Starbucks CEO's plan to fix the chain includes coffee in 4 minutes and comfy chairs
Date: 2024-10-31
Starbucks CEO Brian Niccol just laid out his plan to turn around the struggling coffee chain.
"It is clear we need to fundamentally change our strategy to win back customers," he said Wednesday.
The company released preliminary numbers last week, which showed a big drop in traffic.
Starbucks CEO Brian Niccol gave investors the first look at his plan to turn around the struggling chain, and it involves faster coffee orders and better decor.
"It is clear we need to fundamentally change our strategy to win back customers," Niccol said in the company's earnings call Wednesday, his first call since joining the company last month. "My experience tells me that when we get back to our core identity and consistently deliver a great experience, our customers will come back."
The company released some quarterly numbers last Wednesday, a week early, which showed a 6% decline in comparable sales in the US and a 14% decline in China. At the same time, it suspended its guidance for the coming fiscal year, citing the CEO transition and the current state of the business.
"I'm putting a full-court press on solving four minutes," he said.
One way he said this would happen is by bringing back the condiment bar to company-owned locations by early 2025, allowing cups of brewed coffee to skip the queue of more complex orders.
Niccol also said the chain would stop charging extra for non-dairy milk, which he said was the second most popular drink modification after an extra shot of espresso.
Several other initiatives were reported in the days before Wednesday's call, including a requirement that corporate employees work in the office at least three days a week and a menu shake-up that will end the brand's olive-oil-infused coffee offerings.
Since taking over the job in September, Niccol has focused on simplifying Starbucks' US menu and operations, including pivoting away from the chain's emphasis on promotions, drive-thru, and mobile ordering.
"Mobile orders are a huge problem because you could have 20 people place a mobile order at the same time, and then they all come through at once," a barista in North Carolina told Business Insider in August.
Niccol hinted that "guardrails" in mobile ordering were in the works, saying that the current system invites overly complicated orders that aren't necessarily the best execution of the drink.
While Niccol did not deeply address Starbucks' China segment, he said the company faces twin challenges of an economic slowdown and rising competition from Chinese brands.
"Before discussing China in detail, I need to spend time there to better understand our operations and the market," he said.
Niccol said his optimism is rooted in Starbucks employees, who he said are passionate about coffee, the company, and its customers.
"When you start with that kind of foundation, you know, you're able to put in the right programs so that we can get the business turned around," he said.