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A plan to rescue Starbucks

Posted Apr 10 2008, 12:44 PM by Anthony Mirhaydari
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Pity Howard Shultz. Even after retaking the reins of his global latté-brewing behemoth, vowing to return the company to its roots and launching a six-point plan of attack, his Starbucks shares continue their sickening slide. With this week's launch of the new Pike Place Roast, he's now busily touting efforts to "reinvent brewed coffee across America." Unfortunately, brewed coffee isn’t exciting, and with a much lower-selling price than Starbucks' espresso-based drinks, its promotion will surely erode margins.

The other growth initiatives are similarly lackluster: New coffee machines, a customer rewards program, a stronger focus on environmental initiatives, and a dedicated web portal to accept new ideas from anyone who cares. The last smacks of desperation. So, being a native Seattleite, I feel obligated to offer a simple, four-point rescue plan:

1. Stop focusing exclusively on coffee: Yes, Starbucks needs to do everything it can to improve its image as a purveyor of premium coffee. The move towards pre-ground beans and automatic espresso makers left it vulnerable. This is especially true now that McDonald’s and others are offering vastly improved and in some cases superior coffee, mitigating the company’s claims to quality.

At this point, having the best beans around will only maintain the status quo for Starbucks as competitive pressures intensify and consumers reach their coffee-consumption limits. Before, in the company’s heyday, America was first being introduced to espresso-based drinks. Now, with some 15,000 stores in 44 countries, the point of saturation has been reached.     

2. Expand carefully: Wildly growing the store base under the reign of previous CEO Jim Donald was a surefire way to erode the brand and distract management. Back in 2006, when shares were trading near all-time highs, the company was opening five stores per day with a goal of getting to 30,000. To be sure, ego and hubris often drives blind empire building. But moving into supermarkets should’ve set off alarms for Howard, since he’s religiously preached the “third place” concept for Starbucks.

Thankfully, things are looking up here: Today Starbucks announced it will shut down 45 coffee stands within Save Mart and Lucky Supermarkets throughout California and Nevada. Until same-store sales growth can be reestablished, likely requiring significant capital investment in existing locations, domestic and international expansion plans should be shelved.

3. Embrace your new reality: Starbucks’ management harbors a romantic self-image tied to its early years. They still see themselves as a small indie coffee house where coffee connoisseurs meet up to talk progressive politics. As you know, Starbucks has grown far, far beyond that by all measures. It’s mainstream now, becoming the kind of place those connoisseurs shun for fear of mixing it up with commoners. Moreover, the last bastion of growth lies not in the tapped out urban areas Starbucks considers its roots, but in the ignored suburban fringes. 

4. Grow share of stomach: The key here is to really utilize the store base, which besides its brand is arguably Starbucks’ most valuable asset. After all, any joker with a coffee stand can sell drinks. Untold millions have been spent creating an environment of soothing music, comfy chairs, tables, and chic décor. Let’s put it to use by making Starbucks a total stomach destination -- that is, making it a destination not just for great coffee, but a great meal as well.

I’m not talking about stale pre-packaged foods. Small ovens, hot plates, and a little working station would allow baristas to sell custom Italian sandwiches, soups, fresh pastries, and baked deserts. It’s the reverse of the McCafé concept McDonald’s is wrongly pursuing. The difference here is that fast, convenient, high-quality gourmet food meshes with Starbucks’ vibe. It’ll also get those suburban customers out of the drive-thru and into the stores. I know Howard has a problem with food masking the aroma of coffee, but let’s get real: The coffee smell isn’t coming back, but a higher share price very well could.

Other voices:

New York Magazine's recent "How to Fix Starbucks" roundtable is worth checking out for other ideas.

BusinessWeek's Brand New Day ponders the implications of the Pike Place Roast promotion, and compares Starbucks to Obama.

