Acquired - Starbucks (with Howard Schultz)
Episode Date: June 4, 2024Starbucks. You’d be hard pressed to name any brand that’s more ubiquitous in the world today. With nearly half a billion global customer purchases per week across its stores and 3rd party... retail channels, a significant portion of the human population gets their daily fix in the green and white paper cup. (Including our own Ben Gilbert who famously enjoys his daily spinach feta wrap. :)But it wasn’t always this way. Long before the frappuccinos and the PSLs and the cake pops, Starbucks was just a small-time Seattle roaster that only sold beans — and was started not by Howard Schultz but rather the guys who later ran Peet’s (!). Starting from six tiny stores when Howard took over in 1987, this quirky coffee company named after a character from Moby Dick has scaled to nearly 40,000 locations worldwide.Today, in a first for Acquired, the protagonist himself joins us as a third cohost to tell the whole story of Starbucks. And Howard is in the perfect moment to do this — after three separate stints as CEO he’s now retired, off the board of directors, and in his own words “not coming back.” So place a mobile order (or not! as you’ll hear Howard speak about), sit back with your own favorite Starbucks items, and enjoy.Sponsors:Many thanks to our fantastic Season 14 partners:J.P. Morgan Payments *ServiceNowPilotThe Biggest Thing We’ve Ever Done:San Francisco. September 10, 2024. Mark your calendars.Links:Howard’s letter “The Soul of a Brand”Worldly Partners’ multi-decade Starbucks analysisStarbucks S-1More Acquired:Get email updates with hints on next episode and follow-ups from recent episodesJoin the SlackSubscribe to ACQ2Check out the latest swag in the ACQ Merch Store!** Future capabilities of biometric payments are under development; features and timelines are subject to change at the bank’s sole discretion.*Note: references to Fortune in ServiceNow sponsor sections are from Fortune ©2023. Used under license.Note: Acquired hosts and guests may hold assets discussed in this episode. This podcast is not investment advice, and is intended for informational and entertainment purposes only. You should do your own research and make your own independent decisions when considering any financial transactions.
Transcript
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All right.
We rolling?
We're rolling.
We get to see how you guys do this.
It's kind of interesting.
We usually have pump-up music.
I feel pumped up.
We can do that.
We've got a turntable.
I saw your turntable.
That's beautiful.
What do you want to hear?
No, we're starting.
Ben's keeping us on track.
Who got the truth?
Is it you?
Is it you?
Is it you?
Who got the truth now?
Is it you? Is it you? is it you, who got the truth now? Is it you, is it you, is it you?
Sit me down, say it straight, another story on the way, who got the truth?
Welcome to Season 14, Episode 5 of Acquired, the podcast about great companies and the stories and playbooks behind them.
I'm Ben Gilbert.
I'm David Rosenthal.
And we are your hosts.
Seven years ago, David and I did an episode on the Starbucks IPO.
Just the IPO.
That episode was a mere one hour and 24 minutes,
and Starbucks is a $90 billion institution in our world
that deserves the full acquired treatment.
What were we thinking?
Well, it actually was amateur hour
back then, David. Gotta start somewhere. Well, today we have a very special third co-host to
discuss this third place, Howard Schultz. Howard started working at the small chain of three
Starbucks stores in 1982, eventually buying it and becoming CEO. As you probably know,
he is effectively the founder
of the Starbucks we know today that exists on every corner of the earth. I come to you, David,
and listeners, as an unabashed Starbucks fan. In this tumultuous time for the company, I am
absolutely pulling for them in every way possible, and that is going to come through in our conversation.
You may have seen the news recently that they had a very rough last quarter with a key metric that you may remember from previous episodes as same
store sales. These dropped and their stock price plummeted as a result. This is on top of a
tumultuous pandemic era and some of their stores unionizing and a change in leadership. We thought
that this would be the perfect time to sit down with Howard and unpack,
why did Starbucks work in the first place?
And how did it work at such grand scale?
What can other founders and business leaders learn
from what got them here?
And although he is no longer CEO,
where do they go now?
It really is incredible.
One of the very, very small number
of food and beverage establishments that has scaled to the entire world.
Yeah, most of those types of concepts do not work in different countries and continents.
But Starbucks is different. Today, they're in over 80 countries with 39,000 stores across the world.
They're even huge in China, a country that didn't consume very much coffee until Starbucks arrived.
They are a bank
scale financial institution as well. At any given time, Starbucks holds $1.7 billion that customers
have loaded onto gift cards, but not yet spent. So how did they go from one store selling beans,
not even drinks and cups, just beans, to the default meeting place in communities everywhere. Today, we tell that story.
And listeners, this episode has video.
We recorded it in person in Seattle at the Schultz Family Foundation,
and you can watch it on YouTube.
All right, well, listeners, we have a gigantic announcement for you.
Yes, save the date.
If you love Acquired, you are going to want to be physically in the
show notes. Speaking of JPMorgan Payments, just like how we say every company has a story,
every company's story is powered by payments. And JPMorgan Payments is a part of so many
companies journeys from seed to IPO and beyond. And if you
want more from David and I, you should check out our second show ACQ two, where we interview founders,
investors and experts, often as deeper dives into topics that we covered on the main show.
Recent episodes have been awesome with the CEO and the founder of synopsis of starfish space
further exploring the space industry. And we've got some great stuff in
payments coming up next, too. We do. All right. So with that, this show is not investment advice.
David and I may have investments in the companies that we discuss. And this show is for informational
and entertainment purposes only. On to our episode with Howard Schultz.
Well, I do have to tell you, and I think I've told you this off camera, for the last almost
10 years, every single day starts with a spinach and feta wrap.
I assume there are other people like me in the world, but it's always an iced almond
milk latte with whipped cream and a spinach and feta wrap.
And so thank you for powering approximately a third of the cells in my body.
That's a great start.
I also, here's another stat that David...
You've done the math on...
I have done the math. I exported all of my credit card transactions since 2011.
Of course you did.
And I wish I had more history than that, but that was the oldest I could get. I've spent $23,000
at Starbucks since 2011.
Oh, God.0. And listeners may know that there were three
founders of Starbucks, none of which were named Howard Schultz. So take us back in the Starbucks
prehistory before you arrived. How did the company start? Well, since I wasn't there,
this is what I know. There were three founders, Jerry Baldwin, Zev Siegel, and Gordon Belker.
And the story that was told to me is that one or both of them were going to school in California
in the Bay Area. And they became enamored with Pete's Coffee Company, which-
Alfred Pete?
Yeah, Alfred Pete was, more than anyone else in the history of coffee in America,
was the true pioneer.
He brought specialty coffee, Arabica coffee, to Northern California.
And Jerry Baldwin and Zev became so interested and intrigued with what Pete's was doing
and given the fact that they were from Seattle decided they would try and bring
Starbucks coffee in the form of Starbucks to Seattle Washington now what is not known
is that when Starbucks opened in the Pike Place market in 1971, they were using Pete's Coffee.
Really?
No one knows that. That's new. Because they were not roasting coffee. So they were bringing coffee
from San Francisco to Seattle. They were not calling it Pete's, they were calling it Starbucks.
So it was Pete's Coffee and Starbucks bags.
Yeah, yeah. Again, I wasn't there, but that's kind of the folklore. After the three founders built that store, opened that store, I get came to Seattle, Washington for the first time.
So I was working for a Swedish housewares company based in Sweden called Hammerplast.
That company had a beautiful non-electric coffee maker, kind of a thermal unit.
And we had a big customer in Macy's in Northern California.
And I was in California on a sales call, and I had heard that there was a small company in
Seattle, Washington that was buying a lot of this product. So given the fact, I'd never been to
Seattle. I was already in the West Coast. I figured I'd come to Seattle and see what was going on.
Was Starbucks buying it for use in their- They were selling it in their store.
Now, but here's the thing-
Because this was a consumer device.
Yeah, yeah.
But you have to remember,
Starbucks Coffee Company from 1971
until around 85, 86,
only sold pounds of coffee.
There was no beverage.
That's, you know,
we're going to get into the epiphany of that.
Yeah, of course.
And so I walked into the Pike Place store for the first time on a beautiful day just like this.
The sun was out.
There was snow on the mountains.
The clean, fresh air.
And I walked into the Pike Place market.
And I walked into the Starbucks store, and I was blown away by the experience, the romance of coffee,
the education, and it just spoke to me. I had never met Jerry Baldwin, the founder, who was
the CEO at the time, and I became interested and intrigued with what Starbucks was doing and asked
if I could meet Jerry. One thing led to another. I met Jerry
Baldwin. We really hit it off. And we established kind of a vendor-customer relationship over a
course of a year or so. Starbucks had three stores at the time, only three. And over the course of
the next year or so, I became more and more interested and intrigued with the possibility of leaving New
York City. Sherry and I were dating, we're not married, and I kind of maneuvered my way into a
job working for Starbucks. And so Sherry and I drove to Seattle, Washington on Labor Day weekend
in our old Audi car with a golden retriever.
And we came here because I was offered the job as the head of marketing for Starbucks
when they were getting ready to open their fourth store in 1982.
Still just selling beans.
Only beans.
That's the whole, yeah, still the beans.
The interest that the company had in me at the time, I think, was they were
really interested in expanding.
But their dream or the plan at the time was, could we expand to Portland, Oregon?
Remember, it was a tiny company.
It was a grand ambition.
Yeah.
And I never had any idea, of course, that what was about to happen and unfold over the
subsequent years.
But I arrived in 1982 as the head of marketing.
So when you and Sherry arrive here, what was the coffee landscape? I mean, there were these
three soon to be four Starbucks beans stores here in Seattle. Alfred Peet was down in the Bay Area.
But what was coffee culture? I mean, it was like Folgers and Maxwell House, right?
Yeah, it was de minimis. There was another coffee company, which was Seattle's Best Coffee,
which was another retailer that was kind of at the same size and scale at Starbucks,
both equal at the same time. But you couldn't even get a New York Times in Seattle in 1982,
83. There was no good food to speak of,
and Starbucks was a true pioneer
where they were educating customer after customer
about what good coffee tastes like.
And the Pike Place Market gave them an interesting vehicle
because of the tourists.
And so Starbucks actually started establishing
a mail-order business as a result of all the people who
were coming into Seattle. And I think if I remember, there were so many points that I can
remember where people were talking about Starbucks way outside of Seattle as if it was some kind of
iconic big company. I think people came to Seattle, is this it? This is the 800,
900 square foot store in Seattle, Washington in Pike Place Market. This is the mecca.
And so tourists would come, they would buy a bag and then they would fill out some kind
of information and say, I'd like to have this mailed to me because I don't have anything like
it in my city. Yeah, that's what happened. And because coffee has a shelf life of basically a week to 10 days, and we didn't have a
vacuum bag at that time, we were shipping small amounts because to Jerry Baldwin's credit,
he had such a fastidious point of view about quality and freshness. And I think that had a
huge impact on me. But this couldn't have been like a great business. You're shipping small amounts.
No, it wasn't. The logistics costs, the scale. This was a small business, but the equity of
the brand, even back then, was much larger than the size of the business. And the opportunity
that I saw, even when we had four or five stores, was well beyond Portland, Oregon. And I was always kind of pushing, we could do so much more. And then the whole thing blew up for me when I went to Italy in 83. I think coffee had been declining since like 1940. It's still part of the American culture,
but it's not that it's on the way out, but there's nothing new or interesting,
except for this little segment of...
Especially coffee, which was tiny. And I think what you've just described,
the reason for that is that coffee was terrible. It was instant coffee, stale coffee, and primarily robusta beans,
which is the low-grade coffee that Starbucks was never involved in.
Yeah, walk us through the two types of beans.
There's mainly two types of agricultural coffee grown for commercial use. Robusta beans,
low-end coffee, primarily an instant coffee, and high-grade Arabica coffee. But even within the Arabica coffee,
there's significant segments of quality and integrity.
And Starbucks has always played from 1971 to today
at the highest level.
And my understanding from our research
is that the Robusta market really developed,
as you say, with the instant coffee market.
And that was kind of a product of World War II, right? It was like, hey, we got to get the troops this product to survive.
And so we just need a lot of beans and we need to ground them up and create this instant product.
I believe Maxwell House was involved in inventing.
Yeah, you're exactly right. I mean, it was just fuel and bitter, acidic. And yeah,
and that's I think World War II and the GIs were kind of the impetus for that kind
of quality coffee or not quality coffee to exist and have any kind of run after the war.
So you show up at Starbucks.
You know a little bit about the market because you've been a supplier of theirs.
But you happen to be a pretty talented salesman
from your time at Xerox.
And I want to make a tie here.
Our previous episode was the Microsoft episode,
or at least Microsoft volume one.
You were selling word processors made by Xerox.
Tell me what word processors were in the mid-70s.
So my territory was 42nd to 48th Street from 5th Avenue to the river.
And I had to make 50 cold calls, physical cold calls a day.
That was a job.
The Xerox job taught me incredible amounts about not only selling, but humility.
Humility. Because the rejection every day was
so significant. And you put on your suit and tie, and you go in an office building. There's no
security at that time. Just go in, and you go from the top floor to the bottom. And then there
are other people selling other products who are doing the exact same thing. And you had to get
by the receptionist. was making a thousand dollars
a month and living at home when i started okay the word processor was a big machine
in which you are editing on that machine to basically create a letter and does it have a
screen or it has like a typewriter no it's a typewriter no screen it's like a typewriter
with like a with a little bit of cash, right?
Yes, yes, exactly.
So that you could fix mistakes for one line, right?
Yeah.
The job at Xerox at the time was like working for Google.
Xerox and IBM were the two pillars of technology
and high-tech companies.
You told somebody you're working at Xerox,
you had a whole different patina.
You were, wow, that's working for Xerox, wow.
And so you quitting
well hammerplast but you know quitting what seemed like a i hated stable of pretty good jobs
to drive across the country to provincial little seattle i mean that's that's nuts i knew after a
couple of years if i stayed at xerox for a longer period of time, I was going to be locked in there. But I'll tell you the story that got me to realize I've got to get out of here.
At the end of the year, the performance appraisal at Xerox was basically a scorecard from one to five.
So you'd have a qualitative discussion with your manager, and then he would give you a number. And when I got a three,
I said, I was just saying to myself, I worked all year. I just had a performance
for my manager, and I'm a three. This is amazing. Howard Schultz got a three.
I got a three. I got a three.
Inspiration for all entrepreneurs out there.
I got a three. And as soon as I got the three, I swear, at that moment, I knew I've got to get out of here.
And that's when I started putting myself in a position of meet other opportunities.
And by and large, I was able to get the Hammerplast job, which was the general manager of the company, which was based in Sweden in the US.
But I was a three. Do you think having that background at Xerox, did that give you a piece of perspective that helped build Starbucks to what it is today?
When I hear the question, I have to go back to my childhood and think everything that I've experienced growing up in the projects in more or less a dysfunctional family because of the the pressure
of money getting the xerox opportunity and having some level of success but realizing i wanted more
the humility which came with rejection the shame i had as a poor kid living in the projects, all of that, I think,
crystallized in me. And I give Sherry so much credit in realizing that together we wanted to
build a different kind of life and gave me the courage, the conviction, and the drive to try and do something that I felt I was destined to do.
I didn't know what it was. I certainly didn't know moving to Seattle was going to
create the opportunity of a lifetime. But I always felt I had to get out of that station in life
where I was positioned not to get to the level that I thought I deserved to be. I don't think it is common with someone for your background,
poor kid in the projects coming from nothing,
to get a great job, two great jobs,
and be wildly dissatisfied and not feel like,
I've made it, but rather,
no, there's got to be something more than this.
There's something deep inside you
that caused you to be willing to take a risk. I was really insecure about not succeeding.
And I didn't view what I was doing as the success that I was not destined for. That sounds wrong,
that I had the appetite for.
All right. So we're getting to the big risk. So the year ticks over to 1983.
Yeah.
You are sent, or maybe you asked to go to an international housewares conference in Milan.
Yeah.
What do you discover?
So I went to a trade show called Maccia, which is a big convention center, and it's a giant houseware show with equipment and all kinds of stuff.
And I was staying at a relatively cheap intercepted with the physical manifestation of one coffee bar after another in the business that I'm supposed to be in.
But it wasn't the business that Starbucks was in.
And I walk in like a normal person that's never seen this before.
And I am just like, I'm in a black and white movie.
And all of a sudden, everything was color.
And it was so rich.
I couldn't get enough of it.
And I just went from one to the other to the other to the other.
And I was just blown away and more or less raced back to America.
Sat down with Jerry and Gordon and said, holy shit.
What's happening in Italy is the shit. We got to do this.
What's happening in Italy is the business that Starbucks has to be in.
And they had seen it.
They've been to Italy.
And they said, no, that's not what we want to do.
And I just said, seriously?
And I banged on the door for two years.
And in two years, they finally let me open up a coffee bar on the corner of 4th and Spring
in Seattle.
And it was the sixth Starbucks store.
