous for coffee with a new type of café culture from its birth in the 1970s. The Starbucks Experience...
Words: 3785 - Pages: 16
...Starbucks Coffee Estudio de caso: Claudio Covacevich P. Preparado por Starbucks Corporation (NASDAQ) es una cadena internacional de café fundada en Seattle, Washington. 1. Es la compañía más grande de café del mundo, con aproximadamente 16 000 locales en 44 países. Historia En Estados Unidos, hablar de café es pensar en Starbucks. La sorprendente cadena de cafeterías norteamericana va camino de lograr lo que un día se propuso su principal impulsor y máximo responsable de su estrategia, Howard Schultz: convertirse en la marca más conocida y respetada del planeta. Asentada en un concepto muy específico de servicio al cliente y propulsada por una agresiva y fulgurante expansión nacional e internacional, la compañía ha logrado que su popular sello de identidad Historia Todo empezó con una cafetería en Seattle en 1971, y en poco tiempo comenzó su crecimiento a escala local, entrando en el negocio de la importación de café y tostando el grano en una planta propia. El negocio dio un giro de 180 grados cuando, en 1982, Howard Shultz entró en la compañía encargado de dirigir las tareas de marketing y de gestión del negocio minorista. El directivo realizó un viaje a Italia en 1983 en el que descubrió el encanto de las cafeterías de Milán, el sabor de los “espressos” y el placer de pararse a saborear una taza de café en un entorno agradable. Convencido de que ese Historia La visión de Schultz se tradujo en locales acogedores, en los que los clientes podían...
Words: 1572 - Pages: 7
...SUMMARY ABOUT STARBUCKS Starbucks Corporation is an international coffee and coffeehouse chain. Starbucks is the largest coffeehouse company in the world, with 16,120 stores in 49 countries. Starbucks sells drip brewed coffee, espresso-based hot drinks, other hot and cold drinks, snacks, and items such as mugs and coffee beans. Through the Starbucks Entertainment division and Hear Music brand, the company also markets books, music, and film. Many of the company's products are seasonal or specific to the locality of the store. Starbucks-brand ice cream and coffee are also sold at grocery stores. Starbucks establish as the premier purveyor of the finest coffee in the world while maintaining their uncompromising principles as they grow. The following six guiding principles are the main company mission. First of all they provide a great work environment and treat each other with respect and dignity. Secondly they embrace diversity as an essential component in the way we do business. Moreover they apply the highest standards of excellence to the purchasing, roasting and fresh delivery of our coffee. Also they develop enthusiastically satisfied customers all of the time. Furthermore they contribute positively to our communities and our environment. And finally they recognize that profitability is essential to our future success. The company’s environmental mission statement is that Starbucks committed to a role of environmental leadership in all facets of our business. QUESTION...
Words: 3699 - Pages: 15
...no. 1-0023 Starbucks Coffee Company* On an overcast February afternoon in 2000, Starbucks CEO Orin Smith gazed out of his office window in Seattle and contemplated what had just occurred at his company’s annual shareholder meeting. In prior years, the meeting had always been a fun, all-day affair where shareholders from around the country gathered to celebrate the company’s success. This year, however, Smith and other senior Starbucks executives heard an earful from the activist group Global Exchange. A human rights organization dedicated to promoting environmental, political, and social justice around the world, Global Exchange criticized Starbucks for profiting at the farmer’s expense by paying low prices and not buying “fair trade” beans. Not only did the activists disrupt the company’s annual meeting to the point that the convention hall security police asked the activists to leave, but they also threatened a national boycott if the company refused to sell and promote fair trade coffee. Although Smith strongly disagreed with using the shareholders meeting as a public forum, he knew there was a strong likelihood his company could face serious reprisals if it did not address the issues raised by Global Exchange. Fair trade began after World War II as religiously–affiliated, non-profit organizations purchased handmade products for resale from European producers. During the 1970s and 1980s, the concept evolved further into buying crafts from low-income, third-world producers...
