Starbucks was founded by Jerry Baldwin‚ Zev Ziegler and Gordon Bowker in 1971 in Seattle‚ U.S.A. They named their company after Starbuck from the Moby Dick novel who was a coffee lover. Starbucks sold primarily whole bean Arabica coffee. They got their supply from Alfred Peet of Peet’s Coffee and were under the agreement that once Starbucks ’got too big‚ they would have to roast their own’. Their main focus was to sell a high quality cup of coffee. In 1984 Harold Schultz joined the company as a director
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(Luthans‚ 1998‚ p.422). Howard Schultz wasn’t the first person to be carried away by the aroma of a well-roasted coffee bean. But the Starbucks Coffee Co. leader was undoubtedly the first to turn that reverie into a billion dollar retail operation. "It took Schultz a year to convince the Starbucks owners to hire him. When they finally made him director of marketing and operations in 1982‚ he had another epiphany. This one occurred in Italy‚ when Schultz took note of the coffee bars that existed on
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related diversification and unrelated diversification. Starbucks is the largest coffeehouse company in the world; they not only sell coffee and coffee beans also sell other drinks‚ salads‚ sandwiches and snacks. Besides they bought the Hear Music Company and develop other business except coffee. Related diversification‚ occurs when a company develops beyond its present product and market whilst remaining in the same area. For example‚ Starbucks Corporation buys roasts whole bean coffees and sells
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external‚ customers. Moreover‚ Starbucks uses the bean stock to improve their operations through many decades. In the year 1991‚ Starbucks was the first U.S. privately owned coffee company in the history to offer stock options called “bean stock”. The current CEO of Starbucks is Howard Schultz‚ he replaced Jim Donald to turn Starbucks around from struggling in the coffee world and he is now currently focusing on the Internet projects for the company‚ also managing Starbucks with the stock-option called
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The writing discusses the journey of Starbucks’ early ages and the company’s current Chairman and CEO‚ Howard Schultz. The company was founded in 1971 by Gerald Baldwin‚ Gordon Bowker‚ and Zev Siegl with an initial investment of only $9000‚ with Schultz joining Starbucks in 1982 as its marketing chief. Despite being disencouraged by the initial founders of the company at first‚ Schultz was able to translate his ideas and thoughts into profit and mold Starbucks into the coffee bar with an atmosphere
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An Analysis of Starbucks Company History Starbucks was opened its first coffee company in Seattle’s Pike place Market on 1971. The name was taken from the first mate in Herman Melville’s Moby Dick (Company Profile‚ 2005). Products Beverages: Brewed coffees‚ Italian-style espresso‚ cold blended beverages‚ roasted whole bean coffees‚ tea products‚ fruit juice‚ sodas‚ and coffee liqueur. Food: Sandwich‚ Salads‚ pastries and ice creams. Non food items: Mugs‚ Travel tumblers
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Starbucks: Culture It is not so often that a coffee house gets to tell so much about culture. Think about a Russian coffee house that can tell foreigners about our lifestyle and our character‚ about things that are important to us in business and in personal relations‚ in gastronomical tastes and political affairs… I would not dare to name one. Yet when I think of American culture‚ I marvel at how interestingly it is reflected in Starbucks‚ the most famous and the largest coffee and coffee house
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dynasties‚ one small shop is in the midst of a brewing controversy‚ Starbucks‚ that poster child for American mass marketing and a growing number of Chinese want to banish it. The Forbidden City should preserve its uniqueness‚ says this woman. Ever since it opened more than 6 years ago‚ Starbucks has been a contentious presence in one of China’s most revered historical icons. In some of these symbols of western culture influence‚ Starbucks is just a tip of the iceberg. Do rub up against China’s nationalistic
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Marketing Management COMM 3045 A Crack in the Mug - Can Starbucks mend it? Case Study Prepared for: Professor Pat Gardner Group Members: Kim Denis Tomas Lee Xame Chan Paul Stevens Table of Contents 1. Executive Summary 3 2. Problem Statement 4 3. Company Objectives 4 4. Company Background 4 5. Analysis 5-7 5.1. SWOT Analysis 5 5.2. Market Analysis 6 5.3. Competitive Analysis 7 6. Key Factors 7-8 6.1. Key Opportunities 7
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To support the rapid expansion that Starbucks was making in their retail stores‚ they also made operational changes so as to keep the costs down. One of these was to reduce the time taken and to serve each customer and cost of training the baristas by replacing the older espresso machine (Marzocco) with a push-button Verismo models. While earlier‚ using the older model‚ the barista would talk to the customers while preparing the coffee‚ the new model blocked the view and hence removed the theatrical
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