And out of about 1,200 square feet, I got 100 feet.
And I designed and opened the coffee bar, worked behind the counter as a barista.
And Starbucks probably had 200 to 300 customers a day
selling whole bean coffee.
We were at 500 in a week with introducing lattes
and cappuccino and espresso.
And there was nowhere else in town to get a cafe latte.
Well, Cafe Allegro had it, and that was Dave Olson.
And after a few months or six months or so,
Jerry said, I don't want to repeat this.
I don't want to do it. I don't want to be in the restaurant business.
Yeah. What was the objection? Was it the stigma of the restaurant business?
I mean, I don't want to speak for Jerry. I have so much respect for him, but
he didn't think it was clean. He didn't like it. Now, between 83 and 85, Jerry Baldwin, because of his love of Pete's
and his relation with Alfred Pete, had an opportunity for Starbucks to acquire Pete's
Coffee Company. And they did. Unfortunately, Starbucks buys Pete's and they get into financial
trouble. And so really, at this point, it was like their mentor
was retiring. This person who was a steward of the industry, we're operating six points of retail
distribution in Seattle for our beans. Why don't we just buy your effectively the same business,
but in Northern California and keep them separate for now? Well, it's important to know that between
the opening of the fourth and Spring coffee bar inside
a Starbucks.
Starbucks number six.
Yeah.
And Jerry and Gordon saying, we don't want to repeat this.
I was so frustrated.
I said, I'm going to leave Starbucks.
And what did I do?
I had no money to open up a coffee store.
So Jerry says, Starbucks does not want to open up coffee bars, but we will invest
in Il Giornale. Which was the company you started too. Yeah. So before they get into financial
trouble, Starbucks is an investor. I've always thought he did that so I would sell and market
Starbucks coffee in the coffee bar, which I would have done anyway.
So Starbucks makes an investment. A couple of people that we know make an investment,
but I didn't have enough money. So I go to see two Italian companies. I've never told this.
One is the espresso company, Faema, and one is the large Italian coffee coffee company lavazza oh yeah and i asked them both
to invest in my idea and both of them turned me down so at this point you're in italy you're
trying to get ideas and investors for what would become il giornale for the first il giornale and
only starbucks and a couple other people have committed. But I didn't have enough money. I still needed more money.
And you were raising $1.6 million?
About $1.6, $1.7 million.
And they said, no one is going to buy Italian espresso in Seattle or in America.
Which is stupid, because you watched it happen.
I ran this store for six months, and it was flying off. Yeah, they didn't want to do it.
So Lavazza and Faema, just get that on the record,
turned me down.
Okay?
They'll deny it.
That's a fact.
So then I go back to the US.
I'm trying to raise money.
And I hit the three titans in Seattle.
Jack Benaroya, Herman Sarkowski, and Sam Strong, three of the leading citizens
of Seattle, Washington at the time. And the three of them have a little bit of an investment
together in other things. And they say, we're going to believe in you. And they take me over
the hump. Wow.
Okay. And we opened three Il Gornalli's, two in Seattle,
one in Vancouver, BC. And all three are doing well, all three. But I didn't have enough money
to expand. And needing the money to expand, just to pause on that for a minute, business-wise,
obviously coffee bars are a much better business long-term than coffee beans,
but probably more capital intensive, right?
Eating more staff.
Yeah, more labor, yes.
But the stores weren't that expensive to open because they were small,
less than 1,000 square feet.
And we understood how to do it.
And I was working as a barista with Dave Olson and other people
to keep the cost down.
We were behind the counter, and I had no salary.
I had no salary for almost two years
while Sherry was working and pregnant with our first child.
So looking increasingly worse
from a traditional perspective of leaving a high quality job,
moving across the country,
then just a couple of years later,
here you are not making any money again
while raising millions of dollars
to try to start your own business.
It gets worse.
Sherry is six, seven months pregnant.
She's working.
Her parents visit Seattle.
They're from Ohio.
Father asked me to take a walk.
Oh, no.
God is my witness.
True story.
Take a walk.
And he says uh
whatever you're doing i respect it but it's not a job it's a hobby you need to get a job
my daughter's pregnant she's working you're not i start crying i bet i'm so embarrassed
and uh i come home at three four o'clock in the afternoon, whatever it is. I don't say a word.
Completely shaken by the whole conversation.
Her parents go to bed after dinner.
I'm sitting with Sherry, and I said, I got to tell you something happened.
She was so angry at her dad and so upset, and she said,
there's no way we're turning around.
We are going.
So she is the glue to everything that's happened.
And I don't know if she's ever had a conversation with her father.
I'm sure she did.
But the whole thing could have been over.
And that would have been a very understandable response if Sherry had said,
I wasn't going to say anything.
Look at our situation objectively here. Putting ourselves in your father-in-law's shoes.
How could you not feel that way for your daughter and her impending family?
Yeah, and her father was a great guy.
And I understood, but I was embarrassed and humiliated.
How could I not be?
I mean, I guess that's another dimension here, too.
This was not 2024.
It's not like being an entrepreneur was a glorified
profession here. And a business that he clearly did not understand, a coffee store.
The other interesting thing to point out around this time is for the people who were seeking
high-risk business investments, this is the late 80s, it's time to look at tech.
We're now 12 years into Microsoft, Apple's four years past the Macintosh.
And you're trying to raise money for a coffeehouse chain.
With names that people couldn't pronounce and serving it in a paper cup to go.
That does not sound innovative to me.
I don't know why I'm putting my risk capital into your... Yeah. I would bring investors to the two or three stores, and I would make sure there was
a fair amount of people in the space. And that's when I started talking about the language of
community and the third place. And that's what I saw in Italy. The unlock and the
epiphany, of course, it was the romance of espresso, but it was the sense of community.
And that is what was happening very early on in the two stores in Seattle and the one in Vancouver.
You could see it. What would people do after they bought the coffee? You said these are very small
places. They would stand up because the two stores didn't have seating right away.
They would stand up at the coffee bar at the window on Columbia Center.
And it was at 8, 9 o'clock in the morning.
They were hanging out there.
And then late morning, they were coming back.
And you could just feel the relationship that people were having with one another around human connection.
I know it sounds trite, but I could see it back then.
And as I was talking to people
about the investment opportunity,
I was pointing out, look what's happening here.
There's something happening.
There's some magic going on here.
It's not just the coffee.
The coffee was the conduit.
All right, so we're at the pivotal moment.
Starbucks and Pete's gets into financial trouble.
And the debt to equity was north of six to one
for a company that was tiny.
Jerry comes to me and says,
Jane and I, his wife, are going to move to California
and we're going to keep Pete's
and I'm going to sell Starbucks.
And my heart is pounding. I said, okay. And then he finished it and he says, I think you're'm going to sell Starbucks. And my heart is pounding.
I said, okay.
And then he finished it and he says,
I think you're the person to buy Starbucks.
I said, that's fantastic, but I don't have any money.
You're going to give it to me?
I have no money.
How much is it?
$3.8 million.
Now we're in 86, 87.
Now we get into a story I have told, but not 100%
because I protected the guy, but I'm going to tell it. I go out to raise money. I'm having a hard
time. So Jerry gave me about, I think he gave me 90 days to raise $3.8 million. Around the second
month, he just came to me and said, where are you with all this and i i think
i had about half of it raised i might have fibbed a bit and said i had a little bit more but i i
didn't i had about half and he lays a bomb on me and says howard listen we're in a tight situation
here and one of your investors has put a cash all cash offer on the table with no due diligence
and wants to close right away. For him to take it over, not you.
Yeah, yeah, I'm out. I'd be out. And I said, who is it? And he told me, I'll save that.
And I'm absolutely annihilated, crushed, because I didn't have the wherewithal, and I could just envision as soon as I heard that name, I knew it was over.
I was in a basketball league at the Seattle club.
I'm playing basketball that night.
My good friend, Scott Greenberg, who's an attorney at a prestige firm in seattle the gates firm
i'm basically crying to him after the game and telling him the story and he says you've got to
come to the office tomorrow and meet our senior partner and tell him the story bill gates senior
i said well titan.
Incredible.
We foreshadowed this in the Microsoft episode.
There were three titans there,
but here is the titan.
And Bill was six foot seven?
Six foot seven is a mountain of a man
and very imposing.
So nine o'clock in the morning,
I put a suit on.
I must have been sweating through my shirt.
I was just so anxious, so nervous, and at the same time,
so scared about what was going to happen.
I go in there, and I must have been trembling.
I was just so nervous.
I tell him exactly what I just told him.
And he interrupts me and says, Howard, I'm just going
to ask you two questions. Is everything you told me true? I said, Mr. Gates, yes. Have you left
anything out? No. And he says, come back in an hour. I said, okay, to do what? He says,
I'll see you in an hour. And so we walk out.
I'm walking around.
I think we probably went to Columbia Center to get a coffee and come back.
I go back with Scott.
And Mr. Gates says, Scott, I'm going to see Howard alone.
And Scott leaves.
Now I'm alone in his office.
I hardly sit down.
And he says, we're going for a walk.
And I said, where are we going?
And he says, we're going to see the man who was Sam Strom.
One of your investors.
One of the investors.
We walk across the street to the Rainier Tower, the old Rainier Tower.
I think Sam had one of the
biggest offices. We walk in there, and I swear, even though it's so many years later,
I have a perfect, vivid account for what took place. Sam is sitting behind his desk,
and this is what happened, Because it was five minutes.
Bill Gates, remember, he's a huge guy,
leans over to the desk with his hands on Sam's desk and says, I don't know what you are planning, but whatever it is,
it's not going to happen.
Wow.
And he says, Howard Schultz is going to acquire a Starbucks coffee company,
and he's never going to hear from you again.
That was it.
And we walk out.
That's it.
That's the whole thing.
And so did you hear from Jerry that the bid had been dropped?
We walk out, and I say to Mr. Gates. mr there's one little problem you still need the money yes i say mr what what what
just happened and he said you're gonna buy starbucks coffee company and my son and i are
gonna help you wow hmm and we raised the money and that's the story. I never spoke to Sam Strom again. I've never
mentioned his name publicly. I never mentioned his name in his book. And I say it respectfully.
I'm not trying to, but that's the story. And Sam, I mean, for anyone who doesn't live in
the Seattle area, his name is on buildings and community centers. I mean, this revered
philanthropist, I actually don't know his business background. How did he become the titan that he was?
He was involved in real estate and also in those auto stores.
How did you get him off the Il Giornale cap table? Wasn't he an investor?
Yeah, he was still an investor. He and his family were investors to the end until they got out.
Oh, wow.
Until they got out.
Wow.
Looking back now, what do you think happened?
Did he have any legitimate criticisms of you
as running the company?
No, he had a henchman who was his money guy
who figured out we could just take this company
and what do we need Howard Schultz for?
He was a young kid.
And Sam had experience with retail,
with those auto stores.
I see.
So he could install some professional management from some other venture.
Yeah.
Run the playbook.
Yeah.
It would have been over.
But the thing about Bill Gates is I saw him socially 100 plus times.
He never, ever said anything public about what he did.
He never took credit for it.
So for listeners, Howard's told this elsewhere,
but you spoke at the Microsoft CEO Summit.
You recounted this story to the Fortune 500 CEOs.
And Bill Gates III, Microsoft founder,
comes up to you afterwards and says,
yeah, who was the guy?
But Bill did not know the whole story.
He didn't know any of it.
He didn't know what his father had done for me.
He's hearing it for the first time.
And this is, you know, 2015 or something.
So Starbucks, like, you would think...
No, he didn't know.
Someone would want to tell their family I played some significant role in this,
but that's not the type of guy he was.
Bill Gates, Sr. never told a soul what he did for me.
Wow.
Again, the humility.
Incredible lesson about humility.'s amazing yeah and so were bill gates senior and bill gates the third investors in that 3.8 million dollar round bill senior was but i don't know
if it was part of bill or but yeah microsoft interesting um so i asked sherry about this
when i was preparing for the episode,
and her recollection was it was something like one to two weeks before the three-month exclusivity
for you was going to be up. And so you're basically like, this event happens, but now
you need to come up with the money. And you have this unbelievably short period of time to do so.
And so she said that you were calling everybody you knew, she was
calling her clients, because she's a designer, calling her clients, trying to just find pockets
of 50K here, 100K there, anywhere you could to make it happen.
But I had another angel who helped me by the name of Jack Rogers, who became a lifelong friend who
passed away a couple years ago.
He was part of an investor group, and he brought them along.
So the acquisition goes through.
Yeah.
August of 87, we bought the six Starbucks stores.
We had the three Old Journalies, and there were two stores under construction. So at the end of the calendar year, we had 11 stores and 100 employees in 1987.
All in the Northwest.
Yeah.
Meanwhile, the original Starbucks folks,
they've now gone down to California.
They went to California.
When did Pete's open coffee bars?
Many, many years later.
Ah, so you weren't competing right away.
No, no.
But this is one of the great observations, David.
Il Giornale buys the Starbucks stores,
rebrands Il Giornale Incorporated
as the Starbucks Corporation.
Yeah.
And the original Starbucks had owned Peet's
and now needs a new name,
so it rebrands the company Peet's.
So Peet's was actually Starbucks,
Starbucks was actually Il Giornale. It's amazing. Some stats just for listeners to understand the gravity of
this situation. For the initial 1.6 million that you raised for Il Giornale, you talked to 242
investors, 217 of which said no. So anybody who's griping about their fundraising journey,
those are rookie numbers.
But you asked me a question earlier about what did the years at Xerox teach me?
So the rejection I was going through, the Italians turned me down. People in the US turned me down.
Nobody would believe in the idea. It was like I was cold calling again at Xerox. The other thing that is worth pointing out
is the Starbucks company with the six stores, when they bought Peets with that six to one debt to
equity ratio, basically backed themselves into a corner where now they had these big debt service
payments to make. There was really no risk they could take or innovation that they could do because the
whole business needed to spit out a certain amount of cash every month so they could pay
down the debt.
And so when you're in that situation, Starbucks in the 40 years ahead from this point in the
story has tried all sorts of crazy things to become the business that it is today.
And when you first created this combined company,
you were pretty religious about no debt.
No debt.
I want any debt again because of my childhood.
I was going to ask you,
was that informed by what you had seen
with the Starbucks situation or your childhood?
No, it was totally my childhood.
My parents were always in debt.
Bill collectors were always calling.
And no, we never had any debt the entire time.
Never.
This is probably a good point in time to talk about the business model a little bit.
You've alluded to kind of a stigma, at least among potential investors and the original
Starbucks founders of like the restaurant business.
What did the economics of the business, of the coffee bar business look like
when you bought the Starbucks stores?
So what did we buy?
We had the stores, we had the brand name,
and we had a roasting facility on Airport Way in Seattle.
The ability to source and roast coffee
and put that through the supply chain of a beverage gave us probably at the time
an 80% gross margin. Wow. Yeah, that is not the quote-unquote restaurant business that people
are imagining. And I could begin to see even early on the accretive nature of frequency
where I can see what was going on here is people were not coming for coffee in the morning anymore.
They were starting.
The morning rush was getting bigger, the need for more labor.
And I could sense that the business that Starbucks was in was going to be significantly in the back and the beverage and the romance of the theater.
And the third place was the hero. It didn't take us long to realize we had the beginning of Lightning in the Bottle.
Even the best, most successful restaurant you could possibly imagine,
how many times are their most loyal customers going to come there in a week?
Yeah. There was a time in the Northwest when we were really at our peak
where the average customer was coming 18 times a month. I should rephrase it. Maybe the most
loyal was coming 18 times a month. There's some magic to this idea that it's not a terribly
expensive item. I think I saw some research that said that it's sub 1% of someone's household income and often far less than that. But it is repeat and it is high gross margin. And so when you say lightning in a bottle, there's a cultural lightning in a bottle, but there's also this ridiculous business model where the way it shows up is your stores, basically from this point forward for all of Starbucks' life, you build a new store and the profits from that store would totally cover the costs within two years and often a year and a half.
But I'll tell you the economic model that we applied to every single store we were opening.
By the way, I chose the first 500 locations myself. So I was in it in so many ways. But
the economic model in Wall Street, when we went public in 92, now I'm just,
when they heard the model, I said, well, we'd never seen a model like that.
And the model basically was a sales to investment ratio of two to one
and a operating profit of 20%.
So what does that mean, sales to investment ratio?
So if the sales were a million dollars, the investment was $500,000.
Just the sales had to be a two-to-one.
Wow.
And you're one of operation. Yeah, yes.
And the operating profit was north of 20%.
Wow.
So the cash on cash return was just-
So yeah, you get that two years at last payback.
The retail world had never seen a model like this before.
There was no physical storefront that had this business model before this.
Early on, it became clear to us
that customers were also starting
to customize the beverage on their own.
So we were just,
the barista was behind the counter
and somebody would say,
can you put something else in there?
Yeah, what do you want?
