How The Local Competition Defeated A Global Brand
How The Local Competition Defeated A Global Brand
How The Local Competition Defeated A Global Brand
How the local competition defeated a global brand: The case of Starbucks
Paul G. Patterson *, Jane Scott, Mark D. Uncles
School of Marketing, Australian School of Business, University of NSW, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia
a r t i c l e
i n f o
Keywords:
Service brands
Service quality
Global branding
International business
Starbucks
Coffee
a b s t r a c t
The astounding growth and expansion of Starbucks is outlined, both on a global scale and within Australia. The focus then shifts to the abrupt closure of three-quarters of the Australian stores in mid 2008. Several reasons for these closures are described and examined, including that: Starbucks overestimated their
points of differentiation and the perceived value of their supplementary services; their service standards
declined; they ignored some golden rules of international marketing; they expanded too quickly and
forced themselves upon an unwilling public; they entered late into a highly competitive market; they
failed to communicate the brand; and their business model was unsustainable. Key lessons that may
go beyond the specics of the Starbucks case are the importance of: undertaking market research and
taking note of it; thinking globally but acting locally; establishing a differential advantage and then striving to sustain it; not losing sight of what makes a brand successful in the rst place; and the necessity of
having a sustainable business model.
2009 Australian and New Zealand Marketing Academy. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
1. Introduction
Shunned Starbucks in Aussie exit
1441-3582/$ - see front matter 2009 Australian and New Zealand Marketing Academy. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
doi:10.1016/j.ausmj.2009.10.001
42
Table 1
Starbucks share of the specialist coffee shop market in each major region.
Region
2002 (%)
2007 (%)
North America
Western Europe
Asia Pacic
Australasia
Latin America
44
17
15
6
0
62
21
19
7
18
Region
North America
Asia Pacic
Western Europe
Australasia
World
% of company sales
(revenue in $US)
79.0
13.3
6.7
1.1
80.5
10.8
7.7
1.0
100.0
100.0
Source: Percentage of company sales in each region is calculated from retail sales
within this market in 2006, with sales data drawn from Euromonitor (2007).
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$9.7 billion in income (Australian Bureau of Statistics, 2008). However, despite these statistics, the coffee business does not guarantee success. As Paul Irvine, co-founder of Gloria Jeans notes,
Australia is a tough retail market and coffee retailing is particularly tough. According to ofcial statistics, the caf business is
not always protable, with the net protability of cafs falling to
about 4%. For a caf to be successful, it has to offer marginally better coffee than local competitors, and do so consistently. Coffee
drinkers in Australia are discerning, and they will go out of their
way to purchase a good cup of coffee. They are not as easily persuaded as people from other countries simply to visit their nearest
caf. Secondly, for a caf to make a prot, it needs to turn over
15 kg of coffee a week. The national average is 11 kg, so a caf
has to be above average to begin with to even make a prot. Any
newcomer needs to understand this before entering the market.
The other signicant constraint on protability is the cost of hiring
baristas, with a good one costing between $1000 and $1500 a week
(Charles, 2007). However, it seems that this is a necessary cost in
order to deliver a superior product.
The question that then begs to be asked is: How well did Starbucks understand this existing coffee culture? Did they under-estimate the relational aspect of coffee purchasing in Australia, as well
as the importance of the quality of ingredients and the skills of the
person making each cup? Did they overestimate the value consumers attach to the in-store experience and the third place concept?
Or did they just look at the statistics regarding coffee consumption
and think that operating in Australia was a license to print money?
Did they simply see Australia as the next logical step to global
domination?
Starbucks has 87% of the US specialty coffee shop market, and
only now is it beginning to feel pressure from non-traditional competitors such as Dunkin Donut, 7 Eleven, McCaf and Krispy Kreme
(Burritt, 2007). However, in Australia, the competitive landscape is
different. Gloria Jeans dominates the high-street part of the coffee
retailing market and McCaf dominates the convenience end
(Shoebridge, 2008). Other signicant competitors include The Coffee Club and Wild Bean Caf (an add-on to BP petrol stations) and
Hudsons Coffee (see Table 3). All offer a similar in-store experience
to Starbucks, with McCaf from 2007 onwards refurbishing many
McDonalds stores to imitate the Starbucks experience, albeit at
the economy end of the market.
