Starbucks Corporation

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Starbucks Corporation

Starbucks History:

Starbucks’ opened its first store in 1971, at Pike Place Market in Seattle, by three partners Zev Siegel, Jerry Baldwin and Gordon Bowker. Starbucks opened with the intent of being a gourmet coffee bean retailer and coffee equipment seller. The Starbucks name and logo came from two influences; a character named Starbuck in the classic book, Moby Dick, and a mining camp on the base of Mt. Rainier called Starbo. These two influences were combined to create Starbucks.

In 1982, entrepreneur and current chairman, Howard Schultz, joined the company. When Schultz joined the company, he wanted to change the company’s focus away from in home coffee production and coffee bean retailing, to also include selling coffee drinks. Schultz wanted to create an Italian espresso bar atmosphere to the Starbucks Company. Siegel, Baldwin, and Bowker didn’t like the idea, but in 1984 Schultz convinced the “founders of Starbucks to test the coffee bar concept in a new location in downtown Seattle”. In 1985, Schultz decided to leave the company and start his own Italian espresso inspired company called Il Giornale. In 1987, Schultz got backing from local investors and purchased Starbucks. Shultz then changed the name Starbucks to Starbucks Corporation.

Today, Starbucks has more than 16,000 stores globally including about 11,000 in the United States.

Starbucks’ Mission and Objectives:

Mission Statements

Starbucks is diffe...

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... growth in excess of 20 percent. The strategies and initiatives include Starbucks continued commitment to global growth goals which include annual net revenue growth of approximately 20 percent and earnings per share growth in the range of 20 percent to 25 percent. The Company has announced plans for a broad roll-out to expand warm breakfast items as a core offering in approximately 6,500 U.S. Company-operated stores by the end of fiscal 2008. They have decided to stop issuing monthly revenue releases because they believe that providing the information on a monthly basis encourages a short-term focus and increases instability in the Company's stock that is not representative of Starbucks overall and longer-term performance.

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