And then, so that just started,
the average ticket started growing
as a result of the customers personalizing and customizing their beverage and to be clear
like the era of starbucks we are in right now you produce drip coffee and you produce espresso
espresso and you can put that espresso in frothed milk and those that's basically your options yeah
yeah like none of this you know yeah exactly but can i tell you a mistake i made please please when il granale was getting ready to open it's a standard cup in the world was that
terrible styrofoam cup that is used in diners in new york city remember that cup yeah i put
boiling water into that cup five minutes later the cup is starting to turn like a golden color because of the chemical.
That can't be good for your insides.
Or the taste of the cup.
And so we had to find, we had to change the cup.
This was such a smart move in retrospect, but we were just trying to figure out. Now, no one in America that is in the paper business
had any kind of cup or lid that was compatible
with what I was trying to do.
In fact, they didn't understand it.
Why not just use the cup that exists?
I said, no, because it doesn't taste good
and it doesn't feel right.
Right, why go to the trouble of this perfected roast
of these beautifully sourced Arabica beans from all these farmers if you're going to pour it into styrofoam yeah okay
so i think you were a hippie like when you were telling these things like are you on lsd or
something miss me so we went to chicago to the international paper company and they had a cup, but the cup didn't have a lid, a compatible lid.
And so they found a lid, that beautiful sip lid,
which is now ubiquitous in the world.
Howard Schultz should have said to them,
I want an exclusive on that lid,
because that lid became the standard for the world,
if I would have just understood that the other thing i didn't do is we introduced cafe latte to the to america we didn't trademark it
you know we trademarked frappuccino later on but we didn't trademark cafe latte
just you know i wasn't thinking yeah you got enough right you don't need to get them all right
no i just i missed it when uh the sizing, Grande, Venti.
Oh, that was.
The hidden Trinta.
Yeah, right?
When did that start?
There was a brilliant, brilliant guy who was the architect of the name Starbucks, named Terry Heckler in Seattle.
And he's a fantastic design guy.
And we're just sitting one day, and I'm just talking about the importance of language.
We've got to get the language right.
And we've got the cup.
We've got to get the language.
And we just started talking about changing it from the pedestrian words of small, medium,
large to what it became, which was short, tall, and grande.
People made fun of it, but they loved it.
Was Venti not an original?
Venti, we didn't have that size when we started. That was later on.
Wow.
Who would have thought somebody wanted to...
This is America.
Yeah, this is America. So my one more question on this,
writing the customer's name on the cup.
That didn't come from me. As the stores got busier and busier the baristas were having a hard
time with whose cup is it what are we going to do and someone at starbucks i don't know who it was
started writing names on the cup writing names and it just became standard so much of starbucks
success came from customers asking for things we weren't doing and Starbucks employees who became partners in 91 understanding the business better than me.
And this is all, to my mind, just starting to create this incredible flywheel.
You've got this 80% gross margin business where the key lever is repeat loyal customer visits.
You've got customization that is making customers more loyal and increasing your margin at the same time because you can charge more for it.
You've got the interpersonal relationship with the baristas, sure, but also even as you scale.
The name on the cup, that's something that scales even as thousands and thousands of people come into the store.
The intimacy with the customer and the barista became a very powerful component of the equity of the experience.
And I've always thought, in so many ways, Starbucks became the first experiential brand at scale.
We didn't spend any money on marketing, zero.
There was no money for marketing.
And the cup, the iconic cup, became a badge of honor
because people were doing something that was new and novel
and walking in the street with it.
And people, you know, what is that?
It was a lot of that kind of stuff.
It's your free billboard that people a lot of that kind of stuff.
It's your free billboard.
Yeah.
That people are proud of.
Perfect.
Wow.
Well, listeners, this entire episode so far,
we have broadly been talking about the concept of customer experience with Howard.
And we want to talk about another business
that has been innovating on the customer experience,
and that's JP Morgan Payments.
When it comes to digital commerce,
JP Morgan Payments. When it comes to digital commerce, JPMorgan Payments is
all about personalization and convenience, both for consumers and businesses.
Right. So on the consumer side, technology has completely changed expectations for shopping
and commerce. Whether it's a sneaker drop or a coffee order, customers expect functionality like
ordering in an app, but picking up in store, getting real-time updates,
and having our preferences and past orders synced and remembered. Yep. And importantly,
we expect our payments to be simple, no matter where or how we want to pay, which creates real
challenges for the business on the other side of that to create the magic. Even with super complex
transactions like a marketplace website, where you aren't just buying from one
single retailer, but a merchant on the other side of that platform. You can imagine there are plenty
of technical and regulatory complexities to make that frictionless across different countries and
currencies, but with great embedded finance and innovative commerce solutions, you can delight
customers without really taking that all on yourself. Yep. No matter how big or small your company is, you have to manage a complex technology ecosystem
that now includes online payments, in-app payments, social payments, in-store payments,
digital wallets, and much more in the future.
Oh, yes. Like biometric payments, which remarkably, research shows that will reach
3 billion users and $5.8 trillion in value globally by 2026.
That is insane.
Yep. And just like Howard pioneered many firsts in his industry,
JP Morgan is doing the same with biometric payments.
It's essentially a pay-by-face solution that allows you to complete transactions
seamlessly and securely, removing the need for carrying a wallet
or digging into
your bag to pull out your phone. Yeah, if any of you were at the Formula One race in Miami last
month, you may have even seen JP Morgan's biometric payments powering the fast lane checkouts in the
merch store. In last year's pilot, literally every single payment was processed in under one second.
Crazy. And for businesses, speed of payments is obviously great to shorten lines.
To quantify that, biometric payment solutions have shown to decrease checkout times by up to
35 seconds per transaction and increase purchase value by 4%, driving incremental revenue and
maximizing profitability. I can totally attest to this as a customer. I basically only use Tap
to pay with my watch or phone everywhere I go now, which, you know, just felt like sci-fi a few years ago. But unsurprisingly, that capability
for merchants to accept contactless payments is now also being powered by JP Morgan payments.
Yep. So whether you want a full stack omni channel service with biometric payments,
or streamlined online payments with the latest APIs, JP Morgan's commerce solutions work to
drive your business forward with
the foundation and security of a leading global bank and the innovation of a fintech the very
best of both worlds that is why we here at acquired work with jp morgan you can check them
out jpmorgan.com acquired to learn more and discover more payment solutions powering growth
for your business across every industry from startups to the Fortune 500.
So in this era, I mean, you must just be getting more and more excited every day.
Oh, I was out of my mind.
So David Howard sent me, there's a 1988, I can't believe this was filmed, but a 1988
shareholder and employee meeting where it's great.
The whole thing's like an hour and a half.
It's all there. And you are using all the same language that you used today back in 1988.
We focus on our people. Those people delight the customer. The customer delights the shareholder
or satisfies the shareholder. And the conviction that you have, it's like watching a preacher.
You're up there. You've got, I think,
11 stores or something, and you're like, you have no idea what we have here. We are on top
of something that is going to change, and you don't say the world, America. And this thing can
become America's coffeehouse. And it was interesting because I think the whole room was already scared
of your ambition of going nationwide with this thing that there did not exist another example
of a national coffee house chain. Everything was just these little cities, these small markets.
And there's this great quote that you have at the end of the meeting that says,
the company since 1971 has been growing at a very,
very slow pace. As a result of that, you combine Il Giornale and Starbucks together,
we're going to take your six stores that you've built in 17 years, and we're going to go to 26
in one year, and we're going to go to over 100 in five years. And that must have just sounded
bonkers. But that is literally what happened. That's what happened.
Like the pace of growth, approximately, you just doubled stores year over year over year.
Was there some moment in 88, 89, 90, where you're just looking around realizing,
we must expand as fast as we possibly can because this concept is the concept the world needs now.
And if we don't pull out all the stops,
someone else is going to do it. There were regional competitors who were making noise about
doing what we were aspiring to do. And I was very mindful because one of them was franchising. That
was Gloria Jeans out of Chicago. And at one point, I think they had more stores than we did because of the franchising opportunity.
And that's one of the reasons why I went to Chicago as well in 87, 88.
Because Chicago was the first market outside of Seattle and Vancouver, right?
Yes.
Even before LA.
And it didn't work right away.
Huh.
Howard Behar should be credited with so much of the cultural texture and the tapestry of the humanity
of the company, said, I will go to Chicago and fix it. He went to Chicago and stayed in Chicago
through the winter and recalibrated the mistakes we were making. And of course, he and Oren were so instrumental
into the loneliness that exists as an entrepreneur
and their ability to help me build the company
that you know today.
Yeah, so I have in my script here,
this is literally labeled the H2O era.
And for anyone who was a partner at Starbucks
sort of knows what I'm talking about
and anybody else outside has no idea. But there's two Howards. There's Howard Schultz and Howard
Behar. And Howard Behar joined in 1989. Oren Smith joined in 1990. And the way that it looks to me
from the outside, and you can tell me if this is right, you were sort of the vision and ambition
that would almost take any ambition that anybody else had and force them to think bigger and faster.
And then Howard Behar was in many ways the soul. He brought the idea of servant leadership. He brought the idea of nothing else matters if we aren't people first. And obviously,
that became a huge tenet of Starbucks as we knew it through the 90s and 2000s. But that
seems like it really arrived with him. And then Oren is like a numbers god.
No, he was the adult in the room.
More than the numbers.
He had the style.
He was quiet.
He was a gentleman.
He was the only MBA in the company.
But he was the wise man who, behind the doors,
could say to me and Howard, you're both full of shit.
We're not doing that.
And we listened,
more or less. And is it true that the three of you had dinner every Monday night for a decade?
More or less, that is true. Sometimes more than once if we had a crisis or two, which generally we did, or we had a disagreement. There's a lot of creative conflict,
especially between Howard and I.
Because he had to operate what we were trying to do and at times he thought we were growing too fast
or ahead of the resources.
Because he was basically training all these operators,
the sort of management fleet of the company.
Yeah, he was building the operating system for us to be able to open the store,
design the stores, which more or less I had done, build them, operate them,
train them, and create the system to handle the flow of customers.
So his job was much harder than mine.
Speaking of system, what did your technology look like at this point?
Don't embarrass him.
No, there was no technology.
No.
Were you running like an Oracle system?
Not at that time, no.
Wow.
No.
We're talking paper?
It was mostly manual.
Wow.
Yeah.
I mean, eventually when they did get point-of-sale terminals,
they were DOS-based all the way through like 2008, right?
Yes, yes.
Like the iPhone was out, and you guys had DOS-based point the way through 2008, right? Yes, yes.
Like the iPhone was out, and you guys had DOS-based point-of-sale systems.
Sounds right.
But obviously technology was not the secret sauce. I'm foreshadowing here the future of the company.
Yeah.
So let's take it forward from this 88, 89, 90.
The first market after Chicago, after you sort of righted that ship, that you decide
to enter on the West Coast is LA.
That's the big fight between Howard and I.
I don't think I realized it was a big fight.
I just felt in my bones we had to go to LA.
Why?
And he said, we're not ready for LA.
We're going to San Diego.
I said, San Diego?
AAA.
Who's in San Diego?
No, we're not going to San Diego.
We're going to LA.
And I've got the location
you went to play in the majors
so we had a meeting about it
and it erupted
into a
bad scene
and
one thing led to another
we did go to LA
I'm shocked
we did go to LA and it was fine and your conviction of we have to go to LA. I'm shocked. We did go to LA. And it was fine.
And your conviction of we have to go to LA, was that for?
The equity of the brand, I could see, I could envision the warm weather and everyone walking
around with our cups and the media and the celebrities and just the iconic way.
And there was nothing in the market, nothing at all, that even appeared to be in the business
that we were in.
And anyone who was doing it was not doing it well.
We had to go.
And even though we maybe were not ready, we just had to do it.
And we did.
And I think Howard would agree today that that ended up being the right decision.
And LA, the halo on Starbucks from from seattle to vancouver and chicago was nothing when we went
to la it just exploded because celebrities embrace starbucks was there an intentional strategy to
create sort of a luxury brand out of star Starbucks that like the cool people were carrying the Starbucks cup? It might be a little bit expensive, but you can afford it.
No, there was no, I can never remember a discussion about segmentation of the brand
because we wanted Starbucks to be accessible to all. You'd have a CEO of a company and the person
behind them was a blue-collar truck driver
because everyone could afford the affordable luxury of Starbucks at the time.
When you say affordable luxury, what about it was luxury?
The quality of the coffee, the experience, and what it felt like to walk around with
that cup at the time.
It was a badge.
It was like you were in the know.
It wasn't a badge of luxury. It was just like something new.
So it became a trope for decades now that, you know, it's, oh, it's a $6 latte or an $8 latte.
Where does that come from? In your mind, is Starbucks premium priced?
Is there actually a Starbucks gets to charge a little bit more because the brand has more
cachet?
Or is that just completely a farce or myth?
I think the pricing of Starbucks was directly linked to the economic model that I alluded to earlier and the rising costs of labor,
rent, and the fiduciary responsibility that we all felt to achieving the promise we had to our
shareholders. And now we're talking about as a public company. There certainly was a fair amount of discussion all the time about the sensitivity
of the price points. And I think in later years, maybe in the last couple of years,
given the consumer inflationary time, I think it's become a bit of a problem. And certainly, I've always said, as Starbucks was growing,
that the ubiquity of Starbucks was an enemy to the company. And the challenge was we have to
figure out a way to ensure the fact that we are getting smaller as we're getting bigger.
And specifically, how do we maintain intimacy and the currency of trust with our
customers and our people? That unto itself is kind of the capsule of making sure that the growth
doesn't become so intoxicating and so seductive that we lose sight of the really secret of the
company, which was the internal culture and values, which built the brand
and built the relationship with the customer. Yeah. Can you tell us about the people? This
is such a huge pillar to our minds of building Starbucks. Again, we started this conversation
talking about childhood. I really want to build a different kind of company. And how do I do that in a way that provides respect and dignity?
Because I was so imprinted with how my father felt disrespected, devalued, and kind of vilified
as a uneducated, blue-collar veteran working in a series of jobs that he just never made it
and living through the dysfunction of a poor family always under pressure with money.
And so I wanted to kind of crack the code on how do we create benefits that would, in a way, take the company in a direction no one's
ever been in before. And so early on, we started talking about exceeding the expectations of our
people so they can exceed the expectations of the customer. And the first time we actually
were able to manifest that was a year before the IPO. And that was an incredible struggle because I had on
my board two venture capitalists. And I was proposing something that had never been done
before. And that was, I wanted to give equity in the form of stock options to every single
employee in the company. And they just said, what? What are you talking about? We're not doing that.
And so the fight became, ultimately,
we gave 14% of everyone's base pay in the form of stock options at the end of the year based on the strike price. And I had to do it the year before the IPO, had to, so everyone wouldn't miss
it. And I think the turning point of the culture of the company was the day we announced that and we became partners.
And to the credit of Craig Foley, who was the VC, and Jamie Shannon, they believed that performance
would be enhanced, attrition would be lowered, and that the brand would just elevate as a result of
that. And it was true, completely true. That changed Starbucks for decades,
along with some other events based on doing the right thing.
I mean, the health care for part-time workers.
So then health care, I think, 25 years before the Affordable Care Act,
what we did with Comprehensive Health Insurance,
and that also, I grew up in a family with no health insurance and i saw what happened
so all of that is that origin story of mine of uh and the tragedy is my father passed away and
never saw what we're able to do do you want the stats on that initial employee stock grant i'd
love to hear it so the program was called Beanstalk, listeners, that Howard was alluding to. Amazing name.
So in 1988, the health benefits roll out even to part-time employees, including gay couples
in domestic partnerships. I believe the first of its kind. That was a 33-store company at that
point. A few years later, you had grown to 55 stores, you did the LA expansion.
And then in 1991, which is the year before the IPO, Beanstalk happens. Equity in the form of
stock options goes out to everyone working 20 plus hours a week. There were 1300 employees at the
time. And I believe it was the first time in history that part-time employees were offered a program like this. So those initial grants, the strike price was $6 per share. Today, as we speak, the share price is
$77, but there have been six splits since then, which comes out to a 64x. So that initial grant
has 800x'd since even the part-time employees and baristas were offered the opportunity to buy
Starbucks stock. Yeah. A lawyer, I think Scott Greenberg at the time, came to me and said,
we can't do this unless we get approval from the SEC because we're over 500 shareholders.
So we've studied lots of amazing companies on this show who have lots and lots of different business models.
But one thing that just kept striking us
as we were preparing for Starbucks
are the similarities to your neighbor here
in the Northwest in Costco.
Costco, right.
And how you treat your people specifically.
That's not by accident.
Both from a it's the right thing to do perspective
and the amazing business model benefit
of the retaining employees.
I mean, it's so expensive to train a new employee.
It's not expensive to keep an existing employee.
And so you can just pay people more
if you keep them for longer.
You just basically have extra money lying around
is what Costco discovered.
There's so much about Starbucks, to David's point,
that's similar to Costco.
Did you ever speak with Jeff Brotman or Jim Senegal or any of those guys about this concept?
