Starbucks & Refocusing on Customer-Centric Brand Strategies


The Gist

  • Individual focus. Tailor experiences to each customer’s unique preferences and behaviors.
  • Unique locations. Encourage franchises to add personal touches to enhance customer loyalty.
  • Nostalgic vibes. Reconnect with your brand’s origins to revive customer engagement.

You may have heard recently in the news that Starbucks had a little bit of a bumpy Q1. In fact, Starbucks Chairman Emeritus Howard Schultz said recently on LinkedIn, “The stores require a maniacal focus on the customer experience, through the eyes of a merchant. The answer does not lie in data, but in the stores.”

Hold on a second, did I hear that right? I think I did, the answer isn’t in the data, it’s in the customer experience? That can’t be right — can it?

In actuality, I wholeheartedly agree with Howard and his approach. In this day and age, the customer and their experience are everything.

Here, let me tell you a story to explain and unravel the lessons learned for customer experience strategies.

A Morning Bike Ride to a Cozy Coffee Retreat

One of my favorite morning activities is to wake up early, before the day starts and the sun rises and take a bike ride to my favorite coffee shop in Austin located at the Carpenter Hotel. A cozy nook inside a trendy, vibey hotel that offers some of the best coffee, music and aesthetics the city has to offer. For me, being able to sit, enjoy some ambiance and aromatic coffee is my daily ritual and therapy — it’s how I like to fill up my cup of motivation and drive for what the day brings.

Ironically enough, this coffee shop sits directly, and I mean directly, across the street from a Starbucks. Even more surprising, each morning this small, no-name coffee shop has way more people sitting inside enjoying their cups of joe than Starbucks does. This demonstrates the importance of effective customer experience strategies.

Related Article: Personalization Plateau: Few Brands Deliver Highly Personalized Experiences

Refocus on Customer Experience Strategies

Why is that you might be asking?

Well, it’s simple. As Howard noted, the small local coffee shop provides more than just good coffee. It offers an experience that tantalizes all the senses in the right ways. It has personality and character, and even, to some extent, a sense of anthropomorphism. I think to myself — this local coffee shop “just gets me,” whereas Starbucks’ seasonal-inspired beverages just aren’t my cup of tea. 

So, what gives? Well, it’s no secret that Starbucks came from humble beginnings in Seattle. But that humble start offered customers exactly what local coffee shops provide today — culture and vibes. As things tend to happen when a good idea is born, expansion and growth follow. But with expansion and growth, the little details can often get lost. Managing a brand and a franchise on a global scale requires process and uniformity.

But does it really have to be that way? What if big brands like Starbucks allowed its individual franchises to just do their own thing? Is this idea so crazy? I don’t think it is.

What if big brands like Starbucks allowed its individual franchises to just do their own thing?boyloso on Adobe Stock Photos



Source link

We will be happy to hear your thoughts

Leave a reply

HARMY TECHNO
Logo
Shopping cart