2013 GROUP 6 2013 GROUP 6 STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT TROY UNIVERSITY TROY UNIVERSITY STARBUCK CASE ANALYSIS STARBUCK CASE ANALYSIS Instructor: Min Carter‚ Ph.D. Instructor: Min Carter‚ Ph.D. LY NGOC HUY TRAN QUOC HUY HOANG VAN VINH TON KHANH PHUONG VU NGUYEN TRAM ANH LY NGOC HUY TRAN QUOC HUY HOANG VAN VINH TON KHANH PHUONG VU NGUYEN TRAM ANH Saigon‚ May 20‚ 2013 Saigon‚ May 20‚ 2013 TABLE OF CONTENTS I. INTRODUCTION 1 II.
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Scoring Starbucks: A Balance Scorecard AnalysisUniversity of Maryland University CollegeDMBA 620October 17‚ 2014Executive Summary I signed a non-disclosure agreement with my current firm. I am unable to speak to the operations‚ strategy‚ and performance of the Fannie Mae. For this reason I have chosen Starbucks to analyze. Starbucks is an organization that has a wide moat. The Balance Scorecard as created by Norton and Porter focuses on several areas‚ which include the following: Financial Perspective
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SUPPLEMENT Embracing Corporate and Boardroom Diversity IN ASSOCIATION WITH I n today’s globally inter-connected world‚ companies are finding that having a diverse board of directors is as critical to business strategy as revenue and productivity goals. It’s not just a gesture–it’s smart business. But embracing diversity means more than meeting a quota or hanging a plaque promoting diversity values in the halls of corporate headquarters. Diversity must be integrated throughout the organization from
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Marketing Objectives Sales objective: to increase sales by 12% in the next 2 years by opening 150 new Starbucks retail locations within Canada. Profit objective: to increase profit by 8% in the next 2 years by not competing on price. Starbucks should differentiate themselves in other ways‚ whether giving superior value or reducing prices will only waste effort‚ time and emotional costs. Market share: to increase market share from 24% to 30% by 2015 by introducing an extension of a product
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To help Starbucks on its way to successfully reach the supply chain goals they redefined and changed their distribution and warehousing strategy too. In March 2011 Starbucks signed the agreement with Green Mountain Coffee Roasters to distribute Starbucks coffee and teas for Keurig single-serving systems (2) Green Mountain Coffee Roasters owns the biggest distribution network for the single-serving systems in North America and Starbucks was able to increase their stock prices significantly after
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Katie Decker Starbucks Culture The world-wide craze known as Starbucks that has swept the nations had a very humble beginning. 1971‚ deep in the Seattle’s Pike Place markets‚ a small store was set up for roasting and retailing whole bean and ground coffee‚ tea and spices. Starbucks’ name was inspired by Moby Dick’s character in remembrance of the romance of the seas and early coffee trading traditions. This inspiration comes from the actual history of coffee‚ dating all the way back to the fifteenth
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Background of Starbucks In 1970s‚ Starbucks opens first store in Seattle’s Pike Place Market. The name comes from Herman Melville’s Moby Dick‚ a classic American novel about the 19th century whaling industry. The seafaring name seems appropriate for a store that imports the world’s finest coffees to the cold‚ thirsty people of Seattle. In 1980s‚ Howard Schultz joins Starbucks as director of retail operations and marketing. Starbucks begins providing coffee to fine restaurants and espresso bars
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| |Starbucks is a multinational coffeehouse chain based in USA‚ with thousands of stores across 40 countries. Howard Schultz‚ who led the | |purchase of Seattle-based Starbucks Coffee in 1987 for $250‚000‚ later boasted‚ “Starbucks is going to be a global brand‚ in the same | |genre as Coke and Disney.” By 2003‚ Starbucks has grown from 15 stores and 100 employees in 1987 to more than 65‚000 employees serving
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Social Responsibility & Starbucks BAMMC – BA Thesis May‚ 2012 Corporate Social Responsibility – A case study of Starbucks’ CSR communication through its corporate website Bachelor Thesis in Marketing and Management Communication Sanne Sanne Bruhn-Hansen CPR: XXXXXX-XXXX Supervisor: Tomasz A. Fediuk No. of characters: Thesis: 54‚329 Abstract: 3‚492 Page 1 of 42 Sanne Bruhn-Hansen Supervisor: Tomasz A. Fediuk Corporate Social Responsibility & Starbucks BAMMC – BA Thesis
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coffee fanatics – Gerald Baldwin‚ Gordon Bowker and Ziev Siegel founded Starbucks in Seattle‚ Washington (Moon & Quelch‚ 2006). Howard Schultz‚ who is now the CEO‚ joined the marketing team. He made a trip to Italy and became obsessed with the idea of how people were drinking coffee in the cafes. A few years later Howard Schultz bought Starbucks from the three founders and started to expand the coffee brand. Starbucks is the leader in the coffee industry and is one of the most recognized brands
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