Do you know the answer to that?
I actually don't.
No, we don't know the answer.
I assume the answer to this, but I don't know it.
First, Jeff Brotman invested in Starbucks in the round to buy Starbucks.
No way!
Yeah, in that 87 round.
That's when I met Jeff for the first time.
Jeff became a board member of the early imprinting of Starbucks
and clearly a mentor, mentor of mine.
And then he introduced me to Jim Sinigal.
And so there were many moments of me sitting
with Jeff and Jim, including the huge decision to put Starbucks coffee in Costco, which there was a revolt inside the halls of Starbucks saying, no effing way.
Wow.
And we did it. And Jeff and Jim took me to a parking lot in Kirkland when I said, I don't know if we can do this.
I don't know if I can sell it inside.
Okay, meet us on a Sunday morning, whatever it was.
Look at the cars.
These are your customers. Putting Starbucks in Costco, we were able to measure directly the increase in volume in the stores on the east side as a result of the proximity to the Costco store.
You sold beans.
We sold beans.
In Costco.
Yes.
And that brand awareness of I buy Starbucks beans at home meant that that group of people went to the stores more often.
Because we introduced thousands of beverage customers
to Costco through the beans.
Wow.
So Jeff and Jim were instrumental in so many things
and were so kind to me as a young kid.
Then we went nationwide with Costco.
So this is a thing that I think many
people don't realize now that Starbucks is ubiquitous. We sort of forget about this time
when it wasn't and where people had to find some way to experience Starbucks. You know,
you only get a few stores in each of these cities. You're only in a few cities. But there are ways to scale brand awareness. And so you can do things like become the official coffee of United Airlines or be in Costco's all over the US. You did this a number of times. And I feel like the rest of the world did not catch on to what you were doing, was just finding little billboards everywhere where you could put
the Starbucks logo and sort of create that ubiquity. Yeah. If you thought the Costco revolt
was high, you can imagine when I said, we have an opportunity for United Airlines,
people thought that was absolutely blasphemy. Don't do that. And again, the exposure and the
opportunity to surprise and delight customers in places that they've never had anything close to good coffee.
All these things, when you consider we didn't spend a dollar, a dollar of marketing dollars ever.
And so the reputation of the company was built basically word of mouth, both inside our stores and exactly right in places
that we could surprise the customer. And then we also started putting Starbucks coffee in grocery
stores, which was the other thing. Because remember, we were building a beverage business.
Right.
And we were then going back to our core business in new channels of distribution.
It's like the ultimate goal is to capture those margin dollars
from selling cups of coffees in the stores that you operate.
But there's all these other things that you can do
that actually might spit off some profit dollars,
but at the very least, it's a break-even way
to do customer acquisition and brand building
in the rest of the world.
I don't know what our cost of customer acquisition
was back then, but it was low.
But you weren't spending any money on marketing.
United Airlines was paying you for coffee, I assume.
I don't know exactly how that went down.
I have to assume that Barnes & Noble was basically the same thing.
Barnes & Noble was a different deal.
I met Len Riggio, the founder of Barnes & Noble.
Very interesting guy, very smart guy, great merchant.
And we just started talking.
He was from Brooklyn. I was from Brooklyn. We had a natural kind of relationship. And I said,
what do you think about us opening Starbucks inside Barnes & Noble, given you are the ultimate
third place is what we are? And it just, again, became a natural extension of our stores.
We have a fun piece of trivia that you may know
related to Costco. Do you know where Jeff Bezos and Jim Senegal met for the first time?
Sounds like in a Costco. Not in a Costco, in the Starbucks, in the Barnes and Noble,
in Bellevue. Did not know that. And that led to so many things, Amazon Prime among them.
Yeah.
Did not know that.
And I still am friendly with Jim Sinegal today.
I mean, your companies rhyme in so many ways.
That's not surprising at all.
I want to talk a little bit, before we get to the IPO here, about what the strategy was when you expanded market by market.
Did you try to sprinkle a few
stores in and see? Did you try to move into a market with force and be the dominant coffeehouse
chain in that city? And in particular, it could be worth talking about Boston.
Well, Boston's an anomaly because of the acquisition, but Bihar was so strident in
not expanding to multiple markets at once.
And he was 100% right.
And so we went to Chicago, went to LA, and we stayed there for quite a while.
Went to Portland.
We weren't ready for New York City in terms of the issues there.
But we were very diligent.
You went to DC first.
Went to DC. We were not expanding to multiple markets until we had enough evidence in the
existing market that we had success and we weren't going to compound the growth in another market
with problems that we're having in the existing one. And I think that's all be her because he was managing all the operations.
Boston was very different.
We had a very strong, high-quality competitor called the Coffee Connection in Boston with a owner-operator in George Howell who was not unlike Alfred Peete, kind of a gospel of coffee culture on the East Coast.
And we knew Boston was going to be tough for Starbucks to enter.
We also had Dunkin' Donuts there.
Like a lot of the good real estate was taken by the coffee production, right?
Yeah.
And so George and I never saw eye to eye.
But it was clear that if we came to Boston in a significant way, we were going to impact his business.
And I think to his credit, he was willing to sell.
So Coffee Connection was the first acquisition.
And we had to tread very lightly after the acquisition because of the loyalty and be careful with the name and solicit George's help and advice.
And also, we needed him to kind of validate for us what we were trying to do.
And ultimately, it ended up being a very good strategy.
Well, it seemed like, I think the numbers are, it was a little bit after IPO in 94,
$23 million.
They had 23 locations, and they were doing $16 million a year in revenue.
So if you just look at the purchase... I think it was one-time sales i think or maybe a little over
one-time sales and the original starbucks ironically enough was exactly a one-time sales
right that's what you bought it from the founders for if they had the lock on all the best real
estate and they had burned all the capital figuring out you know what stores we should be in what
stores we shouldn't be in and then then you just get to move into that market
for one-time sales, 1.5, whatever it is,
with all that already figured out, that's pretty amazing.
It probably seemed high at the time, though.
I'm sure it did. Well, isn't that the thing about valuations?
It always seemed like in the good old days, everything was undervalued.
Okay, let's talk about the IPO.
So it seems like you knew the moment that you bought Starbucks from the founders,
this is going to be a public company.
I thought so.
There was no...
I think there was so much about being a public company that meant something to me personally, that it validated
the company, it validated me, my own shame and security as a kid. So that was a driving force
all along. Certainly the year before with Beanstalk is an indication of what I was planning
if Beanstalk was turned down. I would have waited. That had to be done. I think we only
had a couple of quarters of profitability. And I think we had about 130 stores.
And what was the revenue at the time?
Oh, I don't remember exactly. I know what the market cap was the day we went public.
I think you ended up doing $93 million that year, but the year before, it was
50 million or something like that. Companies went public when they were smaller back then, but-
Well, you were a small cap IPO. Yeah, we were. And we got turned down by Goldman Sachs. You know
that? I did not know that. I couldn't believe it. I mean, I just, I wanted Goldman Sachs as the,
I just, they were the patina on the prospectus to have Goldman Sachs.
It would be a very Starbucks thing for Goldman Sachs to be the lead left.
Well, Blankfein, I had a good friend who was a senior partner there who's since passed away.
I thought I had it locked.
I mean, it was just so many things about it, New York, everything.
And they said, no, you're too small.
Well, the thing that Dan Levitan told us years ago when we did an episode on the Starbucks
IPO was that you were really only considering smaller banks because it was going to be a
smaller IPO.
Well, I was considering it because Goldman Sachs told me that.
They told you.
I had no choice.
I had no choice.
And Brotman at the time was not a big fan of Wertheim Schroeder,
which was Dan Levitan's thing.
And so Alex Frown became the lead.
But I also had my own ego attached to this.
I had so much fun on the roadshow.
I was just in my element.
I was looking up, I was trying to figure out your public comps at the time.
I think there were zero publicly traded coffee companies, not bean companies, not retailers,
not coffee house chains.
I mean, truly unheard of.
So when you're going on this roadshow, I think people, of course, are mystified.
There's literally no public companies like yours.
You have a huge investor education problem, right?
Yeah, I think we had to take them through everything.
We had the product there.
We served coffee.
I gave them the whole show. We had a short video that was probably in black and white.
The comp always was a restaurant, and I was always fighting, we're not a restaurant.
We're a hybrid retailer. I never referred to us as a cafe. It was always a store. We are a store.
We are merchants. Fascinating. I mean, I go there and eat many, many meals sitting in your store.
Yeah, well.
But as we've been talking about, I mean, the economics, you were a store.
We were a store.
We were a retail store.
So, Howard, I'm going to take us through the IPO.
You're the first publicly traded coffee company.
You end up doing $93 million in revenue that year.
Do you remember the exact price?
Yes. We went out at $17 you remember the exact price? Yes.
We went out at $17 and the price was $21.
The market cap, I think, was $250 million.
Can you imagine today a $250 million market cap company going public?
And people considering that a success.
I mean, this is a great...
At the time.
For your employees, how crazy is that?
What, 12, 18 months before?
I guess 12 months before. It's $6? What, 12, 18 months before? Yeah.
I guess 12 months before.
Yeah.
Six bucks a share.
You tripled their money.
Yeah.
Fantastic.
And that was when you started calling them partners, right?
When they became- 91.
As soon as Beanstalk was instituted, everyone was a partner.
And is that when you did the lowercase, when titles all became lowercase?
No, everyone was lowercase from the beginning.
Oh.
Out of respect.
Everyone's lowercase. Listeners, when you look up a Starbucks employee on LinkedIn, it always looks
like, is that a typo? And then you realize there's a pattern. All employees always put lowercase
titles. So another interesting thing about the, I was reading the S1 last night, the management team inclusive of you owned 18%, but only 9% to 10% of that was you personally.
So the rest of the management team owned just as much as you did as the founder.
Yeah.
That does feel unusually high.
Do you think that that played a role in sort of getting people's buy-in and getting them to bleed Starbucks as much as
you did? Not intentionally, no. Okay, not a strategy. No, that was not a strategy. Interesting.
So then from there, you open in Washington, D.C. on the East Coast. I think that the reason you
picked D.C. was because your mail order business was strong there. So you sort of had proprietary
data to know that that was going to be a good coffee city. I don't know how you found that out, but that's accurate.
In 1995, you crossed 500 stores. You had just bought the Coffee Connection, as we talked about,
in Boston. And they had one asset that was perhaps much more valuable than any of the real estate or
any of the sales that you would generate from there. they owned the trademark on the word Frappuccino.
And I'm so smart that I looked at that Frappuccino with disdain.
Really?
I didn't like the name.
I didn't like the beverage.
I didn't think it was appropriate for Starbucks.
And because I just saw Starbucks as such a purity with regard to coffee.
And I was wrong, dead wrong, obviously.
Putting myself in your shoes back then,
now Starbucks and Frappuccino are like, it's like a synonym.
It's like you can't disentangle them.
But yeah, it's very different than coffee.
Completely different, a blended cold drink.
That was the first cold drink we've ever introduced.
It was not a coffee-forward beverage.
When we introduced it in Southern California, it went crazy.
So what changed your mind to greenlight it?
I didn't have a choice.
I mean, Coffee Connection had it.
Then we had it in Boston.
People wanted it.
And I just went along.
And you ended up reformulating it, right?
It wasn't exactly what the coffee was. A store manager in Santa Monica reformatted it
and she was on it.
I think Howard Behar loved it.
People in California loved it.
There's a fantastic story about Frappuccino
because of what we did with it,
not in its existing form in retail,
but what we ended up doing with it
in terms of leveraging the brand
and distribution. That's another great story. Was that your first bottled drink in retail?
Yeah. So I went to Atlanta and Pepsi in the same day.
Atlanta being Coke.
I went to Coke. I went to Pepsi in the same day. The Coke meeting was a meeting, lasted less than 30 minutes.
I can't remember who I met with.
They dismissed me.
Didn't view Starbucks, didn't understand what I was trying to do
and didn't give me much time to even explain it.
And then I went to Pepsi.
And this is 95-ish?
Mid-90s.
See, 500 stores, your public company.
But in East Coast,
Starbucks wasn't really well known. So I went to Pepsi and purchased New York,
met Roger Enrico, the iconic CEO, and Craig Weatherup, the president of Pepsi. They loved
the idea. And we started talking about this. craig weatherup and i on a napkin
i swear shook hands and created a multi-billion dollar business for pepsi and starbucks and a
50 50 jv and bottle frappuccino and craig weatherup deserves all the credit for that
and then craig became a board member of Starbucks. Oh.
And Roger and I were friends until his death and served on the DreamWorks board together.
How did you find yourself at Coke and Pepsi
pitching a bottled beverage?
And was there an internal revolt?
Because I could imagine people saying,
this is a bridge too far.
I don't think people knew what I was even doing.
I mean, I think maybe a few people,
I just had the thought, we got to put this in a bottle.
We have to put this in a bottle. We have to put this in a bottle.
And this product, if I'm remembering right, was so successful, the instant that it hit
store shelves, you had to pull it all off because you needed to create new manufacturing
processes and spin up new factories in order to make enough to actually satisfy demand.
Basically correct.
And we also, early on, had a recall
where they found glass in the bottle.
And Pepsi, to its credit,
took all the blame for that and fixed it.
But yeah, it was from minute one,
the power of Starbucks and Bottle Frappuccino
and doing something we had never,
no one, it was no bottle of coffee, let alone.
And again, just like the Costco story and the United Airlines story,
the flywheel of the awareness and people drinking something
they could enjoy at home or at work.
Again, it just created another level of velocity on the brand i mean i'm just thinking
about between the cups but then united airlines and costco and the cpg products there's got to
have been like 50 billion starbucks logos printed i'm sure that was maybe more i'm just i'm sure that was maybe more. I'm sure I could estimate it better another time.
But you can see where the size of the equity of the brand
was much bigger than the size of the company.
Much bigger.
Right, because at this point, you were like 800 stores.
Then something else happened.
And that is we wake up one day and someone says,
Starbucks is in a movie.
And we said, what movie?
You've got mail.
That wasn't coordinated?
First of all, Starbucks never paid for placement.
Someone must have approved it.
I knew nothing about it.
And then someone said, you've got to see this movie.
Starbucks is all over it.
I said, what movie?
Tom Hanks, You've Got Mail with Meg Ryan. I knew nothing about it. It was just another thing where it was just like a little fairy dust on the brand. Did you know that it was like the good old days where you're like,
this is just like... We were so in the mud. We were so in it that we didn't have time to look up.
And we were just running so fast, so hard.
When you're growing at this pace, it's almost virtually impossible to catch the growth in terms of the infrastructure.
And so you're constantly back and forth trying to create that fragile balance between the seductive nature and the intoxication of growth and success
and the foundation necessary to support it and not falling too far behind where you lose it.
But you never are in a position, at least we were never in a position, we were ahead of it,
never. And so there was a constant push.
And I think this is where Oren was the wise man in the room
to say, Howard, we just can't do that now.
Because we don't have the infrastructure.
We don't have the people, we don't have the systems.
And I'd be screaming, we gotta do it.
If we don't do it, someone else is gonna do it.
We gotta do it.
And that takes us to international.
We weren't ready for that.
Yeah, so I wanna, putting a bow on Frappuccino.
The year after it launched in 1996,
Frappuccinos were 7% of revenue,
which I can attest to.
Maybe freshman year of high school.
Seven-year-old Ben is like,
hit me with that Frappuccino.
I had my first tall mocha Frappuccino
with whipped cream and a little chocolate drizzle on top.
And now here I am drinking, what are we here it's you're drinking coffee from india yeah and it's
so good no cream no no only black yeah and so uh you know the the frappuccino began my journey to
the good stuff uh so that's the frappuccino story uh 96 97 98. I mean, this is the international story. So I love the Japan story.
You've told this to me before, but I'd love to hear what it was.
There's a couple of things about this. I started taking a couple of trips to Europe and Asia just to get a sense of what the opportunity would be and how would we do it.
I quickly wrote off Europe because coffee was there. I didn't think we could possibly enter
as an American company. And so we just took Europe off. This would be like a American luxury
leather goods company coming in and competing with Hermes. Yeah, not going to happen. And so we said, we just took it off the map.
And then we narrowed our focus very quickly on Japan.
Japan had a couple of thousand coffee stores named Doutour.
You walk in there, and it was smoke-filled, mostly men, dark, but they were successful. And so I said to the
board, we want to go to Japan. The board was incredibly resistant to the idea. Why? You've
got all this white space in America. There's no need to do this at the time. And I just said,
okay, well, and so one thing led to another and a board member said, if you're considering this, hire an outside resource to do a study.
I was livid about that.
Aren't there some consultants you could possibly pay to help this?
And so we hired a consultant who came back with a big book, presented it to the board. I had a preview,
and it basically was, this is a non-starter. You can't possibly succeed there. And in the meeting,
I could feel my blood just boiling because with every statement, it was getting worse.