Words: 11534 - Pages: 47
...Starbucks Coffee Company The story begins in 1971 in Seattle Washington, back then Starbucks was just a single store in Seattle’s historic Pike Place Market, offering some of the world’s finest fresh-roasted whole bean coffee. “The name, inspired by Moby Dick, evoked the romance of the high seas and the seafaring trading of the early coffee traders.” (Starbucks Company Profile). It wasn’t until the mid-1980s when Starbucks started offering brewed coffee and espresso beverages that they have become so famous of. Starbucks offers a wide range of different coffee products which include: Coffee Beans, Handcrafted Beverages, Merchandise, and Ready-to-drink, and Instant Coffee and Teas. Coffee beans get many of their distinguishing characteristics from where they are cultivated. Starbucks consistently roasts only some of the highest quality Arabica beans, which it sources from several major growing regions of Latin America. Each of the world’s three coffee-growing regions, Latin America, Africa and Asia Pacific have different variables in soil, climate, to elevation that bring out the unique flavors. The signature coffee blends that Starbucks is known from mostly comes from the Asia Pacific Region (Starbucks Coffee Company). It wasn’t until Howard Schultz traveled to Italy and became fascinated with Italian Coffee bars, and sees the potential to develop a similar coffeehouse culture in Seattle. It wasn’t until the 1984 before Starbucks served its first Starbucks Cafe latte and...
Words: 658 - Pages: 3
...STARBUCKS COFFEE Hospitality Organizational Management I. History The history of Starbucks starts back in 1971 when the first store opened in Seattle, Washington. Jerry Baldwin, Zev Siegl and Gordon Bowker got the idea from Alfred Peet (of Peet's Coffee fame). The store initially sold just coffee beans and coffee making equipment rather than the drinks they have become so famous. After about 10 years, Howard Schultz was hired as Director of Retail Operations and came to the conclusion that they should be selling drinks rather than just beans and machines. He couldn't convince the owners, so he went his own way to start the Il Giornale chain of coffee bars in 1986. The next year, Baldwin and the others sold Starbucks to Schultz who then renamed his Il Giornale locations to Starbucks and quickly started to expand. After conquering Seattle, the chain spreads across the United States and then internationally. The first location outside of North America was in Tokyo and they still have a sizable presence in Japan today. Over the course of its history, Starbucks has bought or acquired companies like Peet's and Seattle's Best Coffee, and took over many locations of Coffee People and Diedrich Coffee stores. In the 1990s, Starbucks was offering stock options to employees and went public. Today, Starbucks has expanded to more than 17,000 stores in 55 countries around the world. Their biggest presence is still in the United States, with 11,000 locations. You can find a...
Words: 3852 - Pages: 16
...CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION Starbucks Reward Program has found a new way to connect with other customers such as creating an internet site where they can gather information about their rewards and points. Therefore; we will conduct more research about the rewards program that they have, and what will be the good benefits of it for their customers. We will show the kinds of rewards they have and its backgrounds. Thus, this can be a preference for the other Starbucks Patronisers if they still don’t know what other reward programs they can have and what will be the advantages and disadvantages of it. However, these rewards have some misfires that you will know. This study will only occur from August to October 2014. We will only gather first information from the questionnaires and interviews that we will conduct to provide the most accurate information and to prevent false information. Background of the Study Starbucks Reward Program encourages their customers to buy their products because of rewards. Reward programs of Starbucks were created to test the loyalty of their customers. There have been changes about their rewards to test the loyalty of the few. Starbucks Rewards Program also has the capability of giving their customers satisfaction by giving them back the gratitude for buying their products. The purpose of the study is to identify the credibility of the reward program of Starbucks Coffee. Rewards Program of Starbucks also allows customers to access or to track their...
