Even more stores? Not a tall order for Starbucks
Coffee Goliath doesn’t want customers to have to cross the street for fix
![]() | The Starbucks on the 40th floor of Seattle's Columbia Center too busy? Go down to the first floor, or across the street. |
Ted S. Warren / AP file |
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Starbucks vows to continue expansion The ubiquitous Starbucks corporation has vowed to continue its massive expansion, with a target of 40,000 stores worldwide. NBC's Scott Cohn reports. Today show |
SEATTLE - The people who work in Seattle’s tallest building face a tough decision: should they get their caffeinated indulgence at the old Starbucks on the building’s first floor or the new Starbucks, 40 floors up? And, if those lines are too long, is it too far to walk across the street, where a third Starbucks awaits?
Starbucks Corp.’s recently announced goal of having 40,000 stores worldwide isn’t just about spreading green awnings through middle America, the Middle East and other areas of the world not yet tempted by easy access to mocha Frappuccinos and pumpkin spice lattes.
The coffee chain’s aggressive growth also hinges on what the company calls “infill” — adding stores in cities where its mermaid logo is already commonplace. In some cases, that means putting a Starbucks within a block of an existing store, if not closer.
While Starbucks knows there’s plenty to lure people into their stores, they also recognize that many people can’t be bothered to walk very far — or wait very long — for an optional and pricey treat.
“Going to the other side of the street can be a barrier,” said Launi Skinner, senior vice president in charge of Starbucks’ store development.
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As of Oct. 3, Starbucks had 12,440 stores worldwide, including 7,102 company-operated stores and 5,338 licensed locations. In addition to choosing its company-operated locations, Starbucks also has a say in where licensed stores will be located.
In Vancouver, Canada, such planning has meant adding stores on either side of a busy intersection. In New York, there are two Starbucks in one Macy’s, as well as two in the 49-story Marriott Marquis hotel.
Starbucks also is flooding some smaller cities. In Spokane, Wash., two Starbucks sit across from each other in a strip mall and a grocery store, close enough that baristas could toss pounds of coffee beans at one another if they wanted to.
Despite such saturation — and plans for much more — Starbucks insists that it sees very little cannibalization of its existing business when a new store opens. In fact, the company says, one reason would-be customers don’t end up buying a Starbucks drink is because the line is too long. One solution is to open up another store nearby.
Starbucks says about 60 percent of stores have a wait time of three minutes or less, but the company doesn’t track specifically how long the wait has to be before people decide to pass.
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Chief Executive Jim Donald dismisses any notion that the company could experience oversaturation as it continues to plop Starbucks near other Starbucks.
“We haven’t felt it yet,” he quipped recently.
It takes co-workers Joshua Sanders and Megan Scott about one minute to reach the Starbucks just outside their downtown Seattle office. Sometimes, the two will walk another minute or so to another Starbucks about half a block away, because that Starbucks sells hot breakfast sandwiches and the closer one doesn’t. On a recent weekday morning, both were bustling.
One things Sanders and Scott won’t do is stop for coffee at Starbucks competitor Tully’s Coffee Corp., even though it’s in their building and they actually walk past it to get to Starbucks.
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