The economics won't work. No one in Japan will ever walk in the street with a cup of coffee they would
lose face your no smoking policy which we had from the beginning is a non-starter
and you can't afford the economics to rent don't go well that only made me
more furious it's like they've never met you and more intentional and so
we were we kept thinking about this and then one day we get a handwritten letter
from a japanese company and the founder of the company yuji-san, had a LA restaurant, and he was enamored with Starbucks.
We sit down with him.
We fall in love with him.
We weren't ready, but we decided we're going to give it a shot.
We go to Tokyo.
We meet him.
We ended up forming a JV. And the folklore at Starbucks, which is not that unrealistic,
is the reason we went to Japan as an international market
is because it had direct flight to Seattle.
That was the extent of our understanding.
Now, we open up in August.
If you've been to Tokyokyo in august it's hot it's like 95 degree temperature
and a hundred percent humidity it's like getting out of a new york city subway in the middle of
august as soon as you walk out you need a shower it's going to be a tough opening because of the
hot weather i'm very concerned about. I get back to my hotel room
and I have a message that CNN is covering the opening live. Or they got cameras.
High risk, high reward. Wow.
I'm so nervous. At 6 a.m., we get in the car. It's so hot. The tie around my neck, it feels like a noose.
We're driving up to the store in the Ginza, and there's like 200 people online.
And I turned to the translator, and I said, did he hire extras?
I cut the ribbon, and a young man who slept over the night before to be the first person
as a college student speaks no English.
He rushes to the front of the line, and I follow him, no English, and he says, double
tall latte.
As God is my witness, just like that.
And I said, holy shit.
How did they know? And Japan was an extraordinary success from minute one. We got
2,000 stores there. I was there two months ago. Incredible. We have a roastery there.
Why were there people lined up around the block? Why did it work so well instantly?
Was it a strong coffee culture? No, it was the iconic reputation and anticipation of something that they had convinced themselves was unique, proprietary, not in Tokyo, not in Japan, that they wanted to have.
And that cup, and by the way, the research, that cup was all over Tokyo in months.
Everyone was walking around with that cup.
And this is nine years after you bought the six stores.
It has turned into this icon.
In all the events we just covered, Starbucks has already become Starbucks.
It is already this globally desirable brand.
There by 1996.
I honestly haven't thought about it in that way.
That's so fast.
I mean, to build something that...
It didn't seem fast to us.
I bet.
The parallels to the Microsoft story are just so apt.
Japan was Microsoft's first international market.
Did not know that.
It was half their business, and it started in the same way.
Bill and Paul got a cold call from Kei Nishi,
who was a guy in Japan who had somehow gotten a hold
of the basic interpreter, loved it,
and said, I'm so passionate about this,
I want to bring it to Japan.
50% of Microsoft's revenue for the first at least five years.
And they stayed 50% international permanently.
And that's what took them from Albuquerque
to like, hey, we're international.
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So Japan's 96.
In 97, you cross 1,000 stores globally.
You're getting your feet under you.
You're saying, okay, international is going to be a thing.
In 1999, you...
2,000 stores.
2,000 stores. Because we had a goal of 2,000 by 2,000. We beat it by a thing. In 1999, you- 2,000 stores. 2,000 stores.
Because we had a goal of 2,000 by 2,000, we beat it by a year.
99, you also opened in Beijing. What's the calculus on entering China? And did you realize
it could become such a pillar of the company like it is today?
I honestly don't think we had any real understanding of what we're getting into.
And we went there with a partner that didn't work out. I should tell you that we had a theory of
the case that any international market that we opened that didn't speak English, we needed a
partner. And so Japan was a partner, successful.
We entered in a partnership in China early on that was not successful, did not share
our values, and we got out and ended up going.
So you closed all the stores?
No, no, we got out of the partnership, bought them out, and became company owned.
And so that was legal to do that, to be an American-owned company operating in China.
Yeah, but we struggled in China for almost a decade. Lost money. There was tremendous pressure
inside the company that closed China. Until Belinda Wang. Maybe the most valuable person in the company,
from my view. Really?
Yeah.
When did Belinda get involved with Starbucks? Belinda was working.
She started with Starbucks in Singapore,
but she was working in Hong Kong.
We were open in Hong Kong.
And I saw something in her who was just an extraordinary operator
and had a touch with people.
And I said, and we were dying in china
we're really in trouble would you come to china and run it and she said i would do i would consider
doing that uh but you've got to decentralize it and we couldn't do that right away it was just
too much but she changed the course of history for Starbucks in China.
What year was that? That she took over the role?
I think it's about a decade after we opened.
Okay. Well, I asked-
She's still there today.
I asked because I want to come back to it. There's a whole interim between 2000 and 2008
where you are not the CEO of the company.
Right.
So in 2000, I mean, if you've been listening to this episode, the theme that should be occurring
to you is, oh my God, basically everything worked.
And I know it didn't feel like that on the inside, but you read all those investment
banking reports and it's like, hey, Starbucks, here's all these price targets for Starbucks
and here's what we think they're going to do in earnings and oh, they beat it again.
And like, I don't know, 30, 40 quarters in a row.
It's just like this,
I would say perfectly predictable except
you actually kept exceeding the expectation
so it wasn't predictable.
I did 100 quarterly conference calls
as CEO.
100.
That's a lot.
I bet. That's a lot of earnings prep
because each one of those has what two weeks
before it of the truth is the majority of those were no script which became the league the lawyers
took over after that many years but no script which is your preferred communication style i
mean it seems like whenever i see you up speaking there's no there's no teleprompters it's from the
heart so at this point i don't want to say, it would be incorrect
to say Starbucks is running itself, but like, it's in a great place. And you step into the role of,
is it executive chairman? Yes, executive chair with Oren as the CEO. In 2000. Yeah. What was your... I think I was physically and emotionally exhausted.
Kids were getting older.
I had missed a lot.
Just think about all the things we were doing.
And I had so much confidence in Oren, so it was no problem.
And so that's what I did.
But I was still engaged, but I was not running it day to day.
And at this point, it's 3,500 stores.
The company's doing $2.2 billion in revenue.
It kind of feels like, OK, I can get some distance.
I can do other things in life.
It's going to work out.
At some point, Oren transitions the CEO role to Jim Donald, which I assume you were also
very involved in working with him.
What was that transition about?
Oren never wanted to be the CEO.
He's not a front guy.
In fact, he's shy
and never wanted to be on the stage as a CEO.
So he said, I'll do it for a couple of years.
But he's always kind of knocking on my door saying,
we need a new CEO.
And we didn't have anyone internally.
Bihar didn't want it.
And so we did a search.
We met Jim Donald, great, great guy,
had all this operational experience.
And then certain things started appearing
and we just weren't hitting our stride the way we usually do.
The economic environment was getting tougher. And things just kind of unveiled itself that it wasn't going to
work out. By the way, but Jim is a great guy, like a really good person, but it just wasn't the right
fit. And so how long had he been in that role of CEO? I'd say less than three years, two years maybe.
But basically the 2008 happens and...
So the cataclysmic financial crisis is unfolding.
And that plus the cracks that we were experiencing,
board meeting and...
I don't think the board meeting was set up for me to return,
but it just kind of happened in the meeting about,
okay, we've got all these problems.
What are we going to do?
Do you want to come back?
Yeah, I'm going to come back.
And that was never your intent.
When you stepped away, you thought you were really stepping away.
It was not my intent to come back,
and it was certainly not my intent that we were going to run into problems.
And so in the Christmas vacation of 2007, I knew I was going to return in January.
So I was on holiday, and I was starting to think through what I was going to do.
On that holiday, a friend of mine, I didn't know he was there, but it was Michael Dell
was there.
And I must have talked to him almost every day about the
transformation of Starbucks. And he was going through a similar thing at Dell, almost at the
same time. So we had so many things to talk about. And we were comparing notes and everything.
And so in early 2008, I spoke to Jim and I came back in 2008. And when you came back in 2008, I mean, this is the
whole crux of your book onward. There's an entire book's worth of material here, so we're not going
to do it all. But suffice to say, just to put some numbers on it, the market cap had dropped from $30
billion to less than $7 billion. Same source sales, the comparables number when you compare the store this quarter last year
to this quarter, you know, this year to last year,
had dropped, growth began to slow.
And so you come in and you have to make these
really horrible decisions.
You're faced with two terrible options
and you got to make the right decisions for the business.
I, first off, every rock I turned over was worse than I thought.
There were a lot of unperforming stores that should have never been opened
that we need to close. I think we closed a thousand stores. And I had a company-wide meeting.
I remember it vividly because I started crying and apologized to everybody that we got to close doors we got to
lay people off and i mean just think about you know we were on our trajectory for all this time
and all of a sudden we not only hit a speed bump but the world the music was just stopping the
stock price i think broke six dollars i was so afraid that we were going to get acquired but
the only cover we had is that
the world was coming undone. So no one had any resources. But I was terrified. I just stood up
and apologized and said, we've let you down. I promise I'm going to do my best. But we're trying
to save the company. And literally, we were trying to save Starbucks. Things were that bad.
You say that we were trying to save starbucks and in my head i always thought
what could have been that bad this is big successful company it's fast growing it's
profitable and then i read you were seven months from being insolvent so we had uh we didn't have
enough cash concept we never had negative comps in the history of starbucks so negative i didn't
every single quarter was better than 12 months never had never had a
negative comp month in my history of of the company i didn't understand how i understand it
such an anomaly so um we we closed all those stores and um then you got to decide okay how do
we how do we turn it what do we do and i think going back to
your line of questions in the past about the people is of all the things that i could point to
that demonstrates what starbucks is has been and needs to be it's the humanity and the people of the company. The company was built
on being a performance-driven company through the lens of humanity. That's how it was built.
And whenever we've lost our way, we've lost our way because people in power didn't understand that equation. And so I just said, I need to be in front of every
store manager. I need a meeting with 10,000 people. It's a big conference room. And so in 2008,
no American company was traveling. And so the municipalities were hungry for Starbucks
to potentially have a meeting at a discount.
And so we had Detroit come in, we had Houston come in,
and then New Orleans came in.
What they presented to us was the need for Starbucks to come
as a result of Katrina.
And when we heard that, we realized we've got to go to New Orleans.
And in fact, what we're going to do in New Orleans is we're going to have
one full day of 50,000 hours of community service in the Ninth Ward.
Next day, we walked through and we built basically a tutorial
on how to restore the business and have people walk through it.
And we had classes and we had all these things going on. And the third day was my speech
in the basketball coliseum to 10,000 people. About an hour before, I was really
feeling the burden of how important what I was going to say is.
And the CFO at the time, who subsequently resigned a week later, wasn't my guy,
asked me what I'm going to say.
And I said, I'm going to tell him the truth.
And he says, you can't possibly do that.
You're going to scare the shit out of them.
I went up there and I laid it out, chapter and verse.
I think we have seven months left.
We are going to be insolvent.
I can see why he was freaked out about this.
Like, if word got out to Wall Street that you...
Yeah, well, social media didn't exist at that time,
but I just laid it out.
What if that store was the difference between the food on your table and its success and then i had this
economic formula of how many customers it would take per store to turn comps around and the number
was low it's like less than 10 per day or 11 per day.
And so I said, let's just talk about New Orleans.
You know how many new incremental customers it'll take in your store?
And it was manageable and tangible.
Anyway.
Right, because you could actually imagine, okay, if 10 more people walk in the door today
and I delight them in a particular way that brings them back tomorrow, we're turning this thing around.
We're turning this one store around, and if everybody does that.
And the problem when you get this big is you start thinking about large numbers.
But if you reduce it to the lowest common denominator, one store, one cup of coffee, one customer, one partner. And what if all
of that works? Well, we rushed out of New Orleans like an effing tidal wave. And we never looked
back. And less than a year was turned. And you did crazy. I mean, the tactics involved in the
turnaround. We closed the stores. For what? Noon onward, right?
For an entire afternoon and evening.
Because the previous administration had done things that diluted the integrity of coffee
to maximize yield.
Like what?
What does that mean?
Well, let's say you're making a batch of brewed coffee.
Yep. Well, what if that brewed coffee you're making a batch of brewed coffee. Yep.
Well, what if that brewed coffee
was based on a number of ounces of coffee?
What if you just reduced it just a little bit?
No one's going to know.
Hmm.
It's little things.
Little 10,000 little-
Yeah, sounds good in theory.
Scratches of efficiency that dilute the experience.
Yeah.
Huh.
But that does seem like a,
reflects a misunderstanding of the fundamental business,
that this is a business about a store with high gross margins based on customer loyalty.
But we were beginning to face headwinds.
And what are the headwinds?
Headwinds were the level of attrition of customers
as the financial climate deteriorated yeah yeah spending that six dollars on the latte
daily habit yeah gets harder to justify and we weren't as good as we we were when we're small
yeah then it makes it easier to give up and this goes back to what i said earlier growth covers up
mistakes and success breeds hubris. And it did.
How could it not? I mean, how could you? Starbucks today is so freaking ubiquitous,
which again, is one of the things I love about it. It's consistent anywhere I travel in the world. I
can count on it. I can mobile order and pay. There's all these wonderful things. But when you
become like government level scale in the world, people assume it's a piece of public infrastructure
i assume employees even must feel that way during some periods of time of like we're so big
we're just but the worst thing that starbucks could have become and the worst thing that
starbucks could become is a utility scale and ubiquity creates complexity.
Complexity demands efficiency.
But we are in a business where that touch point between the customer and the barista has to be protected and has to be elevated.
Now, then you get stores that are so busy where the barista can't even look up, can't look up.
And then you get mobile order and pay,
which we haven't even talked about.
Which is a thing I love and do every day
and depersonalizes the experience by definition.
Yes.
Starbucks demands nurturance.
It's a company that has to be nurtured like a young child.
That is an anomaly, inconsistent with scale.
And you get people coming into the company with different experience, different language.
The immersion doesn't quite hit them in the heart or the soul or the conscience of the
company.
They feel like they're doing a good job, but it's not the job that's consistent with the
integrity and heritage of what the company has been.
Metaphorically, let's say that's a giant reservoir.
If you're taking a deposit on a consistent basis out of the reservoir and it's getting dry, you better stop.
You better make sure you're making a deposit so they're equal and it's balanced. When you get
this, that's when the company loses the plot. And if you get this and you're making a lot of money
and the stock price is high, people say, it's okay. We're fine. And that's fool's gold. It's
a camouflage because eventually it's going to bite you in the ass.
Have you ever figured out a way to measure these things in a way that as long as these numbers, that the numbers are a direct tie to our values are good, we can actually put a KPI against them, we know that the core is solid?
I haven't been smart enough to figure that out. But I mean, I think the interesting thing to me today is that the Asian business is operating at a much higher level of the soft side
of Starbucks than we are in the US. Now I've been- Now I understand your Belinda Wong comment.
That doesn't answer your question about quantifying it.
But when I am in Asia,
I see things that are very elevated to the brand
that speak to the financial performance of those markets,
which are very high.
Okay, before we get to today,
I want to talk about some other
things that happened in 2008. 2008 was a big year. So 2008, 2009, 2010, there's no way to put it
other than a wildly successful turnaround. Your low point in 2008 profits were $315 million,
and by 2010, they were $945 million. I mean... I don't know how we did that.
Well, we just went through a lot of the ways of how you did that. There's a couple other things here, one of which is technology.
But I'm told there's a story you have about Steve Jobs around this point in time, too.
Yeah, it's a funny story, another story.
And so in Hawaii, when I was on vacation, I'm talking to Michael Dell and Benioff.
And you're cycling with Michael Dell, right? Cycling with Dell almost every day. And I'm talking to Michael Dell and Benioff. And you're cycling with Michael Dell, right?
Yeah, cycling with Dell almost every day.
And I'm talking to Benioff.
Michael introduced me to Benioff, didn't know him.
And so his-
It's a pretty good Hawaii crew, okay?
So I get back, and Adam Brotman was a key person in all this,
in terms of mobile order and pay.
Yeah.
He ran digital for Starbucks.
Yeah, he ran digital.
I'm trying to make sure I got the sequencing of this right.
I think there was a future meeting scheduled for Starbucks and Apple around mobile order and pay and other things.
And I met Steve on a phone call. around mobile order and pay and other things.
And I met Steve on a phone call.
I never met him, I was talking to him on the phone. And I'm telling him what's going on.
He said, you should come down.
And he had a whole thing about walking.
He would go out and we'd walk around the building.
Have you heard this before?
Yeah, of course.
Infinite loop at their old campus?
Yeah, yeah.
And so I went down there and basically went down
and we took a walk.
And I just told him all my problems,
everything that was going on.
And he just stopped me and he said,
this is what you need to do.
Just looked at me and he said,
you go back to Seattle and you fire everyone
on your leadership team.
I thought he was joking.
I said, what do you mean fire?
What are you talking about?
Fire everybody.
He said, I just told you.
F and fire all those people. He said, I just told you.
F and fire all those people.
He's like screaming at me in my face.
Fire all those people.
That's what I would do.
