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The 'Anti-Starbucks' Starbucks
There's a joke going around that Starbucks has so saturated the coffee market that it is now opening new Starbucks stores inside its old stores.
Well, not quite — not yet — but the corporate coffee colossus is presently trying to expand through an equally bizarre marketing strategy: By disowning its globally ubiquitous brand name.
With Starbucks' sales declining as more and more caffeine consumers reject the cookie-cutter corporate climate that the chain epitomizes, it is launching a new line of stores that disappears its name. There's no corporate signage on the new buildings, no logo stamped on every product inside and none of the generically bland ambience that makes one Starbucks just like the other 16,000 in the chain.
Instead, the new shops strive to be the anti-Starbucks, dressing up as funky neighborhood coffeehouses with a cool, local vibe. A sort of rustic, thrift-shop decor screens the corporate presence, and such additions as live music and poetry readings are meant to lend an aura of down-home authenticity.
The first of these faux local outlets opened last month in Seattle under the nom de commerce of "15th Avenue Coffee and Tea," taken from the name of its neighborhood. Future stores are also expected to appropriate the names of their neighborhoods all across the country in a corporate effort to convey a sense of belonging. The idea, as explained by the chain's senior vice president of global design, is to give each of the coffeehouses "a community personality."
What we have here, of course, is a willful attempt to commit consumer fraud. But it's such a goofy fraud that it's doomed to be an embarrassing failure.
Start with the fact that genuine neighborhood coffee shops genuinely have a "community personality." It's not something that can be faked or "given," much less replicated into a chain of 16,000 outlets.
Indeed, one of the things you'll notice about a real community place is that its organizational chart rarely includes a "senior vice president of global design."Corporate chains can't do "community," can't do "funky," can't do "cool," can't do "independent" — because they're not. They're not any of those things.
In fact, Starbucks revealed just how inherently un-cool it is when it first began developing this absurdist chain of manufactured "authenticity." Since its entire corporate culture is rooted in the numbing homogeneity that one writer has dubbed "Generica," the company had no experience or expertise in authenticity. So, top executives surreptitiously deployed a gaggle of market researchers to snoop around a couple of popular local coffee houses in Seattle. Their mission: to find out what constitutes "community personality" — and steal one.
Starbucks' snoops were not exactly subtle. Rather than entering the small shops inconspicuously, they would arrive as a group, crowding out real customers as they poked around and jotted notes in folders labeled, "Observation." Having gotten what they wanted, the whole gaggle would then depart, without even having had the courtesy of buying a single cup of coffee!
Starbucks is what it is. It can hide its name from us (at least for a while), but it can't hide its essence. The corporate nature will always out.
Instead of masquerading as a loveable independent, a more productive (and more honest) marketing strategy for Starbucks might have revealed itself at one of its branches near my home in Austin, Texas. This store sets side-by-side with that of another national chain, and the signs on the adjacent buildings make the two corporations appear to be functioning in symbiotic partnership: "Starbucks Coffee-Jiffy Lube."
I think there's a certain poetic integrity somewhere in that juxtaposition. Maybe the message is that either place will do a job on you.
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55 Comments so far
Show AllHow pathetic.
Every Starbucks is not exactly like every other Starbucks..check out the shops at the Beaches in Toronto or the one near the Kew Gardens RR station or the one in the Old harbor of Chania, Crete.
And very few places in NYC allow anyone to use their restrooms...and very few coffee shops subsidize health care for part time employees ....
Big companies when still run by their founders can be benevolent employers....as Kodak once was when George Eastman ran it and as the Wegmans family owned and managed supermarket chain is today.
A lot of this Starbucks bashing is just kneejerk ignorance. In the rustbelt town in which I live, Starbucks is the brightest spot on the mouldering main drag of our nabe...
Bless Starbucks and Howard Schultz!
Starbucks loves people like you who are willing to pay $32 a gallon for burnt coffee...