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Table 3
Competition in the Australian specialty coffee chain market (chains arranged in order of the number of stores operating in Australia).
Number of
stores in
Australia
Year
established in
Australia
Business model
Gloria Jeans
500
1996
Franchise
Regular
$3.25
McCaf
488
1993
Some store-owned,
some franchise
Small
$3.25
Coffee Club
220
1989
Franchise
Standard
$3.40
105
2004
Regular
$3.40
Hudsons
45
1998
Franchise
Small
$3.10
Starbucks
23
2000
Store-owned
Tall
$3.60
However, it seems that these measures were too late for the
Australian operation. On 29th July 2008, Starbucks announced that
it would be closing 61 of its 84 Australian stores (i.e., 73%) by August 2008, resulting in a loss of 685 jobs. All of these stores had
been under-performing (8 were in SA, ACT and Tasmania, 28 in
NSW, 17 in Victoria and 8 in Queensland). This decline of Starbucks
in Australia was not as sudden as many would have us believe and
in fact some reports (Edwards and Sainsbury, 2008; Shoebridge,
2008) indicated that by late 2007 Starbucks already had:
employees, for example, meant staff and baristas had less time to
engage with customers. It began to stray too far from its roots
and the very values upon which the brand was built.
Some of these actions were forced upon Starbucks by emerging
competitors seeking to imitate the brand, and thus gain a slice of
the ever growing lifestyle coffee market. Starbucks points of differentiation were systematically being eroded and, in a sense, the
brand that taught the world that coffee is not a commodity was itself becoming one.
6.2. Declining service quality
The brand has also come under re for declining customer service as it continued to expand. For example, the quality of baristas
is said to have declined as Starbucks widened its pool of applicants
in order to meet demand at new stores. Can a 17 year old high
school student really compete with a boutique trained barista with
a passion for coffee? By not offering a better experience and product than emerging direct competitors, Starbucks found itself
undermined by countless high street cafs and other chains that
were selling stronger brews at lower prices and often offering better or equal hospitality. Whilst they may have pioneered the idea
of a third place, it was an easy idea to copy, and even easier to better by offering superior coffee, ambience and service. Now, with so
many coffee chains around, Starbucks have little point of differentiation, even wi- internet access has become commonplace across
all types of caf. Furthermore, while customers were offered promotional rewards for returning to Starbucks, the card-based
scheme is no more sophisticated than equivalent me-too cards at
Gloria Jeans, Coffee Club, Hudsons and many independent cafs.
And as noted earlier, one of the things that set Starbucks apart
from the competition i.e., acknowledging customers (often by
name for regulars) within a few seconds of entering the store
and seriously engaging with them, began to unravel when Starbucks imposed both customer service and sales targets for its cafes.
The imposition of these targets plus an ever widening range and
complexity of coffees to remember and make to perfection, meant
staff morale and inevitably customer service levels declined. In fact
in the USA some staff were so disillusioned with the imposition of
sales targets (because it meant they simply didnt have time to engage with customers) they posted blogs openly stating that Starbucks had lost its way.
Finally, it appears that Starbucks were not even delivering on
their core promise of serving superior coffee in comfortable surroundings, thus justifying its premium price. By switching to vacuum packaged coffee, consumers are denied the store-lling
aroma of the coffee beans. The switching of traditional coffee machines to automated espresso machines (which can make coffees
40% faster and move customers through the lines more quickly),
has also resulted in a loss of theatre (Grove et al., 2000) for people
wanting to see their coffee made that way and has also had implications for taste. In-store, it has been noted that there are fewer
soft chairs and less carpeting, and Starbucks recently lost ground
in the service and surroundings category of the Brand Keys
2007 Customer Loyalty Engagement Index (Cebrzynski, 2008). It
seems that Starbucks is now less about the quality of the coffee,
and is more about the convenience of faster service and being on
every corner whilst still charging a premium.