I said, Steve, I can't fire all those people.
Who's going to do the work?
He said, I promise you in six months, maybe nine, they'll all be gone.
He was right.
Except for one, the general counsel. They were all gone. Your whole leadership team turned over after. They were all be gone. He was right. Except for one, the general counsel.
They were all gone.
Your whole leadership team turned over after.
Yes, they were all gone.
Wow.
That's the story about Steve Jobs.
Wow.
Did you ever call him back and tell him? No, I talked to him since then.
And we were on stage together at an event.
And I told him, they're all gone.
He said, well, you're six months, nine months late, man.
Think about all the things you could have done.
Of course.
That's that story.
So while we're in technology land then,
I think today 33% of Starbucks orders
are done with mobile order and pay.
So obviously this huge pillar of Starbucks
as it exists in our world.
How did that start?
Yeah. You had been on pen and paper then you moved to dos and now you have the most sophisticated technology platform
of probably any retailer at the time so you're talking to a non-tech person so i'm not i'm not
focused on anything other than the customer experience yeah Adam Brotman, to his credit, along with Steven Gillette,
who was at Starbucks very shortly, came to us with the idea of building a mobile app.
I didn't know what it was. Honestly, we're in the meeting, I'm trying to figure out what are you
actually talking about? How are they going to do that?
They created...
And apps at this point, I mean, if it came out in 2009, which was the first version,
the iOS SDK came out in...
Summer 2008.
Summer 2008.
So it's like, you know, you're one of the very...
If they're having this idea and bringing it to you, it's like months after apps exist. Well, they get complete credit for
assembling the pieces of all this, convincing us to fund it, and we were off and running.
I don't think any of us, honestly, for myself, really knew what they were actually going to create they explained it to us but i
didn't really i didn't get it until i saw it and then holy shit overnight it was just an unbelievable
new vehicle now if we fast forward i don't know if you want to do that here, on what it's become, it is the biggest Achilles heel for Starbucks.
Really?
And it's not even a close second.
And so the mobile app created unbelievable convenience for our customers. But remember, we are an experiential
brand. And so as this thing was growing, there was never an opportunity because it became so
seductive for the company. It also created an even better business model for you, right?
It was more efficient and you get the float with customer funds.
All that is true, but it was beginning to deteriorate at a rapid rate, the third place experience and the sense of community. And then it became, it overflowed to the point where
it disproportionately created an environment in our stores where the mobile app became
the primary vehicle, as well as the primary vehicle for dissatisfaction.
Because people couldn't get their drink on time people
were confused whether that was their drink a lot of anxiety and the thing i remember the most is
that we were in chicago at 8 a.m because people wanted to show me the problem and so everyone is
getting off the loop the train at 8 a.. And everyone who ordered on their app, it says the same thing.
Your drink's going to be ready in seven minutes.
And everyone shows up.
And all of a sudden, we got a mosh pit.
And that's not Starbucks.
And so the company did not do a good job of anticipating the technological refinements that needed to be
put in place to avoid what was happening. And I want to be fair to everyone who's managed the
company. For about a five-year period, remember, I wasn't involved in the company from basically 2018 to 2022.
Yep.
I was not involved.
You stayed CEO from 2008 until 2017.
Then I left.
And there were no bad people, and no one had bad intentions.
But the heritage and tradition of what I've described,
which is so vital
to the nurturance, was lost.
Well, it must have been.
It was so seductive.
Yeah, the stock was at record high, and the company was not investing ahead of the curve
and not paying attention to the velocity of the mobile app and what it was becoming until
it was too late.
And the company has that problem today, which they will solve.
But it's late.
And also, everyone has caught up to, we were the only game in town.
And the novelty of that and the uniqueness of it, especially for our product.
And everyone pretty much copied it.
It is interesting.
David keeps saying it's so seductive to put some numbers for listeners wondering
why is the mobile app such an interesting thing.
David pointed out the float.
So of course, if you look at Starbucks financial statements,
right now at any given time,
there's about $1.8 billion of cash
that Starbucks has gotten in the form,
effectively as an advance from customers,
that Starbucks can use to operate. It's like this amazing... Invest in the form, effectively as an advance from customers, that Starbucks can use to operate.
It's like this amazing...
Investing in growth, capital, store expansion,
et cetera, et cetera.
Right.
We're not the only one.
I mean, everyone...
Right, you know, Amazon has this.
Apple.
Apple has this.
Berkshire has this, the insurance business.
But it's effectively interest-free loan from customers
and a loan that's not all going to get called at once.
It's, uh, some of it will never get called, right? The breakage. And so there's this benefit of like,
it's a reasonably predictable amount of cash that comes in that you get to use, um, you know,
for your advantage, uh, in terms of velocity, about $14 billion a year gets loaded onto gift cards.
That's unbelievable.
I mean, if you actually look at all of the banks in America,
if Starbucks were a bank and you treated the gift cards as deposits,
it would be in the top 10% by deposits of banks in the United States.
It's this unbelievable business model
that happens to exist inside of this experiential business
that powers this experiential business.
But to your point, you have to keep it from eating the core.
Yeah, so let's just go back, not to the economics,
but the idea itself.
And I think whether we talked about bottle frappuccino,
the cup, you just thread all these things, there is a common through line.
And that is we took a commodity business and we transformed it into a premium product, brand, and experience but when you are disrupting the market there has to be
some governor on the on the disruptive innovation to monitor how is it being
used how is it being abused and the era of judgment in the period where this was
really kind of where we really took hold this five-year period between 2018 and 2022,
it's a government that didn't exist.
Oh, you feel like it wasn't really taking hold in that whole run before.
It was taking hold.
And I'm not criticizing anyone because we're all, everyone's trying to do a good job. job but the the the result is the the the runner the the unbelievable success it disrupted the
experience yeah and now you have stores that are entirely built to just pick up mobile orders yeah
and so and and my view is we should not succumb to the mobile app looking back back now, when you were in the moment
and you and others in the management team,
things happened.
But knowing what you know now,
are there a couple key design decisions
or things that you would re-architect differently
about the mobile app experience?
I don't think I would have allowed
the mobile app
to be on demand 24 hours a day hmm I would have slowed rolled the
the availability of it and then understood how it was being used and
with and whether or not I was going to disrupt the experience but now it's it's
you know on demand whatever you want it right and now you can't you can't shut it off
from 8 to 9
the expectation's been set
whenever I
whenever I get that
that message
you know
mobile order ahead
is not available
at this time
I'm like oh
but it's available
99% of the time
it's not available now
and because the store
yeah I won't even go to a store
if it doesn't have it
the store's over
you wouldn't go
yeah
that breaks my heart
I hate to hear that
well
I went to the presidio
store yesterday in san francisco and i would go there no matter what but if i'm you know i only
agree with you in airports in airports i'm so time constrained that i'm like if mobile order isn't
working the line's too long oh but i've had plenty of times where like i'm looking at stores in the
radius i'm in i'm traveling i'm in a new city's like, well, I'm only going to go to the one that's open for mobile order and pay. I'm not even going to try. Fascinating. I got to
hit one other, Howard, I know you hate it, but one other amazing business model benefit of mobile
order and pay. If I'm buying $6 lattes over and over again with my Visa card and Starbucks is
getting hit with 30 cents every time, instead, if I'm buying $25 gift cards,
well, that's now three out of four times
I'm going and buying my coffee
and Starbucks doesn't have to pay Visa 30 cents
or the bank 30 cents.
That's a pretty amazing business unlock.
Like, you know, I'm aware it degrades the experience.
So you have to find ways to deal with that.
But I'd be more than willing to
sacrifice economics to
go back to ways to
enhance the experience myself.
But I'm
not in charge.
All right, listeners.
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We talk all the time on Acquired
about Jeff Bezos' AWS-inspired axiom
that startups should focus
on what makes your beer taste better.
In other words, only spend your limited time and resources only on what's actually going to move
the needle for your product and customers and outsource everything else that you need to do
as a company but doesn't fit that bill. Yeah. While we're in beverage land,
Starbucks is actually a great example of this. There are so many things that are not proprietary
to Starbucks. For the most part, they don't are so many things that are not proprietary to Starbucks.
For the most part, they don't own the real estate that the stores are in.
They don't manufacture the bottled beverages like frappuccinos that you see in grocery stores.
They use Pepsi for that.
And they don't make their own cups, napkins, silverware, any of that from scratch.
They focus on what makes their coffee taste better.
Aha, I love that.
For startups and growth stage companies, accounting is
example number one of this idea. Every company needs it, it needs to be done by a professional,
and you don't want to take any risk of something going wrong. But at the same time, it has zero
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that you can trust to both get your finance right and make it easy and painless for your company.
Yep. And when you say thousands of companies Pilot does this for, these are now companies like OpenAI, Airtable, and Scale, as well as large e-commerce and other companies.
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They can also keep working with you as you scale to the growth phase and beyond. So if your company or a company you start in the
future wants to go back to focusing on what makes your beer or coffee taste better, go on over to
pilot.com slash acquired and tell them that Ben and David sent you. Thanks, Pilot. Moving on from
technology and mobile order and pay, there's one more, to my mind, key pillar of the Starbucks
tapestry, and that's real estate and maybe this
is a good time because i feel like around this era is when people started looking at starbucks
and scratching their heads and being like there's two starbucks across the corner from one another
these guys must be insane uh talk to us about yeah real estate uh the the basic idea early on given the beverages velocity in am was to find a corner
location in an urban setting where we could physically see pedestrian traffic in a significant way. And so we would go to cities
and count, just physically count how many people were walking by, what hours they were walking by.
And once we had a model of success, it became clear to us what we needed.
And also once we became aware of co-tenancies,
of certain tenants that would be interesting to us,
we also were very intrigued with being next to a grocery store early on
because of the frequency in which people were buying food.
Anytime we were in an office building where there was 3,000 to 4,000 people
in a building, that was a home run.
But then it became very clear that there were locations that we never imagined we could be in that became wildly successful and just opened up an aperture to us that basically we had opportunities to do things that were not traditional for a retailer.
Now, the other thing, which we haven't talked about, is a decision I made early on not to
franchise, which you haven't, surprised you haven't mentioned that.
Oh, well, there were franchises.
But I'll, let me explain that if I can, which is all part of the real estate strategy. I never believed that we could build, maintain,
and elevate the culture of the company, which I viewed as the thing in a franchise system,
where we had individual franchisees who had their own subculture. And so even though there was
pressure early on because of the cost of capital,
and we didn't have a lot of money to franchise, we'd have no CapEx. I said, no, we resisted that.
And I don't think we'd be having this conversation if Starbucks was a franchise system. Because
McDonald's, extraordinary company, but they're a commodity-based product.
Well, as you've been saying, from the the beginning it was about elevating yeah mcdonald's great company but yeah nobody
would ever accuse them of elevating i don't think yeah and that's why i i don't want starbucks to
become transactional coffee is personal the biggest magic and the lightning in the bottle is when you go to Japan or Shanghai or Malaysia and you see the culture in a way that you just can't believe.
How did it happen that we were able to transfer this to another country, different language, different culture, different policy?
How did we do it?
That's actually quite befuddling to me because so many food and beverage concepts
do not transfer geographies.
And I think it's transferred
because young people around the world,
we all want the same thing.
They want opportunity.
They want to be respected.
They want dignity.
They want to make their parents proud.
They want to work for a company that they believe in.
And when I see what we've done around the world, I'm moved emotionally because the humanity
I speak of is universal.
That's why when I came back from China, what I said was, I just want to say something about
China and the US.
I know all the rhetoric and the propaganda
about our two countries,
but what I see is that we have so much more in common
than we have differences.
And that should be the theme of the world right now.
I want to pick up the thread on China
now that we're sort of into the 2010s.
This decade saw huge, ridiculous growth
in China store openings.
So there were 500 stores in 2011,
right when you're sort of coming out of that, the rut.
By 2017, there were 3,000.
Today, there's almost 7,000.
And there was a stat that was reported
that a new store opened in China every 15 hours in 2017.
True.
Now bring us to that seed that you planted earlier
with Belinda being the single most important employee.
China presented the enormity of opportunity
with the significant challenge of pioneering.
And it's a tea drinking culture.
Yeah, tea drinking culture, no morning business,
people eating rice in the morning. We got real estate wrong. We got breakfast wrong,
but it was all coming from the control of Seattle. Did you go in with essentially the Starbucks
concept? Yeah, it was exactly what you see right now. There's no different. But they didn't know. The Chinese people hardly knew what coffee was. There was no morning traffic. And in the
early days of our partner, we didn't see eye to eye, so we got them out. When Belinda came along,
we had a world-class operator who had succeeded in Singapore and Hong Kong. She's a strong person who believed that
Seattle, the way we were organized, was not a formula for success. You can't have people in
Starbucks in Seattle designing the breakfast menu who have never been to China, who think
they're going to eat blueberry muffins. And so when she said to me, I will do it if I'm in control of everything.
So I want to decentralize China.
I report to you, it's you and me,
and John Culver, who runs International,
take Seattle out of the equation.
We were failing.
What choice did I have?
She turned it.
She single-handedly built the China business.
Today, 18% of Starbucks' revenue is China.
Yeah.
She deserves all the credit.
John and I have been to China almost every quarter during the building years
of turning it with her. And all the government meetings to tell the Starbucks story. And then
we did things in China disruptively. Well, Belinda decided that she could go to the government
and go to an insurance company and come back to Starbucks
and get government approval for Starbucks to do something that had never been done before
and provide health insurance to the parents and grandparents of our partners.
Cool.
So the Chinese government was so intrigued, sitting down with them saying can can you explain
why do you want to do this right you don't have to yeah right yeah because it's the culture of
our company we we want to do everything we can to benefit our people humanity and it's universal but it's so i think important to just
create some guardrails so one day in the early stages of starbucks
howard beer comes in my office one day remember we're small at this stage
and he says we we got a terrible situation.
He said, the manager of the Seattle Trust store on 2nd and Madison, Seattle, Tom Kerrigan,
has AIDS. Now, AIDS at that time was like leprosy. Leprosy.
So Tom comes in and he says, I need to resign from Starbucks.
And he's crying.
Do you have any health insurance?
No.
And so we covered Tom Kerrigan from that point on.
But it was those kinds of imprinting moments,
and there were many like that.
Right. I think it's funny.
So I have heard that story probably five times because I've consumed an incredible amount of Starbucks content
over the last couple months,
and I've heard a story about
Starbucks employees wanting to buy a cow for a farmer in Africa,
and stories about Flint, Michigan, and stories about the initiative to bring the company
together to try to bring the country together when the government was shut down in 2013,
whenever that was.
I was getting frustrated watching all these stories because I kept thinking,
this is not the answer to why Starbucks worked. These are these one-off anecdotes that are,
sure, they're emblematic of some broader theme. But at the end of the day, the answer to why
Starbucks works has to be something about the business model. And every time you walk into
the store, XYZ happens, and here's the economics.
But it turns out there are thousands of these stories, and it's the humanity seeping through.
And it's hard for the company to tell the story because everyone just feels like a random one-off
example, but they're happening in every community in every part of the country. And I think that is
the, for me as like a business historian, that's been the thing that jumps out is there's no other company that we've studied that has this sort of obsession with people and humanity the way that Starbucks does.
And we're not perfect.
And so we do make mistakes.
And when the brand is being shined so brightly.
It's a high standard to be held. We live in an environment where if you do make a mistake, and we are human, we're going
to make mistakes.
Unfortunately, that becomes the thing.
Yep.
And it's tough to fight that.
Are you open?
I'd love to kind of flash forward.
You know, you were CEO through 2017.
Kevin Johnson took over 2017 to 2022.
You came back for one year as interim CEO,
and now Laxman is the CEO and has been in the seat for about a year. You came in after a tumultuous
COVID era and tried to basically figure out who the successor was going to be and patch the ship
in the meantime. A lot of stuff has happened in that last five years, notably with labor unions.
I don't want to make this podcast about labor unions, but I do want to ask you,
what have you learned from the experience of having to do a deep dive into how we got here? complex question. I think my personal relationship with the company and how
personal it is to me and the things that we, not I, but we have tried to do to build a different kind of company.
When the country started moving in a post-COVID era to a direction that I didn't recognize,
very, very hard to understand
why Starbucks would be under assault
or just being challenged this way.
Particularly when you had built a reputation on a fact pattern and a history of being unbelievably
kind to your people.
Yes.
Yeah.
I entered Starbucks as the interim CEO when this was already going on.
And I think the company made some early mistakes,
some of which were COVID-related.
Again, no textbook had to deal with COVID issues,
health issues, safety issues.
And then I think underestimated the groundswell of public sentiment for this movement in America.
And then became vilified for trying to defend the company in a way that I thought was appropriate.
I think what's lost in all this is the percentage of stores that have been petitioned and the number of people is very small in relationship to the whole.
And then all of the people in Starbucks who were depending on me to defend the company and trying to do that in a world of disinformation is very difficult.
At the time when I was trying to restore the company back to health, clearly mistakes were made.
