Ken’s Take: Uh-oh. Premium brands shouldn’t try to shift focus to price … cheapens the brand and plays to the other guy’s advantages. Starbucks is flailing …
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Excerpted from WSJ, “Starbucks Plays Common Joe”, Feb. 9, 2009
Starbucks — built a coffee empire on its premium image — wants to convince customers that its drinks aren’t that expensive.
Soon, it’ll be selling discounted pairings of coffee and breakfast food for $3.95, a type of promotion long used at fast-food chains. It’s the first move in an aggressive campaign to counter the widespread perception that Starbucks is the home of the $4 cup of coffee.
The Seattle-based company is training its baristas to tell customers that the average price of a Starbucks beverage is less than $3, and that 90% of Starbucks drinks cost under $4.
For Starbucks, the effort is also an attempt to fend off McDonald’s … whose advertising includes billboards saying “Four bucks is dumb.”
Few companies embody the consumer spending boom of the 1990s and 2000s like Starbucks … it transformed coffee from a commodity drink into what he billed as an affordable luxury … but sales have been in steep decline during the recessionary era of penny-pinching … so, executives began plotting a new strategy to portray the company as offering value.
Research uncovered what executives describe as a disconnect between the company’s actual prices and consumers’ perception of those prices.
“The myth of the $4 latte … is not true” … the average price of a Starbucks latte is $3.25 (before tax).
Pinning down the price of the drinks is more difficult than it may seem. The price tag climbs when customers add flavoring or additional shots of espresso, and sales tax also makes the tab higher. Prices also vary depending on the city.
Indeed, the price gap has narrowed and some sizes and varieties of Starbucks are cheaper than Dunkin’ Donuts coffee when adjusted for size differences. McDonald’s is still cheaper than Starbucks.
Dunkin’ Donuts says, “We believe we are the faster and more affordable alternative” to Starbucks.
McDonald’s says “everyone’s looking to get more from a dollar … our customers know that’s what they’ll get at McDonald’s.”
Asked whether Starbucks is considering simply reducing drink prices: “Today, no. But never say never.”
Full article:
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123413848760761577.html?mod=testMod#printMode
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