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Starbucks Makes the Right First Step

03/21/08 - 10:12 AM EDT

Marek Fuchs

What follows is a short look by The Business Press Maven at how everything has changed in the past year for StarbucksSBUX, even though chances are, nothing will change. This piece is part of a two-part series on Starbucks. The series includes a book review that examines the prospects for the company's turnaround, through the observations of a worshipful author writing at the height of the company's power.

Simply put, it's probably hard to sell $4 cups of coffee with competition finally creeping up behind you at every turn. It is, after all, nothing short of a miracle of modern commerce that Starbucks went so many years without serious competition in the coffee business. Even if the likes of McDonald'sMCD and Dunkin' Donuts don't compete directly, the pricing pressure they put on Starbucks probably means that the days of jet-thruster growth are over.

All that said: Starbucks at least laid the groundwork for a comeback this week.

How do we know? Compare the public accounting of their troubles at this year's annual meeting vs. last year's. At their annual meeting this year, the company was open as a book. And while openness hardly guarantees full recovery, we do know it's the ante you put up if you even want to hold out hope. Moreover, if you are not open about troubles during troubled times, it indicates self-delusion or worse and does not bode well. Look no further than What-Me-Worry? comments from Angelo Mozilo of CountrywideCFC before that firm became the seat of a massive fire, or the same with Bear StearnsBSC this very month, with management declaring no liquidity trouble days before the firm was taken over for a song ... because of liquidity trouble.

Starbucks, a legitimately brilliant and ethical operator, should not otherwise be mentioned in the same breath as Countrywide and Bear Stearns. But it is important to note a distant similarity. You can then appreciate how far Starbucks has come this year by comparing it to where they stood last year.

Last February -- on Valentine's Day, no less -- Howard Schultz, then the company chairman and its spiritual leader, wrote a memo (soon leaked) that took the company's direction to serious task. At the end of the day, everything he wrote about would come to the fore as an acknowledged problem in customer service and experience within, but at that time Starbucks management ran from the memo at full tilt. All they would say was that Schultz was being Schultz, motivating employees with the Starbucks equivalent of dirty talk, as only he can.

Turns out, of course: Schultz was being honest. But the truth was shown the door and, as management disavowed the memo, the business media dutifully forgot about it too.

Then, rather than centering the annual meeting around the issues spelled out in the memo, the company made a splashy introduction of Paul McCartney, the Beatle who was becoming the center of their recording effort that had little to do with the future of their profitable coffee business.

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At the time of publication, Fuchs had no positions in any of the stocks mentioned in this column.

Marek Fuchs was a stockbroker for Shearson Lehman Brothers and a money manager before becoming a journalist who wrote The New York Times' "County Lines" column for six years. He also did back-up beat coverage of The New York Knicks for the paper's Sports section for two seasons and covered other professional and collegiate sports. He has contributed frequently to many of the Times' other sections, including National, Metro, Escapes, Style, Real Estate, Arts & Leisure, Travel, Money & Business, Circuits and the Op-Ed Page. For his "Business Press Maven? column on how business and finance are covered by the media, Fuchs was named best business journalist critic in the nation by the Talking Biz website at The University of North Carolina School of Journalism and Mass Communication. Fuchs is a frequent speaker on the business media, in venues ranging from National Public Radio to the annual conference of the Society of American Business Editors and Writers. Fuchs appreciates your feedback; click here to send him an email.


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