Jane Leung
Oct 20, 2010

Coffee, wine, beer and cheese at Starbucks?

GLOBAL – Starbucks has launched a testing stage for serving local wines, beer and cheese after almost 40 years of serving coffee.

Coffee, wine, beer and cheese at Starbucks?

After almost 40 years, the Seattle-based coffeehouse chain worth a reported US$15 billion, is branching out to test the introduction of wine and beer to offer customers more choice in the evenings. The first store is opened at Olive Way on Capitol Hill, Seattle.

Kris Engskov, regional VP for Pacific Northwest at Starbucks, explained, “People are interested in more options during the afternoons and evenings at Starbucks.”

Starbucks is planning to roll out the offering on a global level if the initial café-restaurant concept, currently being tested in Seattle, is successful. Alcohol will be served from 4pm onwards which could change the way the business works as Starbucks currently makes 70 per cent of its money before 2pm daily.

Engskov added that the store is serving food, like cheese and bisque, on china crockery to “elevate the Starbucks experience at night”.

Michael Robinson, shopper marketing practice lead of APAC at Momentum Singapore, said the decision on whether to diversify the focus is tough. He said, “Starbucks understands that their brand equity loses relevance as the day migrates to night and the shopper mindset is not on coffee and pick-me-up’s.”

The idea would work in the States as people are more open to new brand experiences, but, in order to establish itself in the wine and beer culture, Robinson said it will have to be clever about naming the nighttime offering.

Referring to McDonald's success with its morning coffee service, standalone coffee corners and WiFi gaming zones as an example, Robinson says the fast food company has not strayed far from its core business of fast-food, whereas Starbucks is aiming for whole new brand experience. 

He adds that it will be a long while before the changes are implemented in Asia. Starbucks is extremely successful here and perhaps even covering losses suffered in the US. 

“If and when it [Starbucks wine and food concept) does come to Asia, it will have to be under a new brand name, a shared space that is Starbucks by day and ‘Charcuterie and Cheese’ by night,” Robinson said.

2010 is a big year for Starbucks as it works to revamp its retail store designs in major cities in the US, Europe and some parts of Asia like Hong Kong and Japan.

Source:
Campaign Asia

Related Articles

Just Published

6 hours ago

Agency Report Cards 2024: We grade 25 APAC networks

The grades are in for Campaign Asia's 22nd annual evaluation of APAC agency networks. Subscribe to read our detailed analyses.

6 hours ago

Agency Report Card 2024: VML

Working through a complex merger in 2024, VML remained steady and stable. Now it's time to show the world how it can flex its scale to creative benefit for all to see.

7 hours ago

'If it doesn’t entertain, don’t even enter': ...

Nearly 80% of the Film Lion winners used humour as a narrative style. McCann’s APAC chief creative officer and Film juror Valerie Madon explains why funny work works, short-form is trickier than it looks, and why the best films sell more than just a feeling.

7 hours ago

Canva plugs MagicBrief into the creative feedback loop

By acquiring MagicBrief, Canva is blending AI-powered insights with real-time design iteration—turning creative guesswork into scalable, data-backed storytelling for enterprise teams.