Starbucks reports better-than-expected quarterly sales as turnaround
efforts begin
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[January 29, 2025] By
DEE-ANN DURBIN
Starbucks on Tuesday reported better-than-expected sales in its fiscal
first quarter as some of its turnaround efforts start to deliver
results.
The Seattle coffee giant said its revenue was flat at $9.4 billion for
the 13-week period ending Dec. 29. That beat Wall Street's forecast of
$9.3 billion, according to analysts polled by FactSet.
Chairman and CEO Brian Niccol, who joined the company in September, said
customer-focused changes — such as a decision to stop charging extra for
non-dairy milk and a streamlining of the menu — were helping to improve
service and drive store traffic.
In a conference call with investors Tuesday, Niccol said Starbucks is
planning to cut its food and beverage offerings by 30% over the course
of this year to simplify operations and speed service. Starbucks will
also add digital menus to all of its company-owned U.S. stores over the
next 18 months to make ordering options clearer and make it easier to
shift its offerings depending on the time of day.
Niccol said the company is also adding staff to some stores and
experimenting with ordering algorithms that prioritize in-store
customers and better pace mobile orders.
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“The place where we run into problems, frankly, is the fact that there
is just no gating on the mobile orders,” Niccol said. “All these orders
come flooding in faster than even our customer can get there. So all
these drinks are sitting on the counter, and it’s at the expense of
providing any other experience for a customer that’s right in the
store.”
Starbucks is trying to reestablish itself as a gathering place, and this
week announced that it will start using ceramic mugs and offering
in-store customers free refills of coffee or tea. The company is also
trying to appeal to customers with a new rule that requires people to
buy something if they want to hang out or use the restroom.
“This is back to the core of what makes Starbucks a unique experience,”
Niccol said.
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A Starbucks Coffee sign on Thursday, Jan. 16, 2025, in Houston. (AP
Photo/Ashley Landis)
 Starbucks' same-store sales — or
sales at locations open at least a year — fell 4% compared to the
same period last year. The decline was less than the 5.5% analysts
anticipated, according to FactSet. It was also better than the
previous quarter, when global same-store sales were down 7%.
U.S. same-store sales also fell 4% in the first quarter. Starbucks
said transactions were down 8% but customers spent more per visit.
Starbucks also pulled back on discounts during the quarter, Niccol
said.
Niccol said he recently visited China, Starbucks' second-largest
market, where sales have been hampered by lower-cost competitors.
China's same-store sales fell 6% in the fiscal first quarter.
Niccol said Starbucks is continuing to explore a strategic
partnership that would help it continue to grow in China.
Niccol has also been reshaping Starbucks' corporate staff. Earlier
Tuesday, he announced the departure of two senior executives and a
reshuffling of their job responsibilities.
Mike Grams, who most recently served as president of Taco Bell, will
become Starbucks’ chief stores officer for North America. Meredith
Sandland, the CEO of Empower Delivery and the former chief
development officer at Taco Bell, will become Starbucks’ chief store
development officer. Niccol led Taco Bell until 2018, when he left
to run Chipotle.
Niccol also announced earlier this month that Starbucks plans an
unspecified number of corporate layoffs by early March.
Starbucks' shares rose less than 1% in after-hours trading Tuesday.
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