Analyst Dan Geiman at Seattle-based McAdams Wright Ragen has a special place in his heart for the high-end Clover inverted French press coffee machine Starbucks plans to rollout: "We are quite familiar with the Clover, and agree that it produces extremely flavorful coffee. Based on our experiences, we would be surprised if it fails to develop a large, loyal following."

(Disclosure: I don't own any shares of the companies mentioned in this post.)

Comments

 

A bailout from Congress would also help!!

They need to focus, not expand their product line.  You can't be all things to all people, but you can focus on one thing, coffee.  Plus, having stores right across the street from each other may be ok in a high traffic area, but come on, I see starbucks doing this all over the place.  Reminds me of 12 years ago when mcdonalds express came around and mcdonalds was across the street from mcdonalds.  Of course same store sales go down.

I suggest dropping the tip jars. Starbucks started this goofy idea of tipping for counter service (they don't even bring it to your table).  Now you feel like if you don't tip the barrista, they will spit in your cup!  I'll take McDonalds no tip policy anyday.

Too strong, too expensive, grande? NOT! Not giving the customer enough for their bucks. Times are hard for most people; loosiing therir homes, gas, employment. You have to know the cost is driving customers to Dunkin, 7-11 and McDonalds. You want t be competitive...join the ranks. Lets see:

approx.--Starbucks $4.50, Dunkin $1.50, McDonalds $1.25, 7-11, 99 cent to $1.99. Keep in mind the ones with the least cost, actually taste better. Now you do the math!

My personal opinion is that the HYPE is over!!!  What is so spectacular about waiting in line to pay $5.00 for a  cup of java?  I have never did it and never will.  Starbucks need to reconsider who the real star is, and what limits the spending of their bucks.  Or better yet.... have George W bail them out of trouble since he is behind this terrible economy.

I reside in Buford GA.  Starbucks had one store on Buford Highway.  They built another store about 1/2 mile from the original and now have two on Buford Hwy less than a mile apart on the same side of the road.  This guy just expanded too much too quickly.  Now he is paying the price.  I also notice their whole bean coffee sold in Kroger stores is now a penny away from $10.00 for 12 oz.  I bought my last bag of Starbucks at Kroger until he brings the price back to a reasonable level.  I can buy Kroger Premiium brand coffee (12 oz) for $5.79.  And their coffee is as good or better than Starbuck's.

First, a cup of coffee (tall) at Starbucks in my town is $1.62, not $5.00.  Those $5.00 coffee's are the various high-caloire coffee mikshakes, with lots of sweetner, that people who don't like coffee drink.  That is a market that is being hit hard by the recession.  Second, McD's coffee is only good compared to the brown water they used to sell. The idea that I am going to go sit in McDonalds and relax over a cup of coffee is absurd.  Third, contrary to a previous posting, what Starbucks has backed away from over the years is truly bold coffee flavors.  Why because the "average" coffee drinker still thinks tepid brown water is coffee.

Coffee is too bitter but iced tea is wonderful and very affordable.  The pasteries keep me coming back and would love to see upscale "healthy" sandwiches.  Fast food is not an option, but with the classy feel of "Starbucks" a turkey on wheat would go lovely with a Vente Iced Tea!

I'm a Starbucks lover.  I think the coffee is great.  I get a venti carmel mocha all the time -yes $4.35 is a bit for a coffee but even the regular coffee is good.  I have talked to alot of people that think it is bitter, but they have not explored beyond folgers and maxwell house types.  I prefer carribbean blends that have a bolder taste with a strong aroma-I guess until you encounter different flavors from around the world you stick with what you know.  I see it as an aquired  taste like wine drinking.   Bonus-  they have a drive thru in my suburb.  

Personally, I love Starbucks coffee.  I live in Tacoma (near Seattle) and have enjoyed it for years.  I would agree that comfortable stores not a stand in a grocery store are part of the answer.  I also agree that too much diversity takes from the main point, good coffee!  Everything changes, takes trial and error to find an even place.  I bet my money on Starbucks and their creative genius to make a place in the market for years to come.

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