Brian Niccol is standing in the corner of a newly renovated Starbucks in Seattle on an afternoon in mid-April. Baristas are making iced cherry chai lattes and mocha Frappuccinos with whipped cream, and warming egg bites and croissants. Customers sit in plush mustard-colored chairs and on cushioned benches in an olive tone, surrounded by wood-paneled walls. âI like it,â says Niccol, who took over as chief executive officer in September. âI like the furniture. I like the lighting. I like the music.â Mostly he likes the vibe. People camping out, doing homework, chatting with friends. Thereâs a guy preparing a tax return.Â
âEvery seat is full,â Niccol says. âThatâs what we want. What we should be able to do is have spaces for people that, if you want to socialize, you can socialize. If you want a moment for yourself, you have a moment for yourself.â He asks me what I think is the best seat in the house, and I tell him Iâd tried a few as I alternated between grabbing a bite and working on my laptop. âI want a great seat for whatever occasion youâre having. If you want to eat, thatâs probably the best seat,â he says, pointing to the cushioned bench. Since the 1980s, Starbucks has sought to be a welcoming âthird place.â Stores became known for comfy seating, power outlets and Wi-Fi. But as to-go orders climbed from 60% of business pre-pandemic to more than 70% during Covid, Starbucks accelerated a plan that shrank the number of seats at storesâultimately, it would remove about 30,000. What was left looked uninviting. Customersâunshackled from the pressure of holding up a line or giving a baroque beverage order to another humanâpersonalized drinks more aggressively on the app. Workersâgrappling with worries of catching Covid and colleagues getting sick or quittingâstruggled to churn out grande iced shaken espressos with salted caramel cold foam, in caramel-lined cups, with blonde espresso, three pumps of sugar-free vanilla syrup, caramel drizzles and extra cinnamon dolce topping. An unprecedented unionization effort ensued, ignited by workersâ frustrations with what they saw as understaffing and the companyâs pandemic-era policies, including around hazard pay. (Starbucks said at the time that it had stepped up for workers.)Â
Daniela Sirtori reports on Bloomberg Businessweek Daily.
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