廣告

2008年3月2日 星期日

the love and compassion and commitment (Starbucks)

スタバ、全米で営業休止 品質改善へ3時間半訓練

2008年2月28日 朝刊

 【ワシントン=小栗康之】米コーヒーチェーン最大手のスターバックスは26日夕(日本時間27日朝)、全米7100店のすべての営業をいったん休止した。約13万5000人の従業員の再教育と訓練が目的で、一部店舗は3時間半後に営業を再開した。

 営業休止は午後5時半から9時まで(現地時間)で、スターバックス側は「歴史的な訓練を行うため」と説明。訓練の具体的な内容は明らかにしていないが、エスプレッソの品質改善を目的にしているという。

 スターバックスは最近、価格の安いマクドナルドなどに押され気味で、売り上げが伸び悩んでいる。

 一方、米ドーナツ・チェーン大手のダンキン・ドーナツは同日、スターバックスの営業休止時間に合わせて、スモールサイズのコーヒーを普段のほぼ半額の99セント(約106円)で販売。米国の“コーヒー戦争”のし烈さをうかがわせた。

Starbucks Takes a 3-Hour Coffee Break

Jacob Silberberg for The New York Times

A training session on Tuesday at a Starbucks on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, which focused on making the drinks.


Published: February 27, 2008

At Starbucks stores across the country on Tuesday night, it was time for the corporate version of re-education camp.

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Jacob Silberberg for The New York Times

On the Upper East Side of Manhattan, Mario Munoz told potential customers that Starbucks was closed for training.

In its campaign to revive the intimate, friendly feel of a neighborhood coffee shop, Starbucks orchestrated the closing of 7,100 of its American stores at precisely 5:30 p.m. for a three-hour retraining session for employees.

It was an exacting enterprise. At a store on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, the drink-making employees, known as baristas, were told to dispense espresso into shot glasses instead of cups. They were urged to check the color of each shot. They were urged to pay more attention to the particularities of steaming milk.

A handout labeled “Espresso Excellence” informed them that “without aeration, the milk screams and lacks sweetness.” And: “The perfect milk requires surfing the tip of the steam wand until the sound is SSHHHH.”


aer・ate


━━ vt. 空気に当てる[を入れる]; 炭酸ガス(など)を入れる; 酸素を供給する.
aerated bread 無酵母パン.
aerated water 〔英〕 炭酸水.
aer・a・tion ━━ n. 通気; 炭酸ガスを入れること.
aer・a・tor ━━ n. 通風装置(など).



Lest anyone doubt that Starbucks is serious, employees were reminded that the chain intended to get rid of odoriferous breakfast sandwiches, just so customers can smell the coffee again.

Howard D. Schultz, the company’s recently reappointed chief executive, has spoken of regaining the “soul of the past” and improving the experience of Starbucks customers. Tuesday night’s sessions were the latest indication of his focus on that task. Indeed, the sessions took place at a time when Starbucks is pining for better days.

The company is closing 100 American stores because of sluggish sales, and expansion plans have been scaled back. Starbucks, once a magic name on Wall Street, is increasingly seen there as just another big food chain.

Time for a makeover.

“It’s really inspiring to talk about the quality of our espresso when we’re here all in the same room,” Justin A. Chapple, manager of the Starbucks on 85th Street and Lexington Avenue, told his employees as members of the press viewed what was billed as a typical training session. “We want to be aware of how we are presenting our drinks to our customers.”

The group, many of them earnest young employees who seemed dedicated to learning their lessons, watched a videotaped message from Mr. Schultz. The head and shoulders of the barista in chief filled the screen.

“This is not about training,” he said to his employees, looking somewhat somber. “This is about the love and compassion and commitment that we all need to have for the customer.”

The store’s employees — dressed alike in black tops, green aprons and Starbucks caps — watched the screen carefully, some nodding in agreement. Mr. Schultz reiterated points from a well-publicized memorandum he wrote in February 2007. In it, Mr. Schultz bemoaned the “watering down” of the Starbucks experience, blaming the expediencies of rapid growth for removing “much of the romance and theater” from the ubiquitous stores.

At the time, Mr. Schultz lamented, “We achieved fresh-roasted bagged coffee, but at what cost?” (To be precise, a one-pound bag of Starbucks Caffe Verona beans sells for $9.95.)

Then employees broke into groups to discuss new techniques to improve the taste and texture of drinks. Would-be customers were turned away at the door. In Manhattan, at least, a few were left in the rain.

In his memo, Mr. Schultz mentioned the automated machines that grind coffee beans and spit out espresso with little human intervention. Those machines, regularly assailed by espresso fanatics, are a continuing sore point for the chain.

“The machine is really a tool,” Ann-Marie Kurtz, the company’s manager for global coffee and tea education, said in an interview. “Ultimately, the barista is still the artist.”

She said that baristas still control the quality of the espresso shot by adjusting the grind and also aerating the milk just so to make it appropriate for lattes and cappuccinos.

Ms. Kurtz said Tuesday night’s training was “not retraining as much as refining skills,” and she likened it to the staff of her favorite Italian restaurant returning to Italy every year to immerse themselves in authentic food.

On busy Lexington Avenue, a barista offered free drinks to the customers who had been refused entrance. Told of the company’s plans for rejuvenating its brand, one Manhattan resident said he was unimpressed.

“Honestly, I just want the coffee fast,” said Cameron Kemal, 16, a student at nearby Regis High School. “The stigma of a big chain doesn’t go away by making coffee slower.”

But a friend of his said the brewing techniques could make a difference. “When you see them pull a carton of something out of the refrigerator, it reminds me I’m paying $5 for a squirt of liquid and milk,” said Hannah Boyd, 16, who lives on the Upper East Side.

She helped herself to three free samples.

Andrew Martin contributed reporting.

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