This story is still unfolding.
And my heart's with the company.
But the thing that I think was lost in the story is the shareholder is not the primary person.
It's the Starbucks partner in the green apron, which is the cloth of the company.
And if we exceed the expectations of the cloth of the company and our people, shareholders and customers are going to win.
That's been my whole life story.
And that's basically worked for decades and decades.
Yeah. And that's basically worked for decades and decades. It also seems like when you,
Starbucks has become such an institution in our society
that leading a small disruptive organization,
everyone gives you the credit for all the positives
and all the exciting things you're doing.
And you sort of get a pass on anything that didn't work.
Move fast and break things.
When you're at this scale,
everyone expects you to be wildly successful all the time
because you always have been.
But anything that's misaligned,
that is where 100% of the focus is.
Well, I think if you take a step back,
not from Starbucks,
but if you say to yourself,
what company has gotten big in the food business
and stayed true to its core purpose and reason
for being and then stayed positively inclined to its customers?
What are you going to name?
And so the odds on getting this big and still being revered for who you once were is very,
very difficult.
And I would argue, in so many ways, we are better today than we were when we were smaller.
That is expected of us.
But I don't think we get much credit.
Maybe we shouldn't.
Maybe this is our responsibility.
The elements, the characteristics that built the Starbucks business, the culture, is compassion, empathy, and love. Those are not just words. It's like real things that are not being taught in business schools, and people on the outside view it as not
true. I'm telling you, the reason we've succeeded is because the underpinning of the company's purpose has been just that.
And it's much harder today to execute that because you're dealing with cynicism as the first order of defense that you have to overcome.
But the responsibility as leaders is to do just that. All right, I'm going to take us to
Starbucks today. I'll kind of map that out and give you the stats. And then we're going to go
into playbook where we basically try to take all the lessons we just learned over the last few hours
and figure out why did Starbucks work. And at such a grand scale that it did. So to catch listeners up on the
business today, Starbucks does $36 billion in revenue, $4.1 billion in net income. There are
380,000 employees. You gave me a stat. I think over 450,000.
450,000 now. Globally.
I must be using an old number. And over the lifetime of the company, has employed over 5
million? Yes. 5 million alum.
That is scale right there. 39,000 stores globally in 86 countries, almost half of which are in North
America, 18% in China. And about half of those are licensed franchise, and half are company operated.
And so while we're not, you know, you mentioned
we don't franchise in the traditional McDonald's sense, you do these joint ventures and you do this
way of entering countries where you don't need to own and operate the entire store yourself.
They're not franchises in the typical sense.
Yeah. So tell us about that.
I think we should talk about that.
Yeah. The joint venture
relationships that we've established, and some goes back almost 30 years, in the Middle East,
in Latin and Central America, now in Italy, in the EU, in India. And what does it mean to be your
partner? So every country is different depending on the economics of that country, the political issues.
Some countries have been an 80-20.
Starbucks owns 80.
They own 20.
Some are 50-50.
Some of the 80-20 started out as 80 for us, and they bought it in over the way.
It depends. But the key thing is, whether it's
Alberto Tirado in Latin and Central America, Mohammed Alshai in the Middle East, the Tata
group in India, the Percossi family in Italy, they understand the culture and values of Starbucks.
And so tactically, you said it's not a franchise in the traditional way.
What are Starbucks responsible for and what is the partner responsible for?
Starbucks is responsible for roasting the coffee, for all the recipes which are consistent with Starbucks worldwide, a co-design of the store where we're designing the store with the JV or the licensed
partner, and they control all the operations. And so all of Starbucks' franchise or licensed
stores are done in this way where there's a partner in a country. Yes. There are no individual
licensed franchises of any kind unless it's certain real estate that we can't get that we want access to
like the a roadway on a highway in switzerland or something i see and airports are this way right
airports are master licensed with the with the master licensee like whoever has it in like
marriott or whoever has it i gotcha or. Or Target that has 2,000 Starbucks stores.
And those are Target operated?
Yes.
I see.
And great partner.
And Brian Cornell, great guy.
And it's interesting.
Basically, half of Starbucks stores
look like the platonic ideal of coming out of the Starbucks HQ.
Here is how we imagine this this store to be
and half of them are there's some reason why we alone can't do this and need a partner and you
you know you spend a lifetime i mean i mean ideally you want the customer experience to be
the same worldwide regardless of the shape and size of store where it's located
makes sense which is not always the case i admit. So one market that we haven't talked about
that I want to ask you about while we're in this,
and then we'll get to playbook, is Italy.
Yeah.
The whole thing came out of Milan.
Right.
And yet, for decades...
50 years.
No Starbucks.
50 years, no Starbucks in Italy.
And the belief, at least as I see it, is they've perfected the
coffeehouse concept. Don't bring an imitation in here. But it's worked. It's working phenomenally
well. Why is Starbucks being so well received in Italy? So I know I'm going to be chastised for what I'm about to say, but it's true. By and large, coffee in Italy is not as good
as it once was. There are certain coffee companies that have maintained the standard, but by and
large, the coffee is not as good. I'm going to be killed for that, but that's my truth.
If you don't believe you have a better product, who does?
Yeah. But I didn't think we earned the right to go to Italy until we were really ready to present
ourselves in the best possible way. Because I knew the knives would be out for us in ways that we
couldn't even possibly imagine, given the history and the cultural relevance
of espresso in the coffee bar.
And so we waited and waited and waited until the roastery.
And so before we get to Italy, I have to explain the roastery for you.
Please.
I mean, the first time I went in there, kid in a candy store, wide eyes.
So there are six roasteries starting in seattle chicago new york tokyo
shanghai and milan the roastery itself is probably the most entrepreneurial creative project
that i could recall in my history of starbucks what is the experience we could create that just absolutely blows people away so what did i do
as a kid i've loved this movie and so i invited the most creative people in the company to my house
and i said we're going to watch a movie of course they thought i was nuts. And I turned on Willy Wonka. I was going to say that has to be it.
It's got to be.
I turned on Willy Wonka with Gene Wilder.
And we went to work starting to design a space.
Now we realized early on.
And this was what, 2013, 14?
Eight years ago.
Now we realized economically, this is a tough business model.
So what are we trying to do we're trying
to create an experience that is accretive to the brand and significantly elevate starbucks which
is fighting ubiquity all the time every day and so we created this 30000 square foot space in Seattle, which we opened seven years ago,
which is the most dynamic, entertaining vehicle of theater, romance, seduction.
And we open it to rave reviews.
And we're manufacturing, like Willy Wonka did, we're manufacturing and roasting coffee
in the space.
Which makes the smell of the roast amazing.
We open it up, and then over time,
we start opening a couple more.
We got approval from the Chinese government
to manufacture in the center of Shanghai.
We opened up a 40,000 square foot in Shanghai.
We opened up an incredible space in Tokyo.
We opened up in the old crate and barrel space in north
michigan avenue in chicago we open up in the meat packing business in new york but the shrine has to
be milan this is the way to go back and this is the way we open on italy now our partner in italy
is the precossi family fantastic people who are in the real estate business. And they
are showing me, I'm going back and forth to Milan like all the time because they've got real estate.
And I got to see it. I got to touch it. I got to smell it. I keep going back and back and back.
No, not the right site, not the right site. And I'm standing on the corner of Cardozo Square. And I look at this space and I said, what about that?
And he says, that's the post office.
You can't get the post.
I said, well, it's empty.
It's empty.
You can't get it.
So I said, can I meet the landlord?
He said, Howard, it's the government.
I said, well, who's responsible for it?
So they arrange a meeting for me.
And I meet the broker who's involved in this,
but it's empty space.
And I find out the story is that these government buildings
during the financial crisis were sold to private equity.
So I said, who's the landlord?
I'm not, I can't tell you.
You have to tell me you're the landlord.
Private equity that's letting real estate sit empty?
It's empty.
I know where this is going.
Okay, it turns out,
I know I'm going to get killed for this story.
You're going to have to fix this.
Turns out the owner of the space is Blackstone.
I knew it, I knew it.
Of course.
Of course.
So I said, why am I in Italy?
I called John Gray. You've got to go to New York. I called John Gray up front of me. Of course. Of course. So I said, why am I in Italy? I called John Gray.
Got to go to New York.
Called John Gray up.
No way.
I said, John, I'm in Milan.
Do you realize you own this space in Cartuzzo Square?
It used to be a post office.
He said, I don't know.
Let me check.
I said, John, I'm coming to see you tomorrow.
I'm on the next flight.
We do the deal with John Gray.
Amazing. John Gray, of course,. We do the deal with John Gray. Amazing. Unbelievable.
John Gray, of course, being the number two person at Blackstone.
So, and John's a big fan of Starbucks. He had previously been in Seattle for a wedding or
bar mitzvah or something and saw the roasteries. He knew exactly what I was talking about.
And so, that is how we entered in Milanan now we have 30 stores we have 30 traditional stores
in italy did they already exist before the roastery opened first the roastery then 30
stores we and we're in milan we're in rome and we're in florence and um
two three years later what do you think the number one beverage is it's espresso
for starbucks yeah yeah straight espresso espresso is the number one beverage wow and so we're i
don't take the success in italy for granted we've got to continue to earn it but what i'm most proud
of is that we've respected the Italian people
and coffee culture for 50 years.
And they embraced us.
And so the implication of espresso being the number one beverage
is it's not tourists.
It's the Italians coming to Starbucks.
There's a lot of tourists coming into the roastery, but yes.
And that they're choosing to get their espresso at Starbucks.
Yeah.
So, you know, Italy, I'm going to Italy
I think next week,
but just
for me,
the gratification,
the satisfaction
of,
you know,
complete full circle
from 1983
is just beyond belief
for me.
I'm wondering
another backdrop
to the roastery
and really throughout all the 2010s, must have been third wave coffee.
And I'm sure it was on your radar screen.
Yes.
At the same time, it doesn't seem like it's ever made a dent in Starbucks.
There has always been stories that all these competitors were going to steal business from Starbucks. But from 1983 to all the way today,
the consumption of specialty coffee is still a small amount
relative to the macro opportunity.
So all those people have expanded the market with and for Starbucks.
Now, we created an industry that didn't exist,
and they have followed us and done really good things,
but we're not threatened by that.
Interesting.
So you think Third Wave Coffee brought consumers
into the coffee culture market that have then also become
Starbucks consumers, and maybe they wouldn't have been
coffee culture consumers at all.
Yes.
How do you define Third Wave Coffee?
Actually, Howard is probably the best person to ask i mean it's a very uh intentional independent coffee store that is small enough that they're roasting
their own coffee or getting coffee from a small proprietary roaster and creating a very unique handcrafted experience uh that in many ways starbucks can't
do in scale right and so i i tip my hat to them but there's no coffee experience in the world
that comes close to the roastery any of them and do those roasteries break even or are they this like marketing showpiece
that loses some have some are making money and some aren't wow i mean but i don't i you know i
don't i've never viewed it that way it's like the billboards it's it's you can't you couldn't put a
price on the hundreds of thousands of people that come into this roastery and have an experience of
a lifetime and i took mr arnaud to the roastery.
Really?
I did.
Yeah.
In Milan?
In Seattle.
In Seattle?
He and his son, yeah.
Wow.
Yeah, I spent a good amount of time with him.
I've taken a lot of retail CEOs and iconic business people through the roastery.
I bet.
Who want to see it.
Wow.
Wow.
What was Bernard doing in Seattle?
I don't know what he was doing in Seattle,
but I spent a fair amount of time with him and his son.
His son now runs Tiffany.
Oh, great.
Wow.
And his level of curiosity was very high.
I remember he kept looking at the leather railing
and the stitching, and I just said,
he's spending a lot of time on the leather.
I bet he was.
Maybe there's a partnership to be done.
Okay. So now the question sort of becomes, what are the set of circumstances that had to be true
in order for Starbucks today to exist? And the one thing we haven't talked about,
or one of the things is, how much of what Starbucks has accomplished
could have happened if it wasn't an addictive substance? Like, it's kind of this incredible
thing that it's a legal drug that all the research anyone's ever done into caffeine is, by and large,
it's neutral to helpful. And like every other drug that, you know,
at some point people have enjoyed,
whether it's smoking or drinking,
as research comes out over time,
we find out, shoot, that wasn't good for us.
That's not the case for coffee.
What an amazing thing to get to build a business
on this delightful thing we have to consume every day
because we're addicted and it's pretty good for us.
And it gives you superpowers.
Yeah. thing we have to consume every day because we're addicted and it's pretty good and it gives you superpowers yeah i'd like to believe it's not based on what you are characterizing as an addictive
beverage i'd like to believe it's the experience that has been created
around the enjoyment of the coffee and the experience that happens.
I also think, and we haven't really spoke that much about it,
is I can't state enough over the last two decades what customization meant to the company
and how customers created a personal beverage
well beyond what the menu was.
And I don't know any other business in which the incrementality of the price has been dictated by the consumer.
The base price is X, but most people are doing something in addition.
X plus Y. I have a very specific drink that I like.
And when I go to coffee shops that are not Starbucks,
I can't get it because it feels taboo to order.
Like I like an iced almond milk latte with whipped cream.
And when I go to most coffee houses,
I'm like, I can't ask for whipped cream on top of that.
But Starbucks are like, of course, that's what we do here.
This is something that I think has translated incredibly well
to the mobile app.
Yes.
And that no other food company has, really,
the level of customization.
And I think the mobile app actually added velocity
to customization.
It powered customization.
And I think the Starbucks barista deserves so much credit because they are
dealing with so many different variations of beverages some of which they're making for the
first time on the fly hard to do it's a hard work it has to be a good number because there's i don't
know if it's, I haven't
done the math, billions, trillions of combinations of possible drinks. And so it has to be every
single day as a barista, you're making something for the first time. Yes. I think the number that
people use inside the company is a hundred thousand different variations of beverages that are being made consistently.
A hundred thousand
different beverages.
This is actually a really interesting way to lead into
Playbook because
on the surface,
it's like an obvious question, right?
Yes, it's an addictive substance, caffeine.
Of course. On the other hand,
you're in a highly competitive
market. Selling a commodity. And the market actually, you're in a highly competitive market. Right.
Selling a commodity.
And the market actually is not just coffee.
Let's stick with this theme.
It's caffeine broadly.
There's Coca-Cola.
There's Pepsi.
Well, not only that, but every food company, every retail food business from McDonald's on took a page out of Starbucks, went to school on us, put espresso
machines in their stores and started doing coffee beverages. That also expanded the market.
And I think the real question is, for us here, nobody has built Starbucks despite decades in a
highly competitive market with whether it's third wave or competitors in other geographies or domestic competitors or McDonald's getting into the business
or Folgers and Maxwell House,
there is a unique tapestry that we've been weaving throughout this episode
that, in Hamilton Helmer's terms, has power here.
Yes.
Coffee, so here's my second one in addition to the, it's addictive but delightful. It is perceived to be virtuous to be a barista I don't know if that's something inherent to the product.
I don't know if that's because it has this Italian lineage.
But there's all these incredible benefits that Starbucks and any other coffeehouse chains
get to enjoy because it's respected to do that work.
And I'm curious, why do you think that's respected when
similar ways of spending your hours in restaurant work isn't?
First of all, I've never heard it quite like that, and I think that's a very interesting insight.
There is craft and art to the expression of making the beverage. I also think the intimacy of the
relationship with the customer is so different. And baristas know the names of their customers.
They know their dog's name. We have a drive-through and I saw a video where the barista knows the name of the dog and knows the whole thing.
It's just like a magical dance that happens when the cars pull in, and all of a sudden, it's not a transaction.
One of the beauties that we have been able to do is elevate the experience of the drive-through, not all the time.
So I think your question is steeped in
one is a commoditized environment
and the other clearly is not.
And the challenge for Starbucks
is continuing to innovate for the barista.
And in this category, to extend that point, you start from a place of, this
is a good job.
And you can sort of improve the experience for that employee so they can improve the
experience for your customers.
Whereas in other things that are commoditized, they start from a position of, I have to do
this job.
And it's a really tough uphill battle to invest in your people, whereas Starbucks kind of has a tailwind.
But it is a hard job.
Certainly.
And we have to honor the people who are doing it, more so today than ever before.
Yep.
Another one that I have is, it's funny, it flies in the face of some of the pitfalls
of ubiquity that we were discussing before.
The fact that it is everywhere almost cheapens the experience.
To me, Starbucks' ubiquity is a massive feature.
The fact that I can go anywhere in the world and get basically my same order, or certainly
anywhere in America and get my same order.
I can even do it from the mobile app in a way that I'm very familiar with ordering. It's reliable, it's predictable. It's the same reason
I bank with Chase and I buy Apple products. It's this thing that I just know works everywhere and
I never have to take any risk on. And Starbucks didn't have that when it was starting, but it
really feels like it's reached this scale that no one else can really compete with the level of ubiquity.
So ubiquity, earlier on in our conversation, I said ubiquity is an enemy of Starbucks.
