Oh, Starbucks

OK, this has nothing to do with Windows or technology, but whatever. Being someone who was born and raised in New England, and thus privy to the charms of a little local coffee chain called Dunkin' Donuts, I've watched the Starbucks "phenomenon" occur over the past decade with a mixture of curiosity and disdain. I'm actually a big coffee guy, and while I've long since outgrown Dunkin' Donuts' watered down coffee variant thanks to way too much time spent in France (we literally make "coffee" in an espresso machine every day), I still feel that DD makes far more sense than Starbucks for most people, if only because it's more affordable.

But that's not why I'm writing this. I was reading "The New York Times" this morning on the Kindle (yes, still loving it and using it daily) and came across yet another article describing the Seattle coffee chain's recent financial woes. If you're not up on this, here's the short version: Starbucks, like Krispy Kreme, expanded too rapidly and is now starting to tank. So they're scaling back, etc. and promising to keep growing. If this sounds woefully like what Yahoo is going through right now, you've got the idea. They're in trouble.

So here's the thing. The article mentions some reasons why Starbucks is in trouble, including its move to automated coffee machines, which makes the place seem more like a fast food restaurant, and it's recent expansions into both food and merchandizing, especially music. What's amazing to me is that I don't feel that the Times or Starbucks actually understands what's wrong with the chain. Here's what I'm thinking.

Starbucks is not what it was supposed to be. Lost in the mists of time is that Starbucks was created to reproduce the Italian café experience in America. To my knowledge, they have never accurately done this. Most Starbucks chains bear absolutely no resemblance to any European café I've ever visited, and please trust me on this one: Going to cafés is a big part of my many trips to Europe. If Starbucks was like that, I'd be all over it. That's never been the case.

The coffee is too expensive to drink it every day. When Krispy Kreme expanded onto my home turf, I uttered the unusually prescient phrase, "New England will be Krispy Kreme's Viet-Nam." And it was, because people here buy $1 cups of coffee each and every day at DD, while the typical Krispy Kreme fan was all about the donuts. You can't eat donuts every day (at least not for long), but people are addicted to coffee. By the time Krispy Kreme figured this out, it was too late. Well, Starbucks suffers from the same problem, basically, except that in this case, you can substitute a $5 cup of coffee for the donut. Sorry, but that's unsustainable, and if one were to really look at their daily expenses, that would be one of the first things to go. DD was able to emulate Starbuck's espresso/latte-type drinks perfectly, and the chain now sells these drinks for half the price of Starbucks. Game over, at least where DD is common, or where local coffee shops can do it for less as well.

Automated coffee machines aren't the problem. Neither is the food. Most Americans would rather get identical coffee drinks quickly than wait while someone makes them by hand, so this is a non-issue (and one area where not exactly duplicating the Italian café experience actually makes sense, at least in this country). The food isn't an issue either: Many people will want at least a snack with coffee anyway, and, my God, have you had those breakfast sandwiches? They're actually quite good. The problem with Starbucks is that there's too much going on that's not café-related. The music stuff is over the top, often too loud, and the merchandizing in a typical Starbucks is disgusting. These stores have morphed from cafés into temples of consumption. We get it, Starbucks. You're trying to sell us stuff. Now back off.

They've botched the music thing. One of my happy places was the Starbucks in downtown Bellevue, Washington, a few minutes away (barring traffic) from the Microsoft campus in Redmond. This particular location featured a large seating area with huge booths and large, comfortable, living-room furniture. It was wonderful. And then they killed it: Apparently, Starbucks uses its Seattle-area stores as living experiments, so it changed this place into what is basically a Tower Records location that sells music. The comfortable and huge seats are gone, replaced by racks of CDs and listening posts. Guys, spare me: You sell coffee, not music. There's a reason Tower Records and all the other music chains are gone: They suck. They're loud, obnoxious, and unwelcoming. I can't believe they killed this place.

They don't get wireless at all. Though Starbucks was arguably a wireless pioneer, offering Wi-Fi access long before it was common, they haven't grown with the times at all. Why is this? Because Starbucks actually charges you for Wi-Fi access, rather than using that as an incentive to get people to hang out there and buy their actual product (which, remember, was coffee). Meanwhile, virtually every other coffee shop on earth offers free Wi-Fi. Guess which I prefer?

I have a penchant for nostalgia, yes, but I think the only thing that will "save" Starbucks is for the chain to look back to its original plan and make an Americanized Italian café that sells coffee and food in a comfortable and friendly location, along with free Wi-Fi and, yes, the occasional CD if necessary. There's no need for there to be two Starbucks at every intersection, however, and there's no reason why the company can't sell $1 cups of coffee in addition to the $5 stuff. (Apparently, they're actually testing this.) Automation is OK, because the soul of Starbucks is the experience. It's unclear why they don't get this.

