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Starbucks' China business will one day overtake its US market

ahojunk

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Starbucks branching into tea...

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Starbucks launched tea brand
2016-10-06 11:43 | China Daily | Editor: Feng Shuang

Starbucks Coffee Co, the global leader in coffee chain stores, launched its Teavana brand in China on Tuesday to strengthen its tea offerings in the nation, with its strong tea-drinking culture.

In its debut, Starbucks Teavana will bring two new shaken iced tea beverages that were created specifically for the Chinese customer.

Starbucks operates about 300 Teavana branded stores in the United States and Canada, but there is no plan to expand them in China.

Belinda Wong, president of Starbucks China, said: "As we continue to deepen the reach of the Starbucks brand in China, our customers are increasingly asking us for new and different ways to experience tea. Just as we've done for coffee, Teavana is tea reimagined by Starbucks."

The two new Teavana shaken iced teas join the existing popular core tea beverages and the current whole-leaf tea sachets, which have been in Starbucks' stores for many years. They will become part of the Starbucks Teavana portfolio across all its more than 2200 stores in China.

"The launch of Starbucks Teavana in China and the Asia Pacific region brings an entirely new and modern tea experience specifically developed for our customers, who increasingly want new and different tastes and experiences," said John Culver, group president of Starbucks Global Retail.

Tea is a $125 billion global category and is the second most consumed beverage in the world, second only to water. The launch of StarbucksTeavana™ is the first time Starbucks has launched a brand on this scale since 2008 with the launch of Starbucks VIA Ready Brew, and represents an important growth opportunity for the business, according to the company.

In 2015, Starbucks' tea business in the United States grew by 12 percent, with all tea categories posting strong growth, led by iced tea at 29 percent. Building on this and the success of Teavana to date in other parts of the world, Starbucks aims to increase its global tea business to $3 billion over the next five years.

Starbucks acquired Teavana Holdings, Inc. in December 2012 and Teavana products will be available in stores across all its markets in China and the Asia Pacific region.

China's specialist coffee shops are increasing rapidly and are forecast by Euromonitor International to rise from 16,692 thousand in 2015 to 33,359 thousand in 2020. Coffee players are eyeing the growth potential in China, although there has not yet been any significant shift from tea to coffee beverages in this market.

"The key to marketing messages is to try and convince consumers that coffee players are here to add to the diversity of drinks, rather than asking the Chinese to replace tea with coffee," according to Euromonitor.

Last year, Liao Weijia, the daughter of China's so-called "Hotpot Queen", vowed to expand her chic teahouse chain NenLyuTea (meaning tender green tea) to 100 stores in three years with more than 100 million yuan ($15.6 million) in funding from Domking Holdings Ltd. Zhang Zetian, the newly wed wife of JD.com CEO Liu Qiangdong, is the main shareholder of Domking.
 
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Teavana tea in Canada Chinese know it's to trick local white folks with no knowledge if what is considered good tea :lol:
 
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Starbucks plans to operate 5,000 stores in Chinese mainland by 2021
By Tian Shi (People's Daily Online) 14:10, October 21, 2016

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[Starbucks, file photo]

Starbucks named its first chief executive officer for China on Oct. 19, also announcing plans to operate 5,000 mainland stores by 2021. To achieve that goal, the coffee giant will open 500 new stores in China every year.

Belinda Wongwill become the company’s CEO of China, promoted from her former position as regional president. Besides focusing on overall long-term growth for China, Wong will be responsible for key areas including the 2017 opening of the first international Starbucks Roastery and Reserve Tasting Room in Shanghai. Wong will also overseevast digital and e-commerce strategies across the market.

Howard Schultz, chairman and CEO of Starbucks, said on a CNBC show on Wednesday that he believes in the Chinese economy and the buying power of Chinese consumers, adding that the company believes "these are the early days for Starbucks in China."

Starbucks first entered China in 1999.After 17years, the company now operatesmore than 2,300 cafes in 100-plus cities.

Chinese coffee consumption has nearly tripled in the past four years, according to the United States Department of Agriculture, faster than any other major market that the agency tracks.
http://en.people.cn/n3/2016/1021/c90000-9130934.html
 
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Chinese are poor.
They can not afford 5 dollars coffee.
Better go to the country with world's biggest middle class
You mean super power India? :enjoy:

Shall we ask one particular delusions Indian to come here and take a look at these thread?
 
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LOL, Chinese are trolling in their own thread :rofl::rofl:
 
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Companies like this should be banned from China. There are major health problems wherever Western fast food go. Starbucks coffee is loaded with processed sugar, which is extremely unhealthy and leads to high rates of obesity, diabetes, and other related problems.

See the book - Pure, White, and Deadly: How Sugar Is Killing Us and What We Can Do to Stop It

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It can be banned if we want to. But it's a leverage with business between both countries. End of the day, those Starbucks outlet will employ large number of Chinese and I bet local brand will not idle around and let US take the whole pie. I been to Taiwan and they have decent amount of local competition to give Starbucks a run for their money.

It will be a similar scene in mainland China. You might seen 5000 outlet as a huge number.
Who knows there is market enough for 20000 such outlets in China market in 2021?

But this article also quash any rumour of collapsing China and weaken purchasing power of most Chinese. In fact the optimize and prediction by this foreign companies show their full confident of healthy growth of ever more powerful China.

You think Starbucks will make such vast investment in India? They know that country can't make it and most Indians are poor even in the next 20 years. The amount of sophisticated and rich consumer in India Is only 0.00001% out of its vast population unlike China. :enjoy:
 
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I have no doubt Chinese companies will eventually beat them like they have in many other industries. I'm more concerned about the health problems these lifestyles/diets will create. I don't believe the sustainable collapse theory lol.
People don't drink that everyday, it's not daily consumption.
Many people are worried about the number of KFC in China, but they forget there are 100 times more Chinese style fast food stores. But in US, you just find one kind of KFC after another.
In term of the proportion, I'm not really worried.
 
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I have no doubt Chinese companies will eventually beat them like they have in many other industries. I'm more concerned about the health problems these lifestyles/diets will create. I don't believe the sustainable collapse theory lol.
This is a rich man syndrome. It's difficult to avoid. Once you get rich. You start to afford all kind of junk food. Unlike some counterpart who is too poor to afford that :enjoy:
 
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This is a rich man syndrome. It's difficult to avoid. Once you get rich. You start to afford all kind of junk food. Unlike some counterpart who is too poor to afford that :enjoy:
We are not really talking about food per se.
It's about investment, jobs and an sign of purchasing power....
 
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In China, they provide very decent environment.
People can use their wifi for a whole day without ordering anything (and got free water and milk).
Yup, it's a lifestyle as what jack ma says. Not abt the coffee. :enjoy:

The Chinese middle class are rising and they can afford that kind of luxury.
 
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