STARBUCKS
Strategic management
Starbuck Corporation: Analysis of its past and future
Today, the name of the Starbucks Corporation is synonymous with a rather corporate version of overpriced coffee. But the company originated with the intention of bringing a customized European coffeehouse experience to the United States. Starbucks began as a small chain of four coffeehouses in Seattle. The business partners asked Howard Shultz to assume the helm of the company as head of marketing as they prepared for expansion. "Schultz was struck by the business philosophy of the two partners. It was clear from their discussions that Starbucks stood not just for good coffee, but rather for the dark-roasted flavor profiles that the founders were passionate about. Top-quality, fresh-roasted, whole-bean coffee was the company's differentiating feature and a bedrock value" (Thompson & Hill 1998: 1). Starbucks focused on offering Americans a high-quality European coffee house experience they had previously been unable to have outside of major cities.
Schultz eventually bought Starbucks and pursued a policy of aggressive expansion. However, Starbucks never franchised its stores, to ensure that it could retain control over the quality of the product. It adapted a unique strategy of expansion called a 'hub and spoke' system, focusing on dominating cities, establishing demand and positive word-of-mouth for its product and then unfurling out into the suburbs (Thompson & Hill 1998: 3). Starbucks supersaturated the market, rationalizing that different consumers would patronize different 'types' of Starbucks,...
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