Discuss this Article 13

Waethorn
on Jan 30, 2008
In Canada, there's several chains such as Williams', Timothy's, as well as the venerable Starbucks. None of them compare to Tim Horton's for the sake of mass consumption. Every day there are lineups at the Tim Horton's drive-thru's at numerous times throughout the day, not just at rush hour. That's just not so at the expensive chains. The only exception is that Starbucks is popular in Toronto, where Bay St. yuppy investors buy their $10 tea and $8 coffee. Whatever the reason, the popular fast-food-style atmosphere of Tim Horton's is what gets people in (and out) of the door in a hurry. ....and they DON'T have wireless internet access whatsoever.
DRWAM
on Jan 30, 2008
Paul, first sell them your avatar pic. It makes me want a coffee. DD is ubiquitous in my part of South jersey [but I was born and raised in Western PA]. The DD has better prices and service and choices than SB here. And, DD now has free WiFi. SB just 3 blocks away from the DD by my home is never crowded like DD, which usually has a line waiting. Also, the staff at DD remember me and the family, which is nice. [but I think that we stand out with 3 little girls all aroud the same age,a tiny blond wife and a big dark guy paying].
cesjr
on Jan 30, 2008
In my neighborhood, I normally still choose Starbucks. Why? The "cool" hangout style coffee places have less consistent product and service. Starbucks' coffee is consistently good and they can handle a large volume of customers much better. The parking is also better. I don't find the others noticeably cheaper, either. Starbucks should lower prices some, add free wi-fi and build some more hang-out style locations (although this is not possible everywhere because of high rent or limited space). Still, we're trying to cut down on Starbucks. If you have a few family members and everyone gets something, you can drop $25 bucks and up. My wife is baking more - lucky me - and we bought Nespresso machine that even makes lattes automatically with the press of one button. 50 cents a cup.
da-chief
on Jan 30, 2008
I gotta say here in the Chicagoland area, DD is not the place you want to go to. First off you need to bring your handy "DECODER RING" or something to translate whatever language is behind the counter or the window. DD here are all mixed with Baskin Robbins as well and they try to gear you to go through the drive through. There is "0" Wireless" up here and they are constantly trying to do things on the cheap. As for the sandwhiches, If you want to take the chance of Food poisoning.. Go get one.. They are not made fresh, and are nuked etc.. They are pre-made, all kept in a vat then nuked.. "Hmmmm "GREASE"... That being said.. I frequent the drive through almost every day taking the kids to school!! BUT if there was a Starbucks in my neighberhood,... I would probably go.. why? Because the coffee just "TASTES" better. Hmm Maybe after paying 5.00 for a cup every day though, DD would look good again.. ;-) D/C
joe-dokes
on Jan 30, 2008
I get decent coffee at a local gas station. 20 oz coffee and a muffin two bucks. four bucks for a cup of coffee is ridiculous, unless the girl serving it is topless. regards Joe
DRWAM
on Jan 31, 2008
Yep, I forgot that DD has Baskin Robbins now. Two DD's stopped making donuts late morning so my kids were unhappy to pick from the few left-overs. McD's now or will have have WiFi, but I am pretty sure that it's subscription based for a monthly fee. Comcast finance has something on SB. The headline link reads that they are closing 100 stores, but the article has nothing about that and states that they will be opening fewer in 2008. Here's the link: http://finance.comcast.net/www/news.html?x=http://www.comcast.net/data/n...
pthurrott
on Jan 31, 2008
As a quick follow-up, Starbucks today announced some changes, including... they're getting rid of the breakfast sandwiches (!) ... idiots. :) Ah well. http://www.nytimes.com/2008/01/31/business/31sbux.html?ref=todayspaper
Sir_timbit01
on Jan 31, 2008
I wonder if that's everywhere or only in the US. When I was in London last summer, Starbucks made for a cheap lunch from time to time. They had a wide variety of sandwiches...
lilserenity
on Jan 31, 2008
Wow, if we could get 20 fl oz cups of coffee and a muffin over here in England for the equivalent of £1 (£1 = $2 USD roughly of late) then well... Cost of living in the USA is definitely lower. I generally pay about $5 (£2.50) for just a good latte over here. As for Dunkin Donuts; I've had rather amusing experience of them in the US when I've been over that side of the pond. Unfortunately my 'cute' English accent was too much for the poor chap to understand when I was asking for croissants. It would seem I pronounce croissant much more like the French do (which I speak a little of) which totally threw him and the guy behind me until I pointed and said "THOSE!" :) Mind you, I don't think many Americans understood me half the time! As for Starbucks, I'd never go to one personally - their coffee send me for a fruit loop, and they are pretty much everywhere over here in the UK too.
lotsamystuff
on Feb 1, 2008
Paul, have you ever been to Europe? ;-) As much as it pains me to admit it, "Waethorn" is right. There's nothing in that compares to Tim Horton's. It's one Canadian export no town should be without.
lotsamystuff
on Feb 1, 2008
That should read: "there's nothing that compares..."
subzerohitman721
on Feb 3, 2008
Paul Starschmucks doesn't get it at all. There's a local Boba and Java in my town that charges no more than two dollars for coffee and other heated drinks. They also make a great smoothie for about 2.75 cents. We have free Wi-Fi on a Wireless G network. Buy a cup of joe or whatever, and you get 45 minutes of complimentary browsing on a desktop. There is a nice couch, plenty of chairs, places to play cards, places to play chess, and chairs outside. They have all kinds of snacks to enjoy. Simple but effective. Not greedy as hell. Even our local libraries has a java joints within. We get to piggyback off the wireless G network of the library even outside. Who needs Starschmucks when the alternatives are cheaper and do a lot more. I hope they go down in flames and somebody else buys the franchise.
poothedrew
on Feb 6, 2008
aaah Paul, you have reminded me of Paris and fantastic coffee EVERYWHERE... I became addicted to cafe creme's in the vending machines that are actually really good. Trying to quit smoking in Paris is quite the chore .. wow!

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