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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

 

Their coffe is too bitter and strong. Much less the $1.75 for a small cup.

The major problem I have with Starbucks is the transition toward morons for baristas that has occurred since I first started patronizing the stores.  It is quite evident that very few, if any of them are coffee enthusiasts.  In my opinion, that is why the coffee is often bitter and undrinkable.  They don't care how the coffee tastes, just get it out there.  Maybe if Starbucks would get an energy drink on the menu, they would have more interest.

Solution?  Get some older folks who really enjoy coffee for baristas and let the current crew go to a rock concert.

I am a flight attendant and Starbucks is my first stop of the morning.  I feel the biggest problem is customer service.  At nearly every airport the Starbucks staff are rude and to get them to say "thank you or your welcome" is like pulling teeth.  My goal is to force one out of the employee daily!  I also agree the prices are too high.  

I am a stockholder in Starbucks and agree they need to take action. I also think the price of a cup of coffee should come down some. I will stick with Starbucks stock, but I am hoping that the management gets their act together.

I PERSONALLY THINK STARBUCKS MESSED UP BIG TIME WHEN THEY REFUSE TO SEND COFFEE TO OUR TROOPS.  IT'S AMAZING HOW SOME PEOPLE ARE JUST FINDING THIS OUT AND HAS STOPPED VISITING STARBUCKS.  I DON'T CARE IF YOU DO NOT SUPPORT WAR, THESE ARE HUMAN BEINGS THAT DECIDED TO HELP OTHERS INCLUDING POSSIBLY YOURSELVES FROM BEING ATTACKED IN THE FUTURE.  SO, QUIT TRYING TO BE SO POLITICALLY CORRECT AND GET SMART.  THIS WAS NOT A DRAFT.  THESE MEN AND WOMEN DECIDED TO DO THIS THEIRSELVES.

I refused to set foot into Starbucks when they refused to send coffee products to our troops because they were against the war.  Whether or not you are for the war or against it, you shouldn't take it out on the honorable men and women of our country by refusing to send products to them.  When they started this practice, I refused to give them my money and went elsewhere.  There are some other companies that have this same practice and I refuse to spend my money there either.

I was watching the CBS report about their "new" brew coffee yesterday and the complete 180 the CEO has done on sending their coffee overseas to our troops which leads me to believe that they must be really hurting financially to make this drastic of a change in policy.

Nevertheless, unless they lower their prices substantially, I will continue to go other places for my coffee products.  I'm not going to pay for "designer coffee."

The issue is and always will be the cost. This person, Art Ruth hit it on the head. bottom line is cost...people are not just willing to spend $3.00 to $ 4.00 for a cup of coffee; gee not when a cup of coffee cost as much as a gallon of gas!  Recently a local Starbuck died in our area..interestingly they were located no more then 30 yardfs from a Dunkin Donuts..doesn't take a genuis to figure out why Starbuck was failing. Starbuck does have the unique atmospher, nice coffee house, meeting place air...they should work around that and make the place more affordable. Loved all the other comments, they are all right there...listen to the people Starbucks. BOBBY B.

I think starbuck should go back to the way they were when they first went public, it was affordable and I looked forward to going almost everyday. They even bought out the Coffee People chain that provided excellent pasteries and coffee based milkshakes. If Starbucks continues on this road they are going to lose alot of their customers.

I hope Starbuck's does go belly up.  During the 9-11 tragedy, they actually charged police and firefighters for a cup of their crap.  GOOD RIDDENCE!!!!!!

Retrain your baristas again!!! They still dont know how to make a frothy latte. Your baristas DO NOT know how to bring milk up to 180 dgrees. Stop over roasting

your coffee beans. Take a lesson from DUTCH BROTHERS COFFEE. Srarbucks is totally overrated and over priced.

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