of the society in which it operates. Starbucks has been concerned with social responsibility in its overall corporate strategy basically since it was founded. Their strategy is largely due to Howard Shultz‚ one of Starbucks’ founder who has held job titles such as director of retail operations and marketing‚ chairman‚ and CEO. He once said‚ "We are not in the coffee business serving people‚ but in the people business serving coffee." Shultz and Starbucks realize that social responsibility cannot
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Jens Philip Therp Retail Marketing November 28th‚ 2012 Starbucks has been the leading retailer of specialty coffee since they opened up their first store in Seattle in 1971. Today Starbucks have over 17000 stores in more than 50 countries‚ all of them with a commitment to providing the highest quality coffee in the world. In the fiscal year 2011‚ Starbucks reported all time record net revenue of $11.7 billion. Starbucks is one of the strongest retail brands in the world‚ which makes them a
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21 January 2015 Customer Service Matters Introduction Organizations are complex collections of various groups working toward the same common goal. In order to create the effective use of limited resources and to focus on stated goal‚ organizations’ structures are established. The most common structure‚ Functional Structures‚ have 3-5 levels each with their own specific responsibility and expectation. The most commonly recognized levels include the following: Human Resources (Hiring employees
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2011 Starbucks Business Model Entrepreneurial Marketing Christi Gisca‚ Andy Negus‚ Charlotte Smith & Grace Waite Table of Contents 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Introduction .................................................................................................................................... 3 Background Analysis ....................................................................................................................... 3 Business Model Framework .............
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Bibliography: Bhaskar Chakravorti. (2010). Finding competitive advantage in adversity. Harvard Business Review 103-108. Prepared by: Abie89
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PayPal Merchant Services: Harvard Case Services Marketing Submitted by Introduction PayPal • Founded in December 1998‚ PayPal is a leading global online payment company. • Purchased by eBay in October 2002. • Over 100 million registered accounts globally and available in 55 markets. • PayPal has a local presence in 13 countries outside the US‚ including UK‚ Canada‚ Australia‚ Austria‚ Belgium‚France‚ Germany‚ Italy‚ Spain‚ Ireland‚ Netherlands‚Switzerland and China. • Supports
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January 6th‚ 2011 Expanding in the Danish market for the coffee shop chain industry – with Starbucks as an illustrative case Table of contents Figures of contents 5 Title sheet 8 1 Executive summary 9 2 Introduction – what is Starbucks? 10 2.1 Subject field 11 2.2 Problem and problem formulation 11 2.3 Project design 12 3 Methodology and theory of science 14 3.1.1 Three methodological views of Arbnor and Bjerke 14 3.1.1.1 The analytical view 15
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Social Media March 18‚ 2014 Social media is a new marketing tool for businesses to interact with their customers in ways that deepen the communication that was not possible before. In addition‚ it is a relatively inexpensive platform for an organization to implement marketing campaigns. Based on this platform‚ businesses become more transparent and consumers have the control of the marketing message. Pros: 1. Lower hard cost compared to traditional marketing‚ such as direct sales
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- 9 2.2 What is Customer Service 9 - 10 2.3 What does customer care really mean 10 - 15 2.4 Why Service excellence is important 15 - 17 2.5 Who really deliverers Customer Service 17 2.6 Why trust is important 17 - 18 2.7 Why do we measure customer satisfaction 18 2.8 Supermarkets and the customer service within the supermarkets 18 - 21 2.9 Tesco’s strategy to motivate their employees to offer excellent Customer service to their customers 22 2.10 Tips for
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03 Customer expectations of service L EARNING O BJECTIVES This chapter’s objectives are to: 1 Recognize that customers hold different types of expectations for service performance. 2 Discuss the sources of customer expectations of service‚ including those that are controllable and uncontrollable by marketers. 3 Acknowledge that the types and sources of expectations are similar for end consumers and business customers‚ for pure service and product-related service‚ for experienced customers and
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