And it's an enemy because we can't be defined by our ubiquity. We have to be defined by the one store you come into, not based on the thousands, but
that experience you have in the store.
So if the ubiquity is driving trust and driving convenience, we have to ensure the fact that
we are providing that intimacy in the store and not allowing ubiquity
to commoditize the experience. That is the framework of the daily challenge of the company.
Frustratingly, for those of us who are trying to analytically put this puzzle together,
the humanity is actually the answer. Scaling humanity is actually the answer.
You know, along with this obsessive quality of product,
the fact that product isn't just product,
but experience is the product.
It's everything you experience
around consuming the beverage itself.
It's a bunch of the things we've already talked about.
You invest in your employees,
they take care of the customers,
who takes care of the shareholders,
but the shareholders are last.
It's the fact that, oh yeah, we talked about the store cash flow dynamics that you can
scale in a really cash efficient way when you're paying the stores back in less than two years
every time. Every store is a billboard. So you're intentionally picking real estate in these places
where you're building familiarity with people. They're walking by over and over and
over. You're extending the brand by doing United Airlines, by going to grocery stores.
Everything is a billboard.
Everything is a billboard. Yeah, that's the, like, why pay for customer acquisition when you can,
you know, get a product in people's hands. Yeah. The third place, you know, very novel idea at
first. Turned out that was something
basically the entire country and then the world wanted to participate in.
Not obvious at first.
And it's so easy to think about these things that now we take completely for granted.
Like Starbucks is infrastructure in our society.
It is assumed, like when I go to an airport or a city and there's not an easy way to get to a store, I'm like, what?
What is this place?
What backwoods place am I in?
Like it's expected.
And when you live with something, you know, most of your life, you forget that it was once a crazy idea.
I think that's the...
Yeah.
I think the other piece that you didn't just list off there that we've covered in depth is the Costco-like investment
in your employees and the people and the reduction of turnover.
In Costco's case, I think it's probably much more so
the reduction of turnover.
In Starbucks' case, that's the key element
to building the humanity, right?
I don't know the employees at my Costco store.
What's the stat that you have on, I've heard you say it a number of times,
on employee tenure at Starbucks versus others in the category?
It's a 2x is what I believe.
That employee tenure is 2x longer or turnover is half of what it is industry-wide. Yes. It makes a huge difference. And you've talked about Beanstalk. You've talked
about comprehensive health insurance. When I think about the most important thing we probably have
done in the last 20 years, it's been the unique relationship that we established with Arizona State University and its president,
Michael Crow. Could we create free college tuition, a four-year free college tuition
through Arizona State for every single partner at Starbucks? And we did it. And thousands of
Starbucks partners are engaged and going to school, and thousands have graduated. The college achievement
plan demonstrates going back to the early years of the speeches I was giving about what is the
responsibility for a for-profit company in the world we're living in. And it's not just to make
money. Here's one that we haven't talked as much about.
You were part of this secular trend of gourmet coffee.
And I'm curious if you view that to be a true statement, or if you're saying, no, we created this entire wave.
It wasn't going to happen.
It wasn't just like...
I don't want to sound arrogant at all,
but I think it's so clear that Starbucks created an industry
that did not exist.
And as a result, tens of thousands of stores
have followed in our wake,
and we created an employment industry that did not exist.
Not to mention it's 5 million alum.
Right.
Yeah, that's a lot of people who have gone on to do other things after.
And I think one thing that's always been missed is that Starbucks has always been a great first job.
So in your mind then, let's say there's a parallel universe where Howard Schultz doesn't exist. The year is 1995.
Is there a nationwide chain not called Starbucks
with gourmet coffee taking off in the United States
because the conditions were perfect for it?
I would assume that there would have been
a national franchised business
that would have occupied the coffee space
but would have been more commoditized.
A Dunkin' Donuts, for instance.
Yeah.
I don't think anything would have been executed like Starbucks.
But I think someone would have showed up.
Right.
The opportunity was just too much white space.
There was clearly demand there.
We were coming off this horrible Folgers and Maxwell House era
and there was this growing demand
but that doesn't mean that a company like Starbucks
would have been created.
It means just in some way that consumer demand would have been satisfied.
You have to remember our intent was not to build a global business.
The first business plan, and I've said this many times, when I was raising money, it was
100 stores.
And I wasn't raising the money, and I couldn't afford to reprint the whole document, whatever
that was at the time.
And I whited out.
No one even knew what that means.
I whited out 175. When was the what that means. I whited out 175.
When was the last time you used a whiteout?
Yeah.
It's been a while.
It's been a while.
Wait, really?
Yeah, I whited it out at 75 because I couldn't.
Did it feel too ambitious?
Yeah, people didn't believe.
Think you were crazy?
But we never, you know,
Japan was the turning point of thinking we could build an international business.
But none of us had any international experience.
No one in the entire company.
I mean, in many ways, you could say this shouldn't have happened.
Yeah.
Okay, so this brings us to the absolute magic of founder-led businesses. When you have a founder at the helm,
you get all this leeway from shareholders,
from employees.
You can take crazy risks.
And people know it's because you're you.
But for you, it wouldn't exist at all.
So run with it.
What are the biggest innovations
that have happened at Starbucks
not under Howard Schultz?
What a question.
I'm pausing, not because there hasn't been any, because I'm sure there has been, but I'm hard-pressed to kind of think about what it was.
I don't think you were running the show when the pumpkin spice latte came out.
Yes, I was.
You were?
I thought I had one.
Yeah, yes, I was.
I didn't like it.
Oh!
Yeah.
It does feel like you were obsessed with the purity of the Italian coffee bar for
a long time, and then at some point you were like, actually, what I'm obsessed with is
serving customers in whatever they want from us.
Well, the Il Gennale store only played Italian opera and had no chairs.
Probably wouldn't have scaled as well.
I'm recalling my time from Rome two years ago.
That's literally, I'm walking around Rome and that's everywhere.
Yeah, yeah.
It's completely different than here.
No, I think I had to see the light.
I had to understand we were not in business to please me, but please the customers.
I mean, what is it, 70% of drinks are now ice beverages,
and it was when you started, 0%.
Didn't have a cold beverage.
For the first decade, it was zero.
Yeah.
So to me, there's this thread of, at some point,
shaking off your own opinions and saying,
we're going to do what the customer wants us to do.
To a degree.
Yeah.
But I was clearly leading.
That was a leading question around innovations, not under.
Yeah, so what's the point?
It's not that there hasn't been innovation.
I think there's a burden that the organization has
and a reliance on the founder that over time can become unhealthy.
And not that I didn't want succession.
I just wasn't really on my mind.
And the marketing and the merchant mentality of starbucks was always with me
and probably did not allow others who were well intended and could have done good things
were following and leaning on me which is not the healthiest thing over the longevity of the company.
And I think that has covered up mistakes, that's covered up things and then was revealed when I
left. I mean, it's the very things that make the business successful, the founder bets,
that then at some point in the company's second act kind of hold it back you you have all this
muscle memory as a company of relying on founder maverick acts yeah at some point you need to
figure out how as a company to not well the the other thing about that is most founder-led
companies are entrepreneurially driven.
It's not that they're not following the rules.
They're making the rules, especially if you're creating an industry that did not exist.
Founder leaves.
I'm not talking about me.
Historically.
And companies lose not only the extent of the entrepreneurial DNA, but they lose the ability to be on offense.
And the worst thing that a company can do, like a sports team, is start playing defense
because you're afraid to fail.
That is a disease.
Not unlike another disease, which has happened at Starbucks, which is
hubris.
The worst thing that could happen to a company is believing that you are incapable of doing
anything but succeeding, and you deserve the success.
But if you start playing defense and don't have the offensive mind, it's not going to go well. And I think over time that has happened
at Starbucks. You've transitioned from being the CEO to someone else three different times.
If you could go back, let's even just say the first time, if you could go back
the year is 1999 or 1997, so you can start working on some talent development.
What would you do differently to make sure that succession?
I would have believed Oren when he said,
I only want to do this for a couple of years.
And I convinced myself I could just get Oren to do this for five years,
maybe 10 years.
And so when he kept saying, I don't want to do this anymore.
So I was stuck because I was not prepared to look around the room and say, God, I think he could do it.
And if I would have spent maybe a year or two, but I didn't.
I was very, I believe that I could convince Norton to stay longer.
And so I think, and also Jim Donald's a great guy, but I think the immersion of an outsider at that time, given we were moving into a crisis, not a Starbucks crisis, but the financial crisis, very difficult.
So it's on me, I think, when I look back, and I just did not do a very good job of recognizing the internal talent and cultivating it.
But I want to say one more thing about Starbucks and the complexity of it.
We're in multiple businesses.
So we're in the agricultural business.
We are buying coffee from 30 producing countries around the world.
We are subject to weather and the agricultural issues, many of which are not in our control, political, all kinds of stuff. a commodity that is very, very challenging
because it's coming from 30 producing countries
and each coffee from every country
has its own proprietary taste profile
that has to be roasted differently.
And when you're blending it like a winery, it's art.
And so we're an agricultural buyer. We are a manufacturer.
We are a retailer. We are a wholesaler. We are managing JV relationships in 80 countries.
We have JVs with two behemoth companies, Nestle and Pepsi-Cola. And above all else, we are in the
people business managing the behavior, the motivation, and the opportunity creation for
almost 500,000 people. And we're a public company in which the expectations based on our success
have been higher than most.
Not to mention you're a quasi-financial institution too.
Yeah. And we've got, yeah, all of that. And lastly, I think the personal responsibility
of a founder, in my case, who loves this company as much as I love my family. And so it's a challenging,
fragile thing on a very personal level. And you can't escape it. You made your point.
You want to go somewhere and get, I mean, you can't escape it. So it's always around you.
I'm so glad you're bringing this up. It really resonates
to us hearing you say that. It's the way we feel about Acquired and our show. And to imagine,
that's easy for us. We have no stakeholders. We never would expect that this would scale to
500,000 people. If it did, I can't even imagine the complexity of that.
But you also have, now that you've achieved this level of success
you you you have an expectation that you've got to keep not reinventing but you've got to make
sure that you're as good as you've been no better yeah you got to be better again and your success
is not an entitlement like starbucks just isn't and it's And when you have success, it gets
harder because the bar keeps getting higher.
Yeah, that's just human expectations.
Going into this, I was thinking, I had
some funny thing occur to me, which was
at some point, why does Starbucks need to grow anymore?
It's already everywhere. And of course,
it's a public company, so
it literally just has to keep growing.
But it's just human expectation
that things keep getting better than they were last year.
They should.
People should just figure it out and make it better.
We all think that about every product and experience that we have.
Indeed.
Well, listeners, we were thinking about how to land this episode.
And in our normal episodes, we land the plane in some way
or come up with the one thing you really you can't leave the episode without thinking about.
And I feel like we covered a lot of those in Playbook.
And so rather than drilling into that again, we were talking with Howard and he threw out this idea.
I really do have one more thing to say.
Yeah. Given this moment that Starbucks is in right now here in summer of 2024, this felt like the right way to address that.
Back to the interview.
Well, Howard, we're at the end here.
And I think listeners may be wondering, okay, but what about Starbucks today?
Yeah.
And the last few years have seen you come back as interim CEO for a year, transition to a new CEO.
It's been about a year after that.
And it's been a rough couple of years.
I mean, part of it is coming out of the pandemic.
But I think anybody who tuned in the last earnings call is wondering, what's up with
the future of this company?
Can you give us a little bit of narration on what brought you back, the things you did,
and where the company is today?
Yeah. Let me try and go back to when I returned as an interim CEO in April of 22.
I was asked by the board to come back to the company, and I said no. My life has changed.
I have no desire to come back. I have no intent to come back, but it was clear to me as the weeks were going on that
the company was heading into a existential crisis.
And if your listeners take anything away from what we've talked about is my love of the
company is so significant that I, I changed my life and I came back to the company.
Now, when I came back, and I want to be fair, I don't want to criticize anyone.
But when I came back, I saw things that really surprised me about the lack of investment
over a four to five year period. And also, I didn't like the way the stock buybacks were being used
to basically increase EPS. And it's no way to run a company. So the first day I came back,
and I knew what the market would do, is I announced that we were suspending the stock
buybacks and stock went down. I expected it. And I announced that we were suspending the stock buybacks and stock went down. I expected it.
And I announced that we were going to take basically the money we were using to stock buybacks for the year.
And I think it was north of $2 billion to invest back into the people of Starbucks, the partners, which I did.
The most important thing I did, though, because I'm not a messiah, but I have an instinct about the company.
And I know the inner workings of the company better than anyone else. I know the people. And so in a year's time, despite the underinvestment and the challenges, we brought the company back to a much healthier place operationally. And certainly the stock price was significantly higher when I left. I think when I came back, when I started, it was in the 70s.
When I left, it was, you know.
But that's an output.
That's investors voting on the performance.
Yeah, yeah.
We don't have to talk about the stock price if you don't want to.
Nevertheless, again, succession.
And the board led a succession process.
You have to remember, I wasn't on the board for a long four or five years.
And I resigned when I decided to leave the company after a year, despite the board asking me to stay another year.
I just said, I've done my duty.
We have to find a new CEO.
They wanted you to be interim CEO for a second year.
Yeah, they wanted. It was up to me. And so the board led a search. There was a number of
candidates. Laxman was chosen. I met him. I approved his hiring, but the search community was driving the process.
So now we're a year later.
And I think probably let's just fast forward.
It hasn't been a great year for Starbucks.
In fairness to Laksman, there's a lot of external issues that have contributed to the pressure, like on every company. But the company has not executed
the way that I think it should have. I go into the stores. I know the company,
and I think we're not at our best right now. Why did I write the letter? I didn't write the
letter because he had a bad interview on Kramer. This is on LinkedIn?
Yeah.
I wrote the letter because I had written a couple of other letters.
Probably the iconic letter I wrote was entitled The Soul of the Brand.
And I was writing that letter because I don't get financial information,
so I don't have any understanding whether the company's making the quarter or not. I was as surprised as anyone else to see the dramatic drop in revenue and in profit.
But I wrote The Soul of the Brand because I could smell instinctively that there were
things going on that just did not feel right to me, that the shine was off the brand, that
partners were maybe not as inspired as they had been. The first thing I want
to say is I've made it clear to the Starbucks board, Howard Schultz, and I've made it clear
to Loxman, Howard Schultz has no desire or intent to return as CEO of Starbucks. If you want, I'll say it again, but I don't. But I can't ignore what we've just discussed for the last few hours if the company is doing a drift towards mediocrity.
And I hold leadership and the board responsible for that.
And my letter was not accusatory.
My letter was not accusatory. My letter was not predatory. My letter was steeped in counsel and advice
based on 40 plus years of experience in building this company. That's the advice and counsel I'm
giving you. If you want to take the advice, it's up to you. If you don't, you're responsible for the outcome. And so I'm not, I have no operational role.
I'm not on the board.
And I'm watching from afar and rooting and cheering for Starbucks.
And I wrote the letter in hope that it would be a catalyst for a positive interpretation.
And what were your recommendations in the letter?
The one thing is we're not a beverage company serving coffee.
We are a coffee company serving people.
And we need to be much more coffee forward.
And we cannot continue to allow the mobile app to be a runaway train
that is going to consistently dilute the integrity
of the experience of Starbucks. We're not in the transaction business. We have to execute
transactions, but that has to go through the lens of being an experienced business,
an experienced place. People are longing for human connection, even if they're on a mobile
app. Let's provide it. But I also recognize this is a complex time. It's difficult. But that's your
job. Yeah. Makes sense. Well, to finish the episode, I can definitely say as an unabashed fan, the same way I opened
the episode, rooting for everyone over a few miles away to pull it off.
Thank you very much.
And I think Starbucks is so resilient.
Starbucks has had many, many challenges.
I have great faith in the company and the equity of the brand and the people
who wear the cloth of the company, the green apron.
Yeah. Thanks, Howard.
Thanks, Howard.
Thank you. Great. Really enjoyed it.
All right. Well, listeners, thank you for being on the journey with us. That was super fun to do
with Howard. Remember the huge announcement from the top of the show, San Francisco in September. Click the link in the
show notes to stay fully in the loop on what that is when we are able to share more details. Our
good friends at JPMorgan Payments are cooking up something very cool with us. So stay tuned for
more acquired.fm slash sf or click the link in the show notes to stay in the loop. And of course,
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slash sf if you want to talk about this episode come to the slack acquired.fm slash slack and
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i've listened to the entire back catalog,
and I really wish they had a second show. Good news,
we have one. So check out ACQ2.
Lots more interviews there,
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Journal and hitting number one on
Apple and Spotify, which we will reflect
on at some point, a totally surreal
few weeks here.
Certainly primed the pump
for a whole bunch of great interviews
that we've got coming on ACQ2.
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And listeners, we will see you next time.
We'll see you next time.
Who got the truth?
Is it you, is it you, is it you? Who got the truth now? We'll see you next time.