GROUP ASSIGNMENT CASE STUDY: STARBUCKS ENTRY INTO CHINA TEAM MEMBERS: ANURAGINI MONAGRAN NEDA MOTTAGHI GOLSHAN NIK MOHD FAIZ B. NIK MOHAMED AMIN ALEYZAR BT. AZMI AIRIN NIZA BINTI ZA ’BA MR091179 MR091241 MR091271 MR091185 MR091200 PROF. ABDUL HAMID MOHAMED MARKETING MANAGEMENT MRC 2023 SEM II 2009/10 INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS SCHOOL UNIVERSITI TEKNOLOGI MALAYSIA STARBUCKS ENTRY INTO CHINA Table of Contents: 1. 2. 3. Introduction Executive Summary Situational Analysis 3-1. External Environmental
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1. What type of a business is Starbucks? Starbucks is a coffee retailer that owns its own outlets and provides licenses to outsiders to open outlets. At these outlets‚ they provide premium coffee and food products while bringing‚ "the idea of the French and Italian cafe into the busy North American lifestyle." Ironically‚ while the idea was to bring the French and Italian cafe concept to North America‚ they have -- through international expansion -- brought this to idea to countries across
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STARBUCKS CORPORATION Group members Abhimanyu Daga 02 Anusha Thakur 09 Bhumi Shah 16 Keshav Modi 23 Movit Ramwani 29 Niharika Sharma 35 Company background •The largest coffeehouse company in the world •16‚635 stores in 49 countries‚ including 11‚068 in the United States‚ nearly 1‚000 in Canada and more than 800 in Japan. •Sells various products from coffee to icecream •Markets products from mugs and tumblers to music and films •Expansion spree in the 1900’s and the first half of 2000’s •Overseas
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…………………………………………………………………………………………References Company Description Starbucks Corporation (SBUX) is a company specializing in the “coffeehouse experience”. Starbucks is named after the first mate in Herman Melville’s Moby Dick. The logo is also inspired by the sea – featuring a twin-tailed siren from Greek mythology. After being founded in 1971 as a single store in Seattle’s historic Pike Place Market‚ in 1987‚ Howard Schultz (Starbucks chairman‚ president and chief executive officer) purchased Starbucks with the help of local investors
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(Company Fact Sheet‚ 2011). The company has won many awards for advertising‚ packaging innovation and even had an outstanding turnout of tourists at the World of Coke Museum and headquarters in Atlanta. Economic‚ Social‚ and Political Force Effects Within the past 125 years many economic‚ social and political
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[STARBUCKS COMPANY] Introduction about Starbucks I knew about this company a long time ago but I just have drunk a kind Starbucks coffee once time last year when my sister bought it for me from American and I can’t forgot the taste of it. Starbucks is a famous brand of coffee and I understand why. That is the reason I decide to analyze this company- as a successful sample of marketing Starbucks Corporation is an American global coffee company based in Seattle‚ Washington. As
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|Starbucks: Leaderships | |MGMT 451 Fall 2011 Dr. Peter Geib | |Christelle Dominique Timothy Bjornson | |Yuchi Kawakami Zaklina Aguilar | Introduction Coffee has historically been a beverage that has significant cultural impact‚ as over coffee people would socialize and make important decisions. Nowadays the most well known coffee house that spreads from the Forbidden City to the colorful
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Starbucks Corporation Annual Report “Starbucks is the premier roaster and retailer of specialty coffee in the world. Starbuck’s goal is to become the leading retailer and brand of coffee in each of its target markets by selling the finest quality coffee and related products‚ and by providing each customer a unique Starbucks Experience. The company’s mission is to inspire and nurture the human spirit – one person‚ one cup and one neighborhood at a time” (H. Schultz‚ (CEO) Starbucks Corporation‚ 2010)
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Starbucks Systematic approach • Encapsulated‚ local approval‚ focus externally (society)‚ social‚ sociology‚ 1990s Understanding external environment 1. Remote and industry environment 2. Customers and markets PESTEL Typical change drivers 1. Homogenisation of customer needs and preferences across markets 2. Development of global supply‚ distribution and communication channels 3. Gain competitive advantage through economies of scale‚ supply chain improvements‚ sorucing lower costs
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CHAPTER 3 Interdependence and the Gains from Trade Microeconomics N. Gregory Mankiw Premium PowerPoint Slides by Ron Cronovich © 2009 South-Western‚ a part of Cengage Learning‚ all rights reserved PRINCIPLES OF In this chapter‚ look for the answers to these questions: Why do people – and nations – choose to be economically interdependent? How can trade make everyone better off? What is absolute advantage? What is comparative advantage? How are these concepts similar? How are they
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