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Dark days for Starbucks: Job cuts and store closures

Posted Jul 02 2008, 01:31 AM by Anthony Mirhaydari
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Finally, some good news from Starbucks: the coffee-shop behemoth is closing 600 stores and cutting 12,000 jobs, roughly 7% of its global workforce.

This is a gutsy move for founder Howard Schultz, who just recently retook the helm with broad pronouncements of returning to roots and reigniting the "emotional attachment with customers" that has been lost over time. After all, Starbucks now has 16,226 locations, up from just 1,886 over the last 10 years. With operations in such faraway lands as Lebanon, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Indonesia, Argentina, and Romania, Starbucks' expansionist future once seemed boundless.  

Instead, Starbucks is discovering what it's like to be classified as a truly discretionary expense by customers who've not only checked out emotionally, but are rationally trying to negotiate a difficult economic environment. Whether this means packing around homebrews, stopping by Dunkin' Donuts and McDonald's, or hitting up the office coffee machine, formerly loyal consumers are deserting in droves.

Calling the $350 million in cuts the "most angst-ridden decision we have made," Schultz showed he's able to embrace unorthodoxy; which comes as a surprise to many who figured he was blinded by his prior successes. It seems, in what is a remarkable transformation for a man obsessed with the metaphysical qualities of his company, that nothing is sacrosanct.

Such creative destruction lies at the heart of healthy capitalism. Instead of spreading like a cancer across the globe, selling a disjointed mishmash of milky coffee, stuffed animals, CDs, books, and branded merchandise, Starbucks has been forced to reevaluate its existence.

A single-minded focus on coffee isn't the key: Indeed, the company is gearing up for the launch of a new cold drink with "a frozen smooth texture and fruit-, dairy-, and yogurt-based ingredients" as described by McAdams Wright Ragen analyst Dan Geiman. The new Italian drink, codenamed "Project Ferrari," will be launched in California this summer, and nationwide in 2009.

Even the story of the drink's origin is fascinating, if slightly disconcerting in its desperation. Within 48 hours of an associate calling it the next Frappuccino, Starbucks' corporate air force descended upon a small town in Italy. A deal was forged in a matter of weeks with a suddenly moneyed Italian.

Although the road ahead is unclear, and no doubt treacherous, Shultz seems reassuringly confident. In his words: "There's a piece of me that is embracing this underdog thing where people are counting us out, because they're going to be wrong. I promise you that. They're going to be wrong."

In the meantime, Dan Geiman is looking for earnings per share of 82 cents this year, down from 87 cents in 2007 on slower traffic and squeezed margins. Shares are trading at 19 times the estimate, inline with its competitors in the specialty eateries segment. Technically, shares are at a critical juncture: Any further fall would enter the abyss.

Previous posts:

A plan to rescue Starbucks

Free Wi-Fi at Starbucks starts today

Starbucks dumps T-Mobile for AT&T Wi-Fi

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

Comments

 

I tried Starbucks one time and the coffee was so bitter. I have no idea how they stayed in business as long as they have. The price they want for it is more expensive then a gallon of gas. So you decide....coffee or gas ?  Yep.. gas here to can go a lot futher on a gallon of gas then a cup of coffee.

Starbucks should  just close the licensed stores and focus on building stores where they are needed & wanted, instead of putting them on top of each other. BTW a Venti (large for those who do not know) cup of coffee is only $2, & is brewed FRESH EVERY 1/2 hour. How old is your cup?

Closing the ones inside other stores is not the answer. Those stores have little overhead and operate more profitably than the freestanding stores. And in response to Laura, I used to work at a Target SB, and yes the coffee buyers do love the coffee. I work with several people now that live and die by the taste of the daily house blend. The price is not the downfall, especially in this world that people will pay top dollar for things like coffee and water, but the oversaturation of their product. I personally do not like coffee, but I do love the blended creme drinks and hot chocolate.

Starbuck's coffee has always been bitterly overpriced and somewhat of a fashion statement.  Time to change the brew and lower the prices.  

I am glad to see Starbuck belly up. Who in america would support them when they didn't support our troops who are dying for the very freedom they have. 600 stores is not enough, come on americans show them they can't do that to our men at war. Stop buying thier coffee and go get it at a gas station for less.

Yeah, I agree, there are a certain number of lower cast individuals who Starbucks does not need patronizing its stores.  These "burrito brains" should go to McDonalds.  It means shorter lines for the rest of us at Starbucks!

That was a myth, don't believe everything you receive  via chain mail....

First of all I do not suppoert any company that refuses to support our troops.  We may not agree with the issues of the war but we still need to support our fighting elite.  I enjoy my freedom too much not to give them all of my support.  Second of all, you are crazy to pay $3 for a water, $5 and $6 for a coffee and then astronomical prices for muffins and cookies.  Starbucks deserves to just disappear entirely.  Too much ego and "get rich quick" going on.

With the economy the way it is or even if it was great, how would anyone in their right mind spend $5,6,7 dollars for a cup of " bitter jitter juice", it's a shame that the problem is not only with Starbucks but with everything in this country,,,,,we can't afford ourselves anymore. The concept of " if they are willing to pay it let's sock-it to them", has got to stop. We have no one to blame but ourselves, if we refuse to pay exorbinate prices , you'd see how fast the prices  would come down.

Good Riddance to Extremely Bad Coffee and Severely Overpriced Products, including the Coffee!!

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