USA TODAY US Edition

Starbucks serving alcohol at more sites

Wine, beer sales can boost average check

- Bruce Horovitz @brucehorov­itz USA TODAY

Don’t be surprised if you soon get carded at your neighborho­od Starbucks.

Like others in the ultra-competitiv­e restaurant world, the coffee giant plans to expand the number of domestic locations that sell alcoholic beverages.

What began with a single Seattle Starbucks location selling beer and wine in 2010, has evolved into 26 locations. That’s about to go into hyperdrive. Within the next several years, the alcoholic beverage platform will expand to thousands of locations, spokeswoma­n Lisa Passé says.

“The concept is a natural progressio­n for Starbucks as we seek to create a new occasion for customers to gather, relax and connect with each other in the evenings,” Passé says.

Starbucks again finds itself at the leading edge of an industry trend on the grow. Not only are sales of alcoholic beverages lucra- tive, but they attract night-time customers, when business typically slows down. The risk is turning off customers who don’t want to be part of that environmen­t. The chain has seen little blowback in its expansion of beer and wine sales, which will reach 40 sites by the end of this year.

Some unlikely restaurant­s have increasing­ly embraced sales of alcoholic beverages in recent years. Applebee’s has heavily marketed its alcoholic beverage sales. Red Robin earned some recent social-media buzz when it began to roll out wine shakes — a few years after rolling out beer shakes. Burger King gave it a go, when it began selling beer and burgers four years ago at its new concept, the Whopper Bar in Miami Beach’s tourist-heavy South Beach. Three years ago, Sonic began to sell beer at a couple of its Florida locations.

Among other things, wine and beer sales can substantia­lly boost the average ticket at Starbucks. At Wednesday’s shareholde­rs meeting, CEO Howard Schultz noted that the typical customer spends about $5 per visit. A glass of beer or wine can instantly double that figure. “We are in the early stages of our growth and developmen­t,” Schultz said. “If we’re a 20-chapter book, we are only in chapter four or five.”

One of those chapters could be the careful evolution from coffee to alcohol. There are no plans for alcoholic beverages beyond wine and beer, Passé says, nor are there plans to expand the program outside the USA.

She says the menus at these locations typically offer shareable, warm small plates and desserts. The same stores typically sell artisan flatbreads, truffle mac ‘n’ cheese, bacon-wrapped dates, salted caramel and cheesecake brownies.

 ?? STEPHEN BRASHEAR FOR USA TODAY ?? Casey O’Neill serves wine at a Starbucks in Seattle. Sales of alcohol attract customers at night, when business often slows.
STEPHEN BRASHEAR FOR USA TODAY Casey O’Neill serves wine at a Starbucks in Seattle. Sales of alcohol attract customers at night, when business often slows.

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