Well, in my rustbelt town, we have real mom-and-pop coffee houses in nearly all of the "nabes". And with a smoking ordnance finally in place, Starbucks only edge - that it was non-smoking, is gone.
And just in case we are in the same rustbelt town, I hope you aren't referring to Liberty Avenue in Bloomfield as a "mouldering main drag"...
"Sam Buck's" was the name of a coffee house here in Astoria, Oregon. Sam Buck is the owner's real name. She was sued by Starbucks and forced to change the name of her business because her name sounds too much like Satrbucks! She went out of business. Don't know if this was a factor or not.
Knee jerk ignorance, eh?
F&*% Starbucks and Howard Schultz!
Starbucks a bright spot? I really feel sorry for you. What a meaningless and shallow life it must be.
Now with Starbucks on your main drag, add Wal-Mart, Apelbees, Bed Bath and Beyond, McDonalds, etc. that must be down-right Utopia.
Why bother going to Starbucks or any coffee store at all? Why not buy yourself some coffee seeds, grind them, and make your own coffee? Healthy coffee for less.
I don't even drink coffee. Caffeine doesn't affect me, so I'm not going to waste my money buying a drink that has no value for me.
You don't drink coffee? What could replace coffee?
A shower and breakfast wakes me up just fine.
Um, I didn't know that robots drink coffee. LOL ! :)
I can't tell you just how much difference I felt every morning going coffee free. Caffeine is known to have some side effects. I remember one of my former apartment neighbors having a heart attack all of a sudden and he used to be a full blown coffee addict. If anything, coffee actually devalues one's health. I stick to protein shakes in the morning or grass fed milk and get along fine every morning. Even today, I didn't need any coffee to get me through a really long day. :)
Grass fed milk...*drool*
I do usually have a cup or two of hot tea at work though, but for the health benefits, and to keep my blood pressure under control. I start my day off with 3 hours of Glenn Beck, and I need whatever I can get. It doesn't make me more alert in any way.
Tea isn't so bad. Grass fed milk has more OMEGA 3 than the regular milk found in most supermarkets. I always think that having enough great sources of OMEGA 3 would make more of us immune to all that rightwing trash talk. :)
Well it's too expensive for me to drink every day...but perhaps I could get it from the farmer's market on weekends to go along with the breakfast I cook on weekends too...and soon, everything in that breakfast will be from the farmer's market: organic whole wheat flour for my pancakes, organic blueberries for the pancakes, organic cage-free eggs, an organic sliced pan-fried potato, and then the organic grass fed free-range milk, and maybe the butter and honey for cooking too. All of it probably no more than a couple hours' drive away. How cool is that?
A friend of my cousin who lives in Washington DC says she goes to MOM's Organic store which she says is somewhere in the DC area.
www.myorganicmarket.com
They say that store sells a lot of what Whole Foods sells but cheaper.
I just checked their location, 40 miles away...no-go for me.
Not even bus or metro? Sigh. :(
No worries, the few things I get from Whole Foods...cereal, peanut butter, tomato sauce, chips, stuff like that, is cheap enough. And there's one 2 blocks away from where I work, it's very easy to go there before getting on the bus to go home.
Caffeine sets off migraine auras for me.
Caffeine also has beneficial effects. Same with coffee, which contains other substances that have beneficial effects.
The so called negative effects of coffee have long been grossly overrated, dating back to when coffee was first introduced into the Arab world.
I found an interesting take on coffee and hangovers.
"the bottom line is that, despite the appeal of being able to stay up all night and drink, all evidence points to serious risks associated with caffeine-alcohol combinations."
check out the full article here: http://everythingbutthecoffee.net/discussions.asp?id=34
This guy has a pretty cool blog going about Starbuck's and all that surrounds it. He takes a in-depth look into the psychological and sociological issues that surround the brand with in the blog and his book, "Everything But the Coffee". I just started reading the book the other day and I'm finding it to be really interesting so far! Take a look for yourself: http://everythingbutthecoffee.net/
Exactly! Something I've been doing for years. Even neighbors like to "bug" me for a cup of my coffee!