Words: 10698 - Pages: 43
...of Startbucks Coffee By Trina Howell Q1. Why is the price of Starbucks coffee rising? Please explain. Answer: There are many factors to include when considering the economic reasoning behind Starbucks raising its prices. The company, in their news release stated that their costs are going up including energy and fuel, however there is much more to it than that. The coffee beans typically used by Starbucks are Arabica beans that are grown mainly in Brazil, Vietnam and Columbia, yet emerging growers on the Ivory Coast and Ethiopia are beginning to experience higher yield crops and quality beans. The rising cost of the green beans is largely due to a decrease in the available supply due to poor crop output which has driven the cost of Arabica beans to a 13 or 14 year high. While more affordable beans like the Robust beans are frequently more in demand causing their prices to rise considerably as well. Another contributing factor is Brazil’s response to higher global pricing for Arabica beans which has been to withhold crops to push the price of beans higher, resulting in supply and demand imbalances. Add to that the increases in fuel and energy prices and the supply and demand imbalances there, in which inevitability of increases in product prices on a global scale were bound to increase as well. The cost associated with distribution alone could be seen as reason enough for the increase. Q2. What will happen to the quantity of Starbucks coffee demanded, the...
Words: 802 - Pages: 4
... Introduction Starbucks has been leading the coffee shop market in more than 40 years now. It has always been the place to find the world's best coffees. Its first store was founded at Pike Place Market in Seattle, Washington, United States. It has given a positive outcome so they serve consumers all over the world. The success of Starbucks coffee had come this far because they expand their operation and services and didn't limit their products. They sell not just coffee but tea, pastries, frappuccino, beverages and smoothies as well. Starbucks is the largest coffee house company in the world ahead of UK rival Costa Coffee, with 22, 551 stores in 65 countries and territories, including 12, 739 in Canada, 1,117 in Japan and 830 in the United Kingdom. From Starbuck' founding in 1971 as Seattle coffee bean roaster and retailer, the company has expanded rapidly. Between 1987 and 2007, Starbucks opened on average two new stores every day. Starbucks had been profitable as a local company in Seattle in early 1980's but lost money on its late 1989's expansion into the Midwest and British Columbia. Its fortune did not reverse until the fiscal year of 1989-1990, when it registered a small profit of $812, 000. By the time it expanded into California in 1991 it had become it trendy. The first store outside the United States or Canada opened in Tokyo in 1996, and overseas stores now constitute almost one third of Starbucks' stores. The company planned to open a net...
Words: 9092 - Pages: 37
...Starbucks Coffee Executive Summary STARBUCKS COFFEE COMPANY EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Starbucks Coffee Company is North America's leading roaster and retailer of specialty coffees. Headquartered in Seattle, WA, Starbucks has 931 retails stores and 75 major airport locations. The Company's objective is to establish Starbucks as the most recognized and respected brand of coffee in the world. To achieve this goal, the Company will continue to rapidly expand its retail operations, grow its mail order and specialty sales operations, and selectively pursue other opportunities to leverage and grow the Starbucks brand through the introduction of new products and the development of new distribution channels. Employees are one of the most important resources to Starbucks. If the company is to prosper, the employees must be treated well. All employees are eligible for Starbucks' health care and benefits package, as well as a starting wage above the minimum. Starbucks' strong commitment to the environment is guided by an environment committee. The Company endeavors to offer an environmentally safe product, as it believes that the welfare of people, plant and product are linked. Starbucks prides itself on being a "good citizen" locally and in the various coffee producing countries. They make significant contributions to local charities that focus on children, the environment, the homeless, and AIDS research/support. Financially, Starbucks has had solid earnings and returns. While still in the...
Words: 8226 - Pages: 33
...1. INTRODUCTION OF STARBUCKS COFFEE The company, Starbucks Coffee was initially incorporated in the year 1971 by 3 entrepreneurs in Seattle where the business of the company is mainly selling whole bean coffee. Throughout the years of 1990s, Starbucks Coffee under the leadership of Howard Schultz, the company had expanded and growth rapidly with several efforts done. Starbucks coffee started its global expansion from year 1996 opening its first store outside of North America in Japan. Opening globally made Starbucks Coffee Company to record total net revenues of USD 9.8 billion for its business sales and operation. One of the Starbucks Coffee Company globally expansion market is Malaysia Food and Beverages Industry. Starbucks Coffee Company expanded to Malaysia in year 1998. The mode of entry of Starbucks Coffee Company to Malaysia expanding and operating its business through the mode of licensing. Berjaya Corporation Berhad is the company that obtained the license to operate Starbucks Coffee Company locally. Berjaya Starbucks Company Sdn. Bhd. Is formed and jointly owned by Starbucks Coffee International and Berjaya Corporation Berhad. Starbucks Coffee Malaysia opened its first store on 17th December, 1998 at KL Plaza Bintang, Kuala Lumpur. The business of Starbucks Coffee Malaysia basically are selling of espresso and coffee beverages, non-espresso and coffee beverages, coffee-related accessories and equipment, gift and merchandise, souvenirs, pastries and confessions...
