I chose to complete the social brand inventory on the Starbucks Corporation. Starbucks’s logo and only symbol is an image of a siren, a two-tailed mermaid. Starbucks does not have one positioning statement, but varying slogans by product or marketing campaign. Six popular slogans include “It’s not just coffee. It’s Starbucks”, “Life happens over coffee”; “Coffee is Culinary”, “Let’s Merry”, “Starbucks DoubleShot. Bring on the day”, and “Starbucks Frappuccino. Work can wait.” Competitive Social Media Analysis
Starbucks direct competitors include Dunkin’ Donuts, Krispy Kreme, Caribou Coffee, and Tim Hortons. Starbucks indirectly competes with McDonalds, grocery stores, and Keurig. Dunkin’ Donuts, its major competitor, utilizes Facebook,
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The firm has the 35.6 million Facebook likes, 8.4 million Twitter followers, 4.8 million Instagram fans, 3.78 million Google+ followers, 188K Pinterest followers, and 77K YouTube subscribers. Consumers who participate in the company owned social media platforms receive specials and discounts posted on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram. The posts on the social sites create an environment where coffee lovers can be social about their Starbuck’s experience. Every social media website provides the same tone, look and feel that a consumer receives in store. Starbucks utilizes its social media for market research, to increase brand awareness and recognition, to enhance customer service, to decrease marketing costs, and for easy disbursement of content.
Starbucks’ My Starbucks Idea is a social community in which consumers and employees can provide ideas and innovations to improve products, services, and or customer experience. My Starbucks Idea encourages crowdsourcing by allowing customers and workers to share their thoughts and ideas openly. The crowdsourcing from this site and participation within the other social sites produces valuable market research the
Finally, this report will identify recomendations for Starbucks to minimze future loss and to compete with major competitors like McCafe and Gloria Jeans Coffee.
Starbucks Financial Analysis Company Overview Starbucks is the world’s largest specialty coffee retailer, with more than 16,000 retail outlets in more than 35 countries. Starbucks owns more than 8,500 of its outlets, while licensees and franchisees operate more than 6,500 units worldwide, primarily in shopping centers and airports. The outlets offer coffee drinks and food items such as pastries and confections, as well as roasted beans, coffee accessories, teas and a line of compact discs. The company also owns the Seattle's Best Coffee and Torrefazione Italia coffee brands. In addition, Starbucks markets its coffee through grocery stores and licenses its brand for other food and beverage products.
In 2002, unexpected findings of a market research showed problems regarding customer satisfaction and brand meaning for Starbucks customers. The situation was unacceptable for a company whose overall objective is to build the most recognized and respected brand in the world. Starbucks was supposed to represent a new and different place where any man would relax and enjoy quality time, alone or with others. But the market research showed that in the mind of the consumers, Starbucks brand is viewed as corporative, trying to expand endlessly and looking to make lots of money. This huge gap between customers' perception and Starbucks' values and goals called for immediate action.
Foreign policy with foreign nations that host the Starbucks brand. Import and export tax is an expenditure that may and can become costly and profits can be lost. Other companies like McDonalds, Dunkin Donuts, and the Coffee Beanery provide consumers with an ambient environment and some specialty coffee flavors. Proximity may be the only thing required for the consumer to select the services of the rival coffee dispensing businesses.
Nithin Geereddy. 2013. Strategic Analysis of Starbucks Corporation. [ONLINE] Available at:http://scholar.harvard.edu/files/nithingeereddy/files/starbucks_case_analysis.pdf. [Accessed 18 April 14]
Starbucks not only shapes a defined importance on its product, the coffee, but also the relationships on its partners, its customers and its shareholders to create diversity, “to create a place where each of us can be ourselves” (Starbucks Coffee), to treat all related partners with dignity and respect at the greatest corporate level. In this sense, Starbucks involves its customers, its neighbors and is shareholders to participate in the community to “be a force for positive action—bringing together [its] partners, customers, and the community to contribute every day (Starbucks Coffee).
In addition to being best-known supplier of the finest coffee and promising only the highest quality products, Starbucks emphasizes firm values, provides guidelines to enhance employee self-esteem. This is to ensure continued customer satisfaction. Moreover, diversity has become a priority to providing an inviting environment to all consumers. Starbucks continues to abide by a strict, slow growth policy in which they set out to dominate a market before moving on to expand, thus history has shown this strategy to be successful for Starbucks, making them one the fastest growing companies nationwide.
