Ralston O. Lewis MKT-651 Starbuck’s Case Study Cornerstone University 12/11/2014 Introduction Just before the market went into trouble in 2007‚ Starbucks was facing its own trouble‚ as the company had two quarters of flat growth in the store sales‚ experiencing its first decline in the fourth quarter. The increased gas prices affected the coffee chain and its competitors. Howard Schultz‚ former CEO of Starbucks from 1987 to 2000‚ was called back to aid with the restoration of the coffee chain. The
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To support the rapid expansion that Starbucks was making in their retail stores‚ they also made operational changes so as to keep the costs down. One of these was to reduce the time taken and to serve each customer and cost of training the baristas by replacing the older espresso machine (Marzocco) with a push-button Verismo models. While earlier‚ using the older model‚ the barista would talk to the customers while preparing the coffee‚ the new model blocked the view and hence removed the theatrical
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Running a Starbucks Sarabeth J. Techau MGT 330 Prof. Sherry Phelan October 15‚ 2012 Running a Starbucks There are many responsibilities when running a Starbucks. There are the customers that come first and the employees that serve them. One must divide duties and responsibilities between employees. The company needs an effective leadership structure to manage their employees. To become successful there must also be contingency plans for potential issues. A manager of a Starbucks franchise
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considered to be the “legitimate authority?” The government would be the first to call themselves “legitimate authority”. Can major groups within a nation call themselves authority? Can the people of a nation call themselves authority? If that was the case then anybody can declare war or genocide. Number two in the just war theory states that “There must be a just cause for going to war”. A government‚ an organization‚ and the people themselves can find many reasons for going to war or starting genocide
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Strategic Financial Management University of Phoenix Finance for Managerial Decision Making / FIN 554 Professor Greg Garay January 17‚ 2006 Table of Contents Abstract 3 Strategic Financial Management ..4 Working Capital Management .4 The Kmart Corporation Debacle ..5 Long-Term and Short-Term Strategies .. 6 Financial Performance
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1. What factors accounted for Starbucks’ extraordinary success in the early 1990’s? What was so compelling about the Starbucks’ value proposition? What brand image did Starbucks develop during this period? Is the value proposition still valid in 2002? The extraordinary success Starbucks experienced during the early 1990s resulted from Howard Schultz’s passion and vision to create a coffee culture in the United States similar to the coffee culture he experienced while traveling to Italy. Schultz’s
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COMPETITOR OF STARBUCKS There are the known international company that become the competitor for the Starbucks. There are: Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf The endurance and popularity of The Bean‚ as it is affectionately referred to by devotees‚ can be attributed to the high standards that were established from the beginning. From trend-setting drinks like the World Famous Ice Blended‚ to the employees who become a part of the communities they work in‚ The Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf ® has discovered the formula
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THE STARBUCKS EXPERIENCE An Impacting Journey towards Globalization 1. An Insight to the Starbucks Company: ➢ Formed in 1971 ➢ Current position- 12‚440 + stores across 37 countries ➢ Average is more than 35 million customers per week ➢ Loyal patrons visit 18 or more times a month ➢ If you invested $10‚000 in 1992‚ it would have resulted in an income of $6‚50‚000 by 2007-08 ➢ Value of leading company’s since 1992- S&P= 200% rise‚ Dow= 230% rise
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Starbuck’s FDI 1. Initially Starbucks expanded internationally by licensing its format to foreign operators. It soon became disenchanted with this strategy. Why? When Starbucks started its international expansion in Japan‚ it initially decided to license. As it is known licensing is "the method of foreign operation whereby a firm in one country agrees to permit a company in another country to use the manufacturing‚ processing‚ trademark‚ know-how or some other skill provided by the licensor"[1]
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STARBUCKS IN CHINA Marketing in the host country Before entering China‚ Starbucks decided to invest in market research to analyze the best approach to reach the Chinese market by entering joint with local companies in different regions across the country which allowed a direct access to the consumer for market research purposes. Several interesting findings were made regarding market behavior in China; first of all China is a tea-based consumption market so to generate acceptance to the Starbucks
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