6.3. Starbucks ignored some golden rules of international marketing
Ironically, it seems that the very thing that made Starbucks successful in the rst place, its ability to adjust the original (European)
business model and coffee tradition to local (US) conditions, is the
thing that let it down. Whilst Starbucks has made minor changes to
its menu in countries such as Japan and Saudi Arabia, it generally
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offers the same products all around the world. When the company
came to Australia, it brought its American offering, simply bringing what worked in the US and applying it here, without really
understanding the local market. But with more than 235 ethnicities speaking more than 270 languages and dialects, companies
wanting to get ahead in Australia need to be aware that they are
not dealing with one homogeneous market.
Unfortunately what worked in the US was bitter, weak coffee augmented by huge quantities of milk and sweet avoured syrups. Not
so much coffee, as hot coffee-based smoothies. For the Australian
consumer raised on a diet of real espresso, this was always going to
be a tough sell
(Mescall, 2008)
As McDonalds Australia chief executive Peter Bush noted, US retailers that have had trouble making it work in Australia (e.g., Starbucks, Dennys, Arbys, Taco Bell) are those that have introduced
formulae developed for US palates and for the US way of doing
business . . . These formulae have, at best, modest relevance in
Australia. Peter Irvine, co-founder of Gloria Jeans, also noted that
US retailers often arrive in Australia thinking the size of their overseas chains and the strength of their brands in other markets will
make it easy for them to crack the local market. Their focus is on
global domination rather than the needs of the local consumers.
Further, there is a strong sense in Australia of buying local, supporting the community, having relationships with the people you buy
from, and supporting ethically-minded businesses. Starbucks
clashed completely with that, whereas local stores can differentiate
themselves as being local and non-corporate. Furthermore, some
would argue that Starbucks has become a caricature of the
American way of life and many Australians reject that iconography.
Many are simply not interested in the super-size culture of the
extra-large cups, nor want to be associated with a product that is
constantly in the hands of movie stars.
6.4. Expanding too quickly and forcing themselves upon an unwilling
public
In the US, Starbucks started in Seattle as a single store. In a nation bereft of a genuine caf culture, that single store captured peoples imagination, and soon became a second store, quickly
followed by a third. Before long, Starbucks had become a demand-driven phenomenon, with everyone wanting a Starbucks in
their local area. McDonalds grew exactly the same way in Australia,
opening just one or two stores in each city nowhere near enough
to meet demand thus creating an almost articial scarcity, which
created huge buzz around the brand experience. Krispy Kreme did
the same.
But when Starbucks opened in Australia, they immediately tried
to impose themselves with multiple store openings in every city
adopting the US-model of expansion through store clusters. Australians were not given a chance to discover it. As Mescall
(2008) points out they took key sites, hung huge signs, made us
order coffee in sizes and gave the coffees weird names. Starbucks
said to us thats not how you drink coffee. This is how you drink
coffee. They took the Coca-Cola strategy of being available wherever people looked, but this quickly led to market saturation. Their
expansion did not hurt their competitors so much as themselves,
and they found themselves cannibalising their own stores. Furthermore, by becoming too common, the company violated the economic principles of cultural scarcity and the novelty wore off. By
having too many outlets, becoming too commercial and too widely
used, it began to lose its initial appeal of status and exclusivity. It
began to have a mass brand feel, certainly not the warm feeling
of a neighbourhood caf. Furthermore, they became more reliant
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also creates conict with the Starbucks ethos of the third place
(and allowing people to sit around for 30 minutes sipping lattes
and reading, talking or surng) versus the need to get people in
and out quickly and not take up valuable real estate (which in itself means that the average Starbucks store needs to be much bigger than the average caf).
Unlike most of the other retail coffee chains, Starbucks does not
use a franchise model, preferring to lease and t-out its own outlets. This means more cash is being spent upfront, and in Starbucks
case, more debt accrued. But adopting a franchise model would
have numerous other advantages than just minimising this. It
would mean that local investors, with a good sense of the local
market, put their own money into the business and take an active
role in running it and shaping its direction.
7. What are the main lessons from this case study?
Several key lessons emerge that should be of interest to both
domestic and international marketers.
7.1. Crossing international borders is risky and clearly Starbucks did
not do their homework, or ignored their homework
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