Showing posts with label Starbucks CEO. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Starbucks CEO. Show all posts
Monday, January 30, 2017
Starbucks CEO Schultz plans to hire 10,000 refugees after Trump ban
NEW YORK - Starbucks Corp. Chief Executive Officer Howard Schultz said on Sunday that the company planned to hire 10,000 refugees over five years in 75 countries, two days after U.S. President Donald Trump's executive order banning refugees from certain countries.
Trump on Friday put a four-month hold on allowing refugees into the United States and temporarily barred travelers from Syria and six other Muslim-majority countries, saying the moves would help protect Americans from terrorist attacks.
The order sparked widespread international criticism, outrage from civil rights activists and legal challenges.
Starbucks in a letter from Schultz told employees it would do everything possible to support affected workers.
The hiring efforts announced on Sunday would start in the United States by initially focusing on individuals who have served with U.S. troops as interpreters and support personnel in the various countries where the military has asked for such support, Schultz said.
Schultz has been outspoken on various issues and has put Starbucks in the national spotlight, asking customers not to bring guns into stores and urging conversations on race relations.
Schultz said on Sunday that if the Affordable Care Act is repealed and employees lose healthcare coverage, they would be able to return to health insurance through Starbucks.
Trump and a Republican-controlled legislature are seeking to undo much of the Affordable Care Act, better known as Obamacare.
Schultz will step down as CEO in a few months to focus on new high-end coffee shops, handing the top job to Chief Operating Officer Kevin Johnson, a long-time technology executive. He will become executive chairman in April.
source: news.abs-cbn.com
Thursday, December 1, 2016
Starbucks CEO Schultz to step aside, stay as chairman
NEW YORK - Howard Schultz, the charismatic head of Starbucks, will step aside as CEO next year, turning a major page in the history of a company he built into an iconic global brand.
Having led the company's rise from a sleepy Seattle chain into the world's biggest coffee business, Schultz will stay on as executive chairman and chairman of the board, the coffee giant said Thursday in a surprise announcement that sent the share price down after hours.
The change will take effect April 3.
Schultz will hand the reins to president and chief operating officer Kevin Johnson, a close friend who was tapped as number two at the company in 2015 and has been a Starbucks board member since 2009.
The move comes as the firm faces an increasingly crowded market for higher-quality retail coffee shops and seeks to bolster foot traffic.
Schultz will devote his time to developing high-end superpremium coffee shops around the world known as Starbucks Reserve Roasteries, the company said in a statement.
It plans to open 20 to 30 outlets in the coming years.
"I will be here full-time," Schultz told a conference call with analysts. "I am not leaving the company, I am here day to day."
NEW INITIATIVE
Schultz, who joined Starbucks in 1982 as a sales manager, is considered the driving force behind the worldwide success of the coffee chain begun in 1971.
He briefly left in 1986 following a dispute with the then-owners to set up his own company, Il Giornale, before buying out their shares in 1987 with support from local small investors.
Starbucks now operates more than 25,000 stores in more than 75 countries, with a turnover of around $20 billion in fiscal year 2015.
Schultz, 63, told The Wall Street Journal on Thursday that the company's new initiative would help maintain in-person sales as consumers increasingly move to online shopping rather than visiting malls, where many Starbucks outlets are located.
"I don't have any time horizon that would limit my engagement in the company," he said. "This gives me the entrepreneurial freedom to do what I think I do best."
Incoming CEO Johnson is a tech industry veteran, having spent 16 years at Microsoft and five as CEO of the networking equipment company Juniper Networks.
Prior to the announcement, the company's share price closed up 0.9 percent in New York but fell 3.35 percent in after-hours trading to $56.55 at 2250 GMT.
SOCIALLY RESPONSIBLE
Schultz is outspoken about social issues such as gay rights and gun violence and has worked to make Starbucks socially responsible.
The company increased the base salaries of its US employees by 5 percent in July after they expressed concerns about the effect new software enabling customers to place orders on their smartphones would have on jobs.
The company has also opened outlets in poor areas and supported initiatives against racism.
Schultz is close to the Democratic former presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, whom he supported during the election campaign. But he has dismissed persistent rumors he would run for office himself. Many, including some of his friends, have said he may run for president in four years.
He steps down as Starbucks goes ahead with plans to double the number of its stores in China over five years.
But it has run afoul of European regulators, one of several major US companies the European Commission accused of having received illegal tax benefits from Ireland.
In October 2015, the commission also ordered Starbucks to repay up to 30 million euros ($33 million) in the Netherlands, saying tax breaks there amounted to unlawful state aid.
The Dutch authorities are fighting the decision.
Schultz has sought to step away from running Starbucks before.
The Wall Street darling became the company's chairman in 2000 before returning as chief executive in 2008 with the onset of the global financial crisis.
