Business Standard

Starbucks filters its coffee from the clutter

Keen to differenti­ate its brand from the crowd, the Seattle-based chain steps up the buzz with a set of new brews

- VIVEAT SUSAN PINTO

Will a nitrogen-gasinfused cup of coffee pique the interest of the coffee drinking consumer in India, especially the young millennial who hunts down a new café to take her custom to every day? The world’s largest coffee house Starbucks, which has a joint venture in India with the Tatas, is hoping it will. Faced with a clutter of coffee houses and cafes that also serve the brew, the chain that has 119 stores in seven cities in India is looking at ways to differenti­ate its brand from the rest.

As a first step, it has lined up an innovative mix of coffee brews that it hopes will attract the adventurou­s and noveltysee­king coffee drinker. It has just unveiled the ‘Nitro Cold Brew’ at select outlets across metros such as Mumbai, Delhi-NCR, Bengaluru and Kolkata, which it expects will generate excitement and bring in customers looking for more than just another place to hang out at. The brew is just one of many that the café chain is quietly rolling out at its stores.

Driving the latest round of menu-led innovation­s to the brand is the fact that the coffee retail market in the country is getting increasing­ly competitiv­e and the need for differenti­ation is growing. For the Starbucks team in India, the different brewing techniques are going to be the biggest brand differenti­ator. Some stores include a stateof-the-art manual expresso machine that ensures coffee is smooth and consistent. Or a coffee derived from a vacuum process that flows through glass chambers and uses a halogen light bulb as a heating source.

One more brewing technique is called ‘Chemex’ that uses an hour-glass-shaped vessel made of high-quality and heat-resistant glass. The coffee flows through special filters that removes oils and solids to produce a clean brew.

Starbucks is investing significan­tly in these techniques, hoping to produce innovative flavours and drinks that not only generate word of mouth, but also allow for premium pricing. The brand is also using this as lever online to draw the attention of millennial café goers, an audience most café chains including Starbucks chase aggressive­ly.

Veetika Deoras, head, marketing, category and digital, Tata Starbucks, says, millennial­s are excited about new and interestin­g flavours and introducin­g new brewing techniques helps catch their attention. Innovation, she says, is at the heart of what Starbucks does. But given the commoditis­ation that coffee and the drinking experience has seen in recent times, experts say coffee chains have no other choice if they wish to increase footfalls and revenue.

“The challenge with café chains in general is the similarity in service, ambience and delivery, which is also visible in quick-service restaurant­s, for instance,” says N Chandramou­li, chief executive officer, TRA, which comes out with the annual Brand Trust Report. “The only way out is differenti­ation either in product, pricing or bringing in greater variety in terms of offerings. Café chains are slowly beginning to realise this as the pressure grows to improve sales,” he says. Café Coffee Day, the country’s largest coffee chain, for instance, drives affordabil­ity aggressive­ly with its service, something that has allowed it to penetrate the market well with over 1,700 stores (as of March 31, 2018). The plan is to open 130-135 stores this year at an investment of Rs 40 lakh per store, VG Siddhartha, chairman and managing director, Coffee Day Enterprise­s, said in May.

McCafe, which is part of the McDonald’s umbrella, has an innovative food and beverage menu on offer owing to the shop-in-shop format of its cafes. Simply put, consumers walking into a McDonald’s store in Mumbai, for instance, can also pick up interestin­g coffees or drinks at the McCafe counter nearby. The result is a win-win combinatio­n that helps both brands, sector analysts said.

Amit Jatia, vice chairman, Westlife Developmen­t, which runs McDonald’s and McCafe restaurant­s in the west and south of India, said earlier that the company had doubled sales of McCafes in the 2017-18 financial year and that the firm expected to keep its pace of growth in the current financial year as well. As of March 31, 2018, there were 149 McCafes, which will be expanded further in the coming quarters, he added. Pushing ahead

Starbucks is definitely under pressure to grow faster according to industry analysts. It was launched two years before McCafe was introduced in India in 2014, but lags the latter in terms of number of stores.

Tata Starbucks executives however have maintained that the pace of store launches will be determined by the availabili­ty of quality real estate at the right price and that growth for growth’s sake is not on its agenda. This acquires even more significan­ce given the struggles faced by brands such as Barista and Costa Coffee in India. The latter have scaled down operations in the last few years owing to lack of profitabil­ity in the business.

The size of the café chain market in India is estimated at ~18-19 billion in size, with year-on-year growth pegged at 10 per cent per annum. A joint report by the National Restaurant Associatio­n of India and Technopak says that café chains as a market could touch around ~29-30 billion by 2021. Innovation­s then are a clear hook for Starbucks, which it hopes will nudge consumers to spend more.

 ??  ?? Starbucks has introduced new brews in several of its 119 stores across the country as it looks to create a differenti­ated experience at its cafes
Starbucks has introduced new brews in several of its 119 stores across the country as it looks to create a differenti­ated experience at its cafes

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