As mention earlier Starbucks has many opportunities of which it can take advantage. These include a joint venture with McDonald’s, where the restaurant giant would supply its customers with Starbucks coffee. Another is the bottled Frappuccino product that Pepsi and Starbucks have created. This has had a very positive response in the test markets and posses to be a lucrative option. Starbucks could also look at the vertical integration possibility of producing its own beans. This could prove to be very successful if they can capture a significant amount of the production they could become a price setter in the coffee commodities. Also because small coffee retail outlets are so trendy it is possible for them to set ...
Overall, how satisfied are you , with [PRODUCT/SERVICE]? Please answer using the rating scale where (5) means "extremely satisfied" and (1) means "very unsatisfied."
Visit Starbucks.com and you enter a virtual world of delight. Consumers can “sample” over 30 blends of coffee; find Starbucks coffeehouse locations, or learn about Starbucks Hear Music®, where customers can “burn personalized CDs, use listening stations to explore musical recommendations, enjoy a handcrafted Starbucks® beverage, or surf the web at (a) T-Mobile Wi-Fi enabled coffee bar” (Starbucks, 2008). Starbucks uses their website to communicate with their consumers about their company’s mission, social responsibility, business ethnic and compliance, diversity relations and press releases. Consumers can even read about the latest “rumor responses” that Starbucks wants to clarify about misinformation regarding the company. From the “click” of a button you can shop for Starbucks merchandise or check the balance on your Starbucks Card, the Starbucks website has got their customers needs in mind.
One could argue that this could be imitated by competitors but it also is very costly. Another strategy is their strategic alliances and acquisitions such as Teavana (Tea), Bay Breads, Evolution Fresh, and many more. Their acquisition strategy has known to be very horizontal. This gives Starbucks the ability to effectively leverage their cornerstone product differentiation strategies by offering a premium product mix of the highest quality beverages and snacks. Starbucks’ goal is to provide each and every customer with a unique “Starbucks Experience” excellent customer service, and well maintained stores which in turn translates to a high degree of customer loyalty. Its HRM value-based approach is for building strong internal and external relationships with suppliers which helps its deployment to international markets, horizontal integration, and organic expansion across the world. Starbucks is known for its high knowledge employees. Human capital is the main asset for most companies and they are provided with great benefits, stock options, retirement accounts, and competitive pay. Good human capital translates into great customer service. I talked to my friends about working at Starbucks and they both said it
Starbucks is an international coffee house and it was created in 1971 when they opened the first store in Seattle, Newcastle. Currently, they own 21,000 stores in 65 different countries of the world, and their passion for the great coffee, excellent service and community interaction exceeds cultures and languages (Starbucks, 2014). This company is the number 1 brand coffeehouse chain in the world due to the best roaster, marketer and seller of speciality coffee. Its main slogan: “Our mission: to inspire and nurture the human spirit – one person, one cup and one neighbourhood at a time” (Jurevicius, 2013).
When I saw this discussion, I couldn’t help but think of Starbucks and the impact they’ve made throughout their 45 years of establishment. I worked with them for about 7 years and saw how unique they were from your everyday coffee and latte spots. A retail company with thousands of coffee shops in the US as well as in other countries, this particular retailer has been able to catch the eyes of all ages as well as locations throughout the world. For example, today college students utilize Starbucks locations to study rather than go to a nearby library. Starbucks is also known for its best coffee and espresso drinks (Latte or Frappuccino) and with one of its delicious espresso 's any student or just a person stopping in to enjoy its lounge area where there is free Wi-Fi is awesome! Starbucks lifecycle has made a 360 turn around and been revamped twice to accommodated the growing market. Customizing their brand to fit more in with everything and not just one thing. By doing this they’ve created multiple product lifecycles within their own lifecycle as a corporate company.
The threats facing Starbucks include trademark infringements and increased competition from local cafes and specialization of other coffeehouse chains, and the saturation of the markets in developed economies, and supply disruptions. Furthermore, the increasing prices of its inputs such as dairy products and coffee beans pose a threat