Copyright © 2003 Thunderbird‚ The American Graduate School of International Management. All rights reserved. This case was prepared by Professors Michael Moffett and Kannan Ramaswamy for the purpose of classroom discussion only‚ and not to indicate either effective or ineffective management. This case draws upon information presented in “Planet Starbucks (A)” by the same authors. Planet Starbucks (B): Caffeinating the World Ten years ago‚ we had 125 stores and 2000 employees. [Today‚] we have 60‚000
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CASE STUDY 1: STARBUCKS: SELLING COFFEE IN THE LAND OF TEA Starbucks has been doing business in China since 1999 when they opened their first coffee shop in Beijing. Today‚ hundreds of Starbucks stores sell coffee in the land of tea‚ including one at the Great Wall. It has become one of the most popular brands among the country’s 20 – 40-year-old upwardly mobile Chinese‚ or “Chuppies”‚ as they’re called‚ but so far China accounts for only about 10 percent of Starbucks’ sales. Nevertheless‚ Chairman
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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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Frame the issue. Discuss the advantages and limitations of optimal portfolio allocation. HMC defined their Policy Portfolio to correspond to their benchmark‚ according to the modern portfolio theory (Markowitz‚ 1952)‚ whose goal is to minimize the variance for a given return. The main advantage of the optimal portfolio allocation lies in its ability to provide weights on how to invest a given amount of money based on a few inputs. Optimal portfolio allocation is easy to implement‚ yet it faces
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III) Starbucks : An Inter- Cultural Company •Diversity = Inclusion + Equality + Accessibility Inclusion : human connection and engagement Equity : fairness and justice Accessibility : ease of use and barrier free The company wide diversity focuses on four areas : The Partners (employees)‚ Starbucks seek out and engage partners who are as diverse as the communities they serve‚ focusing on Partner development by educating and engaging
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| Starbucks | Coffee Bean | S. (Strength) | * It is a profitable organization * It is a global coffee brand built upon a reputation for fine products and service. * It has the honor of the Fortune Top 100 Companies to Work for in 2005. * It has strong ethical values and ethical mission statement. | * Company’s marketing strategy * Company’s franchise practice * Intelligence of leader * Company’s business strategy * Outstanding quality of input and output * Experience
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BA 530 Employee Retention and Company Success Starbucks believes that the compensation paid to executive officers should be closely aligned with the performance of the company on both a short-term and a long-term basis‚ and that such compensation will assist the company in attracting and retaining key executives‚ which is critical to long-term success. Thus‚ compensation for executive officers consists of three components: annual base salary‚ annual incentive bonus‚ and long-term incentive
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Contents Introduction1 Fundamental Analysis1 Prospect Analysis3 Financial Analysis4 Investment Analysis4 Operating Policy7 Conclusion8 Appendix Introduction Ocean Carrier Inc. owned and operated cape-size dry bulk carriers worldwide. Major Cargo type is iron ore and coal. Vessel sizes are 80‚000 DWT to 210‚000 DWT. Cape-size carriers travel around Cape Horn rather than the Panama Canal due to size constraints. The cargo operations include maintenance‚ repairs‚ insurance‚ supplying of
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Based on the details portrayed to me‚ the issue is whether or not Starbucks should buy fair trade coffee‚ as pressure and accusations from NGO Global exchange to do so has presented Starbucks with this challenge. Failure to respond cooperatively to this demand may have negative outcomes- a national boycott‚ which can ultimately harm Starbucks’ corporate image. There are a few risks associated with the fair trade movement; however‚ the benefits of sourcing fair trade are greater in terms of long-term
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Case 2: Starbucks | The coffee Goes Cold | | | | | 11/3/2013 | | INDEX 1. STATE OF THE ART 3 2. STARBUCKS MISSION‚ VISION AND VALUES. EVOLUTION 4 3. ANALYSIS OF THE EXTERNAL ENVIRONMENT: PESTEL AND PORTER’S 5 FORCES MODEL. KSF’S 6 4. STARBUCKS R&C 11 5. CONCRETE STRATEGIC DECISIONS AFTER SCHULTZ COMES BACK 14 1. STATE OF THE ART The Starbucks company born from the idea of Alfred Peet‚ after that‚ Jerry Baldwin‚ Zev Siegel and the writer Gordon Bowker
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