Starbucks to bring its mobile ordering feature, Mobile Order & Pay in Canada

  • Starbucks Mobile Order & Pay in Canada begins with 300 stores in Greater Toronto Area
  • New feature on the Starbucks® app for iPhone® will let customers place an order in advance and pick it up at their nearest participating location

TORONTO, 2015-10-8 — /EPR Retail News/ — Starbucks Canada today announced that it will bring the company’s innovative mobile ordering feature, Mobile Order & Pay, to approximately 300 company-owned stores in the Greater Toronto Area on October 13, 2015.

Following successful launches in company-owned stores across the U.S., mobile ordering is emerging as the fastest and easiest way for Starbucks customers to order ahead, pay and then pick up their purchases – providing on-the-go customers a simple and quick alternative to get some of their favorite food or beverage items. Seamlessly integrated into Starbucks world-class mobile app and My Starbucks Rewards® loyalty program, the feature will be available for customers using the Starbucks® app for iPhone® (in the Greater Toronto Area including Markham, Scarborough, Richmond Hill, Unionville, Vaughan, Etobicoke, Aurora and Thornhill). Starbucks plans to expand Mobile Order & Pay to other select Canadian cities in 2016.

“Toronto is the largest city in Canada and also home to some of Starbucks busiest North American stores,” said Jessica Mills, director brand and digital, Starbucks Canada. “We know that sometimes, customers have to choose between going to Starbucks and making their next meeting or appointment. The simple, convenience of Mobile Order & Pay means customers can bypass the line. It represents a significant opportunity for us to enhance the customer experience and significantly save customers some time.”

Starbucks was the first national retailer to offer its own mobile payment technology combined with a deep loyalty program. Today, mobile payments represent 18% of all in-store transactions in Canadian Starbucks stores and more than 1 million Canadians are active My Starbucks Rewards® members. With the Mobile Order & Pay feature, customers have the same Starbucks Experience they would have in store, including the ability to customize orders through the app with the convenience and speed of placing and paying for an order in advance. Estimated pick up times are shown in-app before a customer confirms their order.

To use Mobile Order & Pay from the Starbucks® app for iPhone®

1. Click on the “Order” option at the top right of the screen

2. Select the food and beverage items to order: Beverages are customizable, including the option to modify size, number of espresso shots, dairy selections and more

3. Select the participating store for pick up: Approximate wait times will be viewable on the customer’s phone prior to selecting store location. Directions will also be available, if needed

4. Confirm by clicking, “order:” At the time of order, payment is made from the customer’s registered Starbucks Card

5. Proceed to the participating Starbucks® store to pick up food and beverages: Orders are sent to the selected store where Starbucks partners (baristas) will begin preparing the items

For more information, please visit www.starbucks.ca.  To download the Starbucks® app for iPhone®, visit the App Store here.

About Starbucks
Since 1971, Starbucks Coffee Company has been committed to ethically sourcing and roasting high-quality arabica coffee. Today, with stores around the globe, the company is the premier roaster and retailer of specialty coffee in the world. Through our unwavering commitment to excellence and our guiding principles, we bring the unique Starbucks Experience to life for every customer through every cup. To share in the experience, please visit us in our stores or online at www.starbucks.ca and the Starbucks Newsroom at news.starbucks.com

For more information on this news release, contact us.

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Starbucks to bring its mobile ordering feature, Mobile Order & Pay in Canada

Starbucks to bring its mobile ordering feature, Mobile Order & Pay in Canada

Starbucks announces nationwide availability of Mobile Order & Pay on iOS and Android devices

Available In More Than 7,400 Stores and Customers Using the Starbucks® App on iOS or Android Devices; International Expansion Coming in October

SEATTLE, 2015-9-22 — /EPR Retail News/ — Starbucks Coffee Company (Nasdaq: SBUX) today announced the nationwide availability of Mobile Order & Pay on iOS and Android devices, a new feature of the popular Starbucks® mobile app that allows customers to place and pay for their order in advance of their visit and pick it up at a participating Starbucks® location.  Following successful launches in select U.S. cities, mobile ordering is emerging as the fastest and easiest way for Starbucks customers to order ahead, then pay and pick up their purchases – providing on-the-go customers a simple and quick alternative to get their favorite food or beverage item. Starbucks plans to introduce this feature in select company owned stores in the UK and Canada in October.

“Bringing Mobile Order and Pay to our customers is about meeting their needs of convenience and customization at any time of the day” said Adam Brotman, Starbucks chief digital officer. “The fact that it also represents the fastest technology application rollout we have ever done is indicative of the strength of our digital ecosystem, how well it has been received by both our customers and store partners and the impact we think it can have on the future of retail.”

Following the initial test of Mobile Order & Pay in Portland, Oregon in December 2014 and subsequent launch across the Pacific Northwest in March 2015, Starbucks expanded the program to 3,400 additional stores across 17 states in the U.S. earlier this summer. Today’s announcement marks the completion of the national rollout with the feature now available on both iOS and Android devices to use at Starbucks more than 7,400 company-owned stores across the country.