Words: 4629 - Pages: 19
...Starbucks Coffee Executive Summary STARBUCKS COFFEE COMPANY EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Starbucks Coffee Company is North America's leading roaster and retailer of specialty coffees. Headquartered in Seattle, WA, Starbucks has 931 retails stores and 75 major airport locations. The Company's objective is to establish Starbucks as the most recognized and respected brand of coffee in the world. To achieve this goal, the Company will continue to rapidly expand its retail operations, grow its mail order and specialty sales operations, and selectively pursue other opportunities to leverage and grow the Starbucks brand through the introduction of new products and the development of new distribution channels. Employees are one of the most important resources to Starbucks. If the company is to prosper, the employees must be treated well. All employees are eligible for Starbucks' health care and benefits package, as well as a starting wage above the minimum. Starbucks' strong commitment to the environment is guided by an environment committee. The Company endeavors to offer an environmentally safe product, as it believes that the welfare of people, plant and product are linked. Starbucks prides itself on being a "good citizen" locally and in the various coffee producing countries. They make significant contributions to local charities that focus on children, the environment, the homeless, and AIDS research/support. Financially, Starbucks has had solid earnings and returns. While still...
Words: 321 - Pages: 2
...How Costa Coffee would benefit and create additional value for their coffee store clients by using elements of Starbucks marketing strategy? Contents Introduction 3 Coffee Market in the UK 3 Market Leading Coffee Shops in the UK 4 Costa Coffee 4 Identifying competition 6 Starbucks 6 Conclusions 8 Recommendations 9 References 11 Appendix 1 13 Appendix 2 14 Appendix 3 15 Introduction Competitive marketing strategy is described by Kotler and Armstrong (2012) as a strategy which positions company against competition giving it the strongest possible strategic advantage. I have chosen Costa Coffee as it currently is the market leader in terms of most coffee retail outlets in the United Kingdom as demonstrated on appendix 1. Kotler and Armstrong (2012) point out that competitor analysis includes assessing competitions objectives, strategies, strengths and weaknesses, reaction patterns and selecting which competitors to attack or avoid. For he purposes of this assignment, I have identified competition based on the market share and customer view. Competitive marketing strategy is selected on the basis of it creating further value for the customer. Blythe (2009) concludes that competitive advantage is the outcome of effective...
Words: 2664 - Pages: 11
...ANALYSIS FOR STARBUCKS COFFEE COMPANY Coursework in Business Environment Statement of originality We, the undersigned, declare that this coursework is our own original work. Student registration No: 101033 Signature: …………. 101047 Signature: …………. Program: Business Administration, Level 1 Lecturer: Prof. M. Malinowska The subject that we are going to focus on in the course work is a PESTEL Analysis on Starbucks Coffee Company. This analysis is aimed to familiarize the readers with the six types of factors that influence the activity of such a large and prosperous company as Starbucks. As we all know every business has its ups and downs but by taking into consideration what the influences are, better service and production could be achieved. The emphasis of this project is to discuss the major characteristics of a whole business and providing information about the way it functions. We will also talk about the reflection of Starbucks on the society all over the world. POLITICAL FACTORS Starbucks was established in Seattle, Washington, USA on March, 30, 1971. This is the largest coffeehouse in the world. Since the opening of the first Starbucks store, 30 years ago it becomes more and more popular. Till today Starbucks Co. owns 17,009 stores in 55 countries, which makes it one of the most popular places for a coffee drink. The following chart illustrates some of the countries where coffee stores...
Words: 2693 - Pages: 11