Shares worth $10 at that time climbed to a record high of more than $60 by the end of last year.
source: news.abs-cbn.com
Tuesday, April 9, 2013
Meet the man who turned Starbucks into an iconic brand
MANILA, Philippines - "I'm not a tycoon," says Starbucks chief executive officer and chairman Howard Schultz.
Never mind if he's 309th in Forbes' list of richest Americans with an estimated net worth of $1.6 billion as of March 2013.
For Schultz, he's just an entrepreneur who happened to help grow a coffee bean shop in Seattle's Pike Place market into the world's most recognizable coffee chain.
In an interview with ANC's Karen Davila, Schultz talked about his inspiration for going into the coffee shop business, his business philosophies and what he thinks is the secret to Starbucks' global success.
"We are in a business where we are romancing coffee and we are creating an experience. Starbucks is one of the most iconic, recognized brands in the world. But we have done it in the most unconventional manner, not through traditional marketing and ads but through the experience in our stores. The equity of the Starbucks brand comes to life by our people and the theater, the romance, the culture has built the brand," he said.
Described by Forbes as "the man who made drinking lattes the American way," Schultz found inspiration from the cafes in Italy. He returned to Seattle with the idea of creating a "community around an extraordinary cup of coffee."
"I saw something in Italy which was the genesis of it all. What I saw was people coming together and human connection over coffee and it was the romance of the beverage that was the genesis of the idea," he said.
Schultz worked for Starbucks, then a coffee bean shop, as director of marketing in 1982. But the owners didn't want to go into the cafe business, so he started his own coffee shop in 1985. He bought Starbucks from its owners for $3.8 million in 1987 and expanded its coffee outlets.
Schultz admitted he didn't know if his venture into coffee shops would become a success.
"I don't think you ever know when you start something that it will ever work. But sometimes the difference between failure and success is perseverance and unbridled belief that something is going to happen, where you can almost will it," he said.
"Our business model is quite different than most companies, especially a start-up. We gave ownership to every single employee. We provided health insurance to everyone in the US. I think we created a culture and a value system that in of itself is the reason why we are successful today," Schultz said.
Why he came back as CEO
Schultz returned as CEO in 2008 after an 8-year hiatus to help the company which he said was "in very bad shape."
"A sense of entitlement somehow entered the halls of Starbucks and we were measuring and rewarding the wrong things. I had to remind people and rekindle the heritage and tradition of what Starbucks was about," he said.
Five years later, Starbucks has posted record revenues and profits, but Schultz doesn't take all the credit for it. "It is a team of people and 200,000 people who have really done something together with shared vision, shared values," he said.
A company with a conscience
As CEO of a global company, Schultz said he feels a responsibility to its 200,000 employees and their families to preserve and enhance the Starbucks business.
"We have an aspiration about trying to build a different kind of company and we have a historic opportunity to be one of the most admired, respected companies of our generation," he said.
The 59-year-old businessman is proud of having built a company with a conscience.
"Great companies have to create transparency in everything we do. Why? You want to attract and retain people who believe in the purpose of the company, not necessarily what we do but why we do it. You want to demonstrate to the customers, Wall Street, that we're trying to do something that adds value to every piece of the business. What value and how much pride do we have if we buy coffee in a way that we don't share profits in the success of the company with the people who grow the coffee?" he said, referring to Starbucks' ethical sourcing of coffee.
"It's about wanting to have a company with a conscience. Going back to the original proposition of Starbucks to today, the business model has been a balance of profitability and benevolence. We have to do that in every way."
Why Schultz' family doesn't work at Starbucks
When he started the business, Schultz said he had a rule that no family members, including his children, should be part of the company.
"I felt it would be too much of a burden for (my children) and if something didn't work out, too much of a burden for me... I want them to seek out things and didn't want them to be burdened by their last name," he said.
Schultz said the management are merely "stewards" of Starbucks, which is a public company. "The responsibility that I and the board have is succession has to be judged and given on its own merits and not a family person," he said.
Starbucks to expand in PH
The coffee giant has never franchised in a traditional sense, which Schultz says is aimed at preserving and enhancing the Starbucks culture.
"I've always believed the best way to do that is in a company-owned environment or through a joint venture, like the relationship we have in this market with Rustan," Schultz said.
Starbucks, through local partner Rustan Coffee Corp., opened its first store in the Philippines at 6750 Ayala Avenue in December 1997.
Schultz, who attended the opening of the 200th store in the Philippines, said he is looking forward to opening 100 more stores here in the next four years.
"We never thought we'd have 200 stores in this market. And here we are. Now we just announced we'll open a hundred more in the next four years," he said.
Despite his busy schedule which involves traveling around the world for nearly a third of a year, Schultz says he is still very passionate about the business.
"I'm more inspired, energized today than I have been about the future of the company," he said.
As for his favorite coffee, the Stabucks chairman and CEO says he prefers Sumatra blend. "Because it's full-bodied, rich like a Burgundy wine," he said. Spoken like a true coffee lover that he is.
source: abs-cbnnews.com
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