The point of going to a coffee shop, a cafe, isn't just to drink coffee, just as one does not go to a bar or a pub just to drink alcoholic drinks.
I agree with you on the get togethers. Didn't think of that earlier.
I have never understood the attraction of a Starbucks, or why everyone seems to want to go there. The coffee is expensive, there is no ambiance, and the corporate structure has always pretended to be something that it isn't -- worker-friendly.
I support community based coffee shops, and now that I know, I will be careful to not patronize new shops until I know who the owner is.
Starbucks has already "diversified" almost twenty years ago by buying up or launching smaller coffee chains like Seattle's Best Coffee...
So when they are across the street from each other, customers think they have a choice...
This helped to drive many of the local independent coffee shops out of business, by intentionally opening up shops next door to existing coffee shops... Starbucks operates new branches at a loss until they drive out their competition...
Now they are trying to coopt the "image" of hip & local after undermining many local coffee shops... Corporate imperialism at it's best...
And they will most likely open up those next door to the few remaining independent coffee shops to steal their market share as well...
The sad thing is that there have been many start-up corporate chains that have followed the Starbucks biz model as well...
Like Tully's, which has the same corporate feel as Starbucks...
and Cafe Vita, which isn't publicly traded, but is still spreading like a virus into every neighborhood and other cities too...
Come and visit Fredericksburg, VA - We have a wonderful coffee house downtown called Hyperion Espresso. It's a delightful gathering place here in our college (Mary Washington University) town. The coffee shop offers a wide variety of home brewed coffees as well as delectable home-made doughnuts and coffee cakes. It's always a busy place and its inviting aroma wafts out onto the street every time the door opens. You'll find people of all ages there - college students working on homework/papers, business people taking a much needed break, senior citizens chatting and laughing, and tourists who can't resist the relaxing atmosphere. Our local Starbucks doesn't do half the business that Hyperion does! You'll enjoy a lot of other unique stores and sights in our downtown area as well!
Yes, Virginia does have it's small pockets of progressive thinking around some of it's Unis. While more a health-food diner-restaurant and ice cream shop than just a coffee house, Gillies in Blacksburg - open since at least 1970, comes to mind.
I've never been to downtown Fredricksburg, but, like other Virginia fall-line citiies I've always liked the way you have some very sporting whitewater right in town. The Rappahannock is especially a nice, undammed, clear-running river we had many exciting times on in my boy scout days.
Another difference between Starfucks and independent coffee shops are the community boards, zines, alternative press, flyers advertising local events and shows, bookshelves full of donated literature, etc. That are conspicuously absent from Starbucks... And they won't let you flyer or circulate petitions or referendum either... Which are some of the main reasons for hanging out in a coffee shop...
I haven't bought their coffee since they took the nipples of the mermaid in their logo.
I went to a Starbucks once and before buying a cup of coffee I asked if WiFi was available and was told "Yes." So, I buy a $5 cup of coffee and a $5 dollar muffin, sit down and after several attempts to sign-on to the Internet asked for some help. Then I learned that if I did not have T-Mobile, I could not get the Internet. That was several years ago, so maybe they have changed. Anyway, the moral to the story is this: I have not been into a Starbucks since then!
Boycott Starbucks!
Howard Schultz, the CEO and primary shareholder of Starbucks is not only an ardent (and financial) supporter of the Israeli settlements and the IDF, but has also supported anti-Palestinian propaganda organizations bent on demonizing Palestinians.
Used to be you could network at the local bar about local politics.
Now coffee shops are back! I think it's great, but the thought police are watching carefully. If they had their way, anyone drinking more than two cups would be arrested!
Better off to drink alone at home watching TV if they had their way.
"Used to be you could network at the local bar about local politics."
Ever heard of Drinking Liberally? I got involved in local politics back in school after attending a few get togethers at a local brewery. Most people probably aren't very progressive compared to us, but who knows, you might sway some Obama supporters :-)
In my town, with perhaps one exception I can think of, bar patrons are a distinctly conservative bunch - and with a bar on every corner, that is a lot of conservatives.
