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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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 The company I would like to talk about is Starbucks. Restructuring: A company’s individual organizational structure is a formal composition of task and reporting relationships that allows the company to control‚ coordinate‚ and motivate employees so a common goal can be achieved (Bateman & Snell‚ 2009‚ p.505). Starbucks last structure is a matrix structure to maximize communication. It was implemented in 2008 to strengthen partnerships‚ and improve customer service. Starbucks
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STARBUCKS Identify company’s identity and image being communicating to its customers. Company - Mission statement: « Our mission: to inspire and nurture the human spirit – one person‚ one cup and one neighbourhood at a time » * The store is the biggest and leading coffee shop/retailer in the world‚ with over 16‚000 stores worldwide. The corporate identity is known worldwide. * The company is known for great coffee‚ lots of choices and being fast but not for cheap coffee With
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Starbucks Corporate Citizens of the World There is currently a robust and ongoing debate about whether a companies‚ especially a publicly traded companies‚ only goal should be profit. Making money for the shareholders used to be what business was about. Now‚ more and more people are starting to believe that companies should pay more attention to social and environmental concerns that effect not just the shareholders‚ but the stakeholders and even society as a whole. The practice of
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Higher Colleges of Technology Competitive Analysis Project Starbucks Vs Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf Prepared for: Debra Henderson Prepared by: 200321738 200221977 H00010608 Date: 22 March 2006 Table of contents 1 Introduction 1 2 Client Company “Starbucks” 1 2.1 Target Market 1 3 Competitor Company “The Coffee Bean and Tea Leaf” 1 4 Major Finding of Competitive Analysis
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Starbucks: Culture It is not so often that a coffee house gets to tell so much about culture. Think about a Russian coffee house that can tell foreigners about our lifestyle and our character‚ about things that are important to us in business and in personal relations‚ in gastronomical tastes and political affairs… I would not dare to name one. Yet when I think of American culture‚ I marvel at how interestingly it is reflected in Starbucks‚ the most famous and the largest coffee and coffee house
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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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Supervisory Starbucks Case Study Questions: 1) Starbucks’ employees can be seen as a formal team as opposed to an informal team. Differentiate between ‘formal’ and ‘informal’ teams. 2) The employees of Starbucks retail shops clearly work together well as a team. List four characteristics of teams that have ‘gelled’ together. 3) “… the numbers of employees are usually from three to six.” a. Why is the size of team an important factor? b. What are the benefits to Starbucks of having
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Alternatives Alternative #1 is to introduce existing products to new markets. Since Starbucks is already an established name‚ we know for a fact that people like drinking Starbucks coffee. However‚ cultural attitudes can be different around the world. This is an important fact since Starbucks is set on growing internationally. They will also face different reception to Starbucks image and taste. Statistics show that there is still a lot of opportunity to grow in current markets. These current markets
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