MANAGEMENT MID TERM EXAM STARBUCKS CASE STUDY PROF. DIANA DERVAL October 21‚ 2010 Authored by: STUDENT MARKETING MANAGEMENT MID TERM EXAM TABLE OF CONTENTS ......................................................... ERROR! BOOKMARK NOT DEFINED. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY ....................................................... ERROR! BOOKMARK NOT DEFINED. PERSONAS VISITING STARBUCK USA ................................................................................ 3 STARBUCKS POSITIONING MAP ..
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___ % | Contents Part One Introduction 3 Part Two External Analysis 4 2.1 Brief overview of the company 4 2.2 Starbucks a global corporation 5 2.3 Environmental opportunities and constraints on the company 5 2.3 PESTEL Macro level analysis 5 Political factors 5 Economic factors 6 Social factors 6 2.4 Micro level analysis 7 2.4.1 Industry life cycle analysis 7 2.4.2 Porters five force analysis 7 Treat from rival firms 8 Treat of new Entrants 8 Treat of Substitute
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Porter’s Five Forces Analysis of Starbucks Although Starbucks may currently be considered the king of coffee‚ the company is continually mitigating the potential threats in its fierce competitive environment. With regard to Starbucks’ existing rivals‚ the company faces little competition in the upscale coffee shop industry with its biggest competitor being Panera Bread Company. The true threat from existing competition comes from other coffee beverage retailers such as Dunkin’ Donuts‚ Krispy Kreme
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1. Based on the case‚ “Planet Starbucks” answer the following questions: (a) How does Starbucks’ strategy of expanding overseas create value for the company’s shareholders?(10points) The global expansion creates value because Starbucks as a company heavily invests in its own employees‚ providing stock options and medical benefits to part time employees. By moving on a global market Starbucks is able to establish a worldwide brand and thus more locations. This allows the company to gain more
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Case One: Starbucks Even with the “No. 1 Best Coffee” Award from Zagat’s Survey of National Chain Restaurants as well as numerous other awards and recognition under their belt‚ Starbucks remains vulnerable to the ever-changing‚ ever-demanding needs of their customers (Starbucks Company Recognition). In order to succeed in the service industry‚ companies must provide impeccable customer service in addition to rewarding their customers through programs and promotional strategies. Currently‚ Starbucks
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Starbucks Case Report EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Founded in 1971‚ Starbucks was one of the wildly successful global brands in the world. The vision of Starbucks was coffee culture as community‚ the Third Place between work and home‚ where friends can share the experience and gourmet coffee. After going public in 1992‚ Starbucks’ strong financial performance and rapid growth made it a heated growth stock. Its growth was propelled by swift expansion in the number of stores‚ not only in the United States
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Starbucks Case Study I. Problem Statement Starbucks has recently lost its brand image as a neighborhood coffee-shop experience. By offering breakfast‚ lunch and other food items‚ they have increased short-term profitability at the expense of maintaining the ‘Starbucks experience’ and long-term competitive distinction. II. Situational Analysis 1. Current Financial/Market Numbers STOCK PERFORMANCE SELECTED YEAR-END ADJUSTED CLOSE SHARE / INDEX PRICES2002-2007 (ADJUSTED FOR DIVIDENDS
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Starbucks Video Case 1. Describe the coffee industry prior to the creation of Starbucks. How did Starbucks change the product and create the specialty coffee sector? Starbucks opened its first store in 1971 and prior to that the coffee industry was different. Before Starbucks there were virtually no independent coffee shops. While coffee was cheap at around 50 cents a cup the quality was also cheap. Coffee was canned‚ tasted terrible and there was no such thing as gourmet coffee. However Starbucks
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Conner A Intro to Business 3/26/2013 Case Study Consumer Behavior in the Coffee Industry Did you know one franchise alone dominated an entire payment-processing market in just one year? You might have heard of this giant company by the name Starbucks. Howard Schultz‚ CEO of Starbucks‚ had a significant role in the company’s growth. Starbucks has steadily dominated the coffee market and has even extended to being
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When the announcement was made in mid 2008 that Starbucks would be closing nearly three-quarters of its 84 Australian stores there was mixed reaction. Some people were shocked‚ others were triumphant. Journalists used every pun in the book to create a sensational headline‚ and it seemed everyone had a theory as to what went wrong. This case outlines the astounding growth and expansion of the Starbucks brand worldwide‚ including to Australia. It then shifts focus to describe the extent of the store
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