That blows.
Is that what they mean by re-branding? Aren't Republicans trying to do the same thing?
as an austinite i am always on the lookout for that neighborhood coffee shop that fosters an atmosphere concussive to poetry reading (and writing) and or live music. however, the juxtaposition of jeffy lube and coffee shop holds no attraction for me.
"You will be assimilated. Resistance is futile."
You forgot an important part.
"Your culture will adapt to service us."
If you can't join 'em, beat 'em?
When I lived in Dallas, before Starbucks turned up the self-replication machine full force, I had at least five favorite genuine single copy neighborhood coffee houses. It wasn't until I moved back to San Antonio that episodes of the Simpsons started depicting people walking down the street and passing two Starbucks on every block.
Now I wonder if Starbucks affected all those great coffee places in Dallas. Starbucks offerings are not cheap. There is one on the block where I work, but I'm just realizing that San Antonio doesn't really have the coffee house culture. Hmmm.
Starbucks is a symptom of unfettered capitalism. In a regulated capitalism, Starbucks would get into a lot of trouble for turning out to be a ruthless predator ala Walmart. Starbucks would be better off renaming itself to Walmart Coffee.
I think you're right, but when it comes to Starbucks I don't get it. They seem to be able to move into the most expensive real estate in every town, and it's hard for me to see how they cover that rent. I know they sell coffee mugs and music CD's and a few other things, but how do those plus coffee and biscotti cover the rent in the same place where Starbucks has displaced a full service restaurant or a book store?
"but how do those plus coffee and biscotti cover the rent in the same place where Starbucks has displaced a full service restaurant or a book store?"
My bet is this. They get their money from upping the prices, getting sneaky about lessening the content, taking advantage of tax loopholes, and I'll guess government subsidization somewhere. Once a business or partnership becomes rich enough to be a huge corporation, the advantages are there for the taking. Big corporations are supposed to be held to higher standards compared to small businesses and partnerships. I'm also sure that they can hunt for very good corporate trial lawyers to do whatever legal scaring they have up their sleeves. It's hard to say what exactly gives Starbucks the edge in displacing.
Instead, the new shops strive to be the anti-Starbucks . . .
They should consult the absolute expert in this field: Barack Obama. He sold himself as a cross between FDR and MLK when, in fact, he was merely Bill and Hillary Clinton.
Starbucks is a symptom of two things
1. Unfettered capitalism. Read my response to Bliss Doubt for details.
2. Society's addiction to fast food and its conditioned behavior of giving up taking even a few minutes to whip one's own healthy breakfast every morning. While I don't buy into the Republican version of "personal responsibility", society will have to put its foot down and ask themselves what the hell they're gaining by wasting more petro dollars traveling to a lousy coffee store to buy chemical laden trash in a cup for $5 plus health dollars.
I wouldn't mind having a coffee with someone on a special occasion such as a business meeting or even going out on a date but when I see almost everyone holding an expensive cup of coffee on their way to work, and yes some of them have their stomachs bulging, I have to shake my head in shame feeling sorry that we're not only the victims of unfettered disaster capitalism but also society's conditioned habits of grabbing those silly dilly quickies. No thanks for coffee or fast food. I got through today's long day just fine without it. :)
Here in Fairbanks AK we have several very nice, very independent coffee shops and no stand alone Starbucks. Starbucks manages to sell coffee through the major supermarkets but so far has no stand alone buildings. I like the independent shops; they offer something Starbucks doesn't though I can't put my finger on it.
Here in Fairbanks AK we have several very nice, very independent coffee shops and no stand alone Starbucks. Starbucks manages to sell coffee through the major supermarkets but so far has no stand alone buildings. I like the independent shops; they offer something Starbucks doesn't though I can't put my finger on it.
The independent coffee stores are what I would call the type that put quality before quantity. Starbucks went more into whole-sale volume sale once they got to be yet another "too big to fail" corporation.