The Jerusalem Post

Starbucks says boycott threat over refugees hasn’t hurt brand

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LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – Starbucks Corp. over the weekend said its business has not been hurt by a social media boycott campaign started in response to the chain’s promise to hire 10,000 refugees globally over the next five years.

Starbucks made its January 29 refugee hiring announceme­nt on the heels of US President Donald Trump’s first executive order that temporaril­y banned travel from seven mostly Muslim nations. The move angered some Trump supporters, who called on other customers to stop frequentin­g the coffee chain.

Matt Ryan, Starbucks’s chief strategy officer, said results from a YouGov BrandIndex survey suggesting that the boycott had dented the brand “do not reflect the customer satisfacti­on and perception trends we are seeing so far in 2017.”

Kantar Millward Brown, a market research firm that has provided continuous Brand Equity measuremen­t for Starbucks since 2013, said the chain has not suffered a consumer backlash related to its refugee hiring promise.

“In February 2017 – after the announceme­nt – we did not observe any substantiv­e impact on customer considerat­ion, future visitation intent or brand perception­s or any other key performanc­e metrics for the Starbucks brand,” Brian James, president of Kantar Millward Brown’s brand and communicat­ions practice, said in a letter released by Starbucks.

The coffee company declined to release related data, citing confidenti­ality.

James said his firm’s measuremen­ts do not substantia­te findings from YouGov BrandIndex, whose data showed declines in consumer perception and purchase considerat­ion after the refugee hiring statement.

A YouGov spokesman told Reuters it stood by the accuracy of its data.

 ?? (Reuters) ?? ESPRESSO IS BREWED at a Starbucks in Austin, Texas, last month.
(Reuters) ESPRESSO IS BREWED at a Starbucks in Austin, Texas, last month.

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