Starbucks has been getting beaten up this year and faces tough competition from Dunkin Donuts. Even McDonalds is taking a run at them. One of the ways they chose to respond is a great lesson in listening to your customer and embracing a private custom media channel. For many companies the knee jerk, old school reaction would have been to launch a “branding” campaign or hire a celebrity pitch person. Instead Starbucks did something very cool – they launched My Starbucks Idea web site. The purpose of the site is to ask their loyal customers what they could do to improve the product and service. I would encourage you to go to the site and read the both the volume and passion of the responses. The site is powered by salesforce.com and they did a similar site for Dell. Interesting, Dell and Starbucks have a lot in common – both were innovative companies who used to be the fresh up-and-comers, and once they got too big; they lost touch with what made them great.
I commend both companies for creating a private media channel to have a two way dialog with their customers. This kind of forum gives customers a place to vent, and make suggestion. Read through some of them – they are not only thoughtful, but smart. A lot of companies give lip service to listening to their customer, but how many actually do and act on it? More than ever, people in the executive suite are isolated from their customers, where they are a long way from their middle class American customers and prospects. Also, since they only talk to other execs, they get caught in an infinite loop of their own B.S. How many meetings have you been in where sales and marketing people sit around pitching each other and not taking in outside information? Happens all the time and the result: the ads we see on TV and in magazines are completely off target.
What I really like about the site is the “Ideas in Action” section where Starbuck employees respond in their own words and tell customers what action they will take based on customer suggestions. This is powerful because many times when you write to a web site, you get an automated response which is sometimes worse than getting none at all. I have to admit I have never been a big Starbucks fan – the coffee is too harsh and I can’t stand the ordering process. It was fun to see that many others feel the way I do. As a result, they are introducing a “smoother” coffee and talking about an express line for impatient people like me who just want a regular coffee; and don’t want to stand behind a line of people ordering complicated permutations of coffee beans, milk (cow or soy) and odd flavors.
Now, let’s see if they take this process one step further. They have collected scores of contact names and been given the “permission” to talk to them about Starbucks. I would suggest starting a real Starbucks private custom media channel to their customers using content marketing to further strengthen the bond between them and their customers. This approach could get Starbucks back on track and make the brand fresh again. Meanwhile, I can’t wait for the first express line open.

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April 17, 2008 at 2:21 pm
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