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Starbucks' Midlife Crisis: The Coffee Giant can't Quite Accept Its Own Customers' Tastes (Columns) (Column)

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eBook details

  • Title: Starbucks' Midlife Crisis: The Coffee Giant can't Quite Accept Its Own Customers' Tastes (Columns) (Column)
  • Author : Greg Beato
  • Release Date : January 01, 2010
  • Genre: Reference,Books,Religion & Spirituality,Politics & Current Events,
  • Pages : * pages
  • Size : 55 KB

Description

LAST SUMMER in Seattle, Starbucks opened 15th Avenue and Tea, an unbranded cafe featuring "small batch coffees sourced from individually owned farms" and a variety of fussy brewing methods designed to appeal to those connoisseurs who believe a cup of $4 coffee ought to be at least as complicated to make as a Big Mac. Live music is provided by a small-batch indie rock piano band sourced from a tiny town in Wisconsin. There's an in-house "tea master" and occasional outbreaks of poetry. Starbucks is 39 years old now, and like a lot of 39-year-olds, especially those who've experienced great success in their salad years but are beginning to wonder if they've lost their touch, it's having a bit of an identity crisis. In 2008, Starbucks dosed 661 under-performing locations. In 2009 it shuttered an additional 300 stores and laid off 6,700 employees. In an attempt to position itself against newer, hipper rivals, the company started talking up its "heritage." It resurrected a less polished version of its logo for use in certain branding situations. Presumably, its coffee is still brewed from coffee beans, but everything else in its new stores seems to have made a radical career switch. The bar at a London Starbucks is upholstered with scraps from an Italian shoe factory. The countertop at the Paris Starbucks is made out of recycled cell phones.


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