Hasan Mohammad Starbucks Ltd. Principles of Marketing Assignment 1 09 November 2004 I. Company History Three Seattle entrepreneurs started the Starbucks Corporation in 1971the name comes from Herman Melville ’s Moby Dick. Their prime product was the selling of whole bean coffee in one Seattle store. By 1982‚ this business had grown tremendously into five stores selling the coffee beans‚ a roasting facility‚ and a wholesale business for local restaurants. Howard Schultz‚ a marketer
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next large group that Starbucks targets. They bring in about 40% ofStarbucks’ sales and Starbucks "positions itself as a place college students can hang out‚ study‚ write papers‚ and meet people." They appeal to this group through the growth of technology and innovative ideas. The young adult group grows at about 4.6% each year. 3. The last group which are apart of Starbucks’ target market are kids and teens‚ ages 13-17. This group accounts for about 2% of Starbucks’ sales but lots of items
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Strengths Strong brand image Starbucks is a global brand. High quality products and a consistently-positive consumer experience have helped the company build a strong brand image. Starbucks‚ for instance‚ was ranked 91st in the 100 Top Brands 2006 ranking of BusinessWeek and Interbrand‚ an international branding consulting firm. The BusinessWeek-Interbrand combine valued the Starbucks brand at $3‚099 million in 2006‚ up from $2‚576 million in 2005. Starbucks uses innovative and cost effective
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This document reviews the strategy of Starbucks. Here is a SWOT analysis of Starbucks: Strengths: • Renowned organisation • Dominance- change of logo but consumers still recognising the company • Very powerful brand in the coffee industry • Worldwide stores- ability to capture key locations with many stores in close proximity • Strong ethical values • Has the lowest staff turnover in the industry • Offers other products • Stores are in visible places • Market leader- highest share
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Starbucks in the global taste Thirty years ago Starbucks was a single store in Seattle’s Pike Place Market selling premium roasted coffee. Today it is a global roaster and retailer of coffee with more than 7‚600 retail stores‚ some 2‚000 of which are to be found in thirty-four countries outside the United States. Starbucks set out on its current course in the 1980s when the company’s director of marketing‚ Howard Schultz‚ came back from a trip to Italy enchanted with the Italian coffeehouse experience
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STARBUCK in JAPAN [pic] PLAN - Introduction + Video - Presentation de la Team + Nos objectives - Concept STARBUCKS - Timeline (general + Japon) - PESTEL - Hofstede –Monochronic –comparaison Jap/USA - How STARBUCKS enterred in Japan ? Strategy Joint Venture. - Export/ Supply Process (Map) - 5porter’s Forces - Brand Pyramid - SWOT - Competition + Mapping - Marketing MIX (Product/Price/ Promotion/
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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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Business case studies ‘Creating a winning marketing mix’. Available from www.thetimes100.co.uk The article discusses how JD sports‚ the Britain’s leading sportswear retailer uses the ‘4Ps’ to outgrow itself. 4Ps includes ‘product’‚ a good or service’s function and feature. JD works with suppliers worldwide to create their own-brand products. ‘Price’ can be the money that costs to manufacture or create the products. It can also be the profit that products bring. JD buys a large volume of stock‚ so the
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PROBLEM-1 Prof. Hardtack gave four Friday quizzes last semester in his 10 student senior tax accounting class. Find the mean‚ standard deviation and coefficient of variation for each quiz. a) How do these data sets differ in terms of Central Tendency and Dispersion? b) Briefly describe and compare student performance on each quiz. Quiz 60 60 60 60 71 73 74 75 88 99 1 Quiz 65 65 65 65 70 74 79 79 79 79 2 Quiz 66 67 70 71 72 72 74 74 95 99 3 Quiz 10 49 70 80 85 88 90 93 97 98 4 PROBLEM 2 • •
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Marketing mix is a mix of options and variables that a marketer has to design his proposition. The four Ps‚ as they are known‚ of the marketing mix are Product‚ Price‚ Place and Promotion. Marketers mix these ingredients and variables in different proportions for their products in order to meet their requirements within their given constraints and boundaries. Marketing mix covers the four major elements and variables that a marketer has and can manipulate in order to design his offering according
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