The Mobile Order & Pay feature allows customers to choose a store from a map view, browse, select and customize beverage and food items, view the estimated timeframe the order will be ready, and pre-pay for the order – all within the Starbucks® Mobile App.  Menu options highlight products available in specific geographic regions and stores, and orders are freshly prepared and ready for pick-up in the bar area.

Mobile Order & Pay is integrated into Starbucks world-class Mobile App and My Starbucks Rewards® loyalty program, providing a simple way for customers to sign up and earn coveted Stars.  It’s available for customers using a Starbucks® app for iPhone® or Starbucks® app for Android™.

Apple, the Apple logo, and iPhone are trademarks of Apple Inc., registered in the U.S. and other countries. App Store is a service mark of Apple Inc.

Android™ is a trademark of Google Inc. Google Play is a trademark of Google Inc.

Link to B-Roll

About Starbucks
Since 1971, Starbucks Coffee Company has been committed to ethically sourcing and roasting high-quality arabica coffee. Today, with stores around the globe, the company is the premier roaster and retailer of specialty coffee in the world. Through our unwavering commitment to excellence and our guiding principles, we bring the unique Starbucks Experience to life for every customer through every cup. To share in the experience, please visit us in our stores or online at www.starbucks.com and the Starbucks Newsroom at www.news.starbucks.com.

For more information on this news release, contact us.

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Starbucks announces nationwide availability of Mobile Order & Pay on iOS and Android devices

Starbucks announces nationwide availability of Mobile Order & Pay on iOS and Android devices

Starbucks chief digital officer Brotman: Mobile Order & Pay expands to all company-owned U.S. stores ahead of schedule

SETTLE, 2015-9-22 — /EPR Retail News/ — Adam Brotman loves a good success story. Ask him what he does when he’s not immersed in Starbucks core digital businesses and Brotman will tick off a list of biographies of entrepreneurs he’s recently polished off and then point to a stack of nonfiction hardcovers that are up next.

Reading about groundbreaking business leaders ranging from Steve Jobs and Bill Gates to his current boss, Howard Schultz, and his uncle, Costco co-founder Jeffrey Brotman, is nothing new for Starbucks chief digital officer, who recalls consuming similar fare alongside comic books when he was a boy.

The Northwest native has written a new chapter in his own success story with Starbucks recent expansion of Mobile Order & Pay. The service, which allows customers to buy customized food and beverages from their phone before they arrive at a Starbucks® store, was introduced in Portland in late 2014. In June of 2015, Starbucks expanded the program to 3,400 additional stores across 17 states. Today the service expands to all company-owned U.S. stores ahead of schedule.

Brotman, who also oversees all of mobile, web, card, digital loyalty experiences, Wi-Fi and much of the in-store digital products used by partners (employees), joined Starbucks in 2009 as senior vice president and general manager of Digital Ventures. He’d previously served as CEO of Barefoot Yoga Company and Senior Vice President for Corbis. He founded the in-store service PlayNetwork in 1996 after completing his studies at the University of Washington School of Law the previous year.

Brotman discusses his career, and the challenges ahead, in this Starbucks Newsroom Q&A:

You’re a Seattle native. Do you recall the first time you encountered Starbucks?

The first time I encountered Starbucks, ironically, wasn’t in Seattle. I went to college in Los Angeles at UCLA. I was familiar with Starbucks from before I left for college in 1987, probably from the original Starbucks and perhaps from some of what had happened after Howard merged Il Giornale with Starbucks. My uncle was one of the early investors and board members too, but really my awareness was just out of the corner of my eye. During the time I was in college, the company began to open some stores in L.A. I remember feeling hometown pride – this is that cool Seattle coffee shop. It had been around for a while in terms of the original concept, but it was relatively new in the mid- to late-‘80s, in terms of expansion. I started going there when I was in college.

I came back to Seattle in 1992 to go to law school and, by that point, Starbucks had just gone public. I remember thinking: This whole town is bonkers for Starbucks and double-tall lattes. I was just a brewed drinker and I began to drink lattes because I needed to get in the cool-kid crowd. I became a rabid Starbucks customer during law school from 1992 to 1995.

You received your bachelor’s degree from UCLA in classical civilizations. Are there things you learned from the Greeks and the Romans that apply to your business career?

I think Greek and Roman history, philosophy and art were the perfect canvas for a liberal arts education. It’s history, it’s literature, it’s poetry, it’s art, it’s philosophy. Those are things that are great to write about. It hones your writing and thinking skills. It helps you with business creativity as well.

This is true of a lot of liberal arts education. It teaches you to look at something that’s somewhat esoteric or somewhat abstract from daily life, but you can relate it to your daily life. And then write about it. Those skills help with problem solving and creative thinking.

After receiving your law degree, your career took a different path. Did you intend to be a lawyer?

I went into the study of law specifically with an objective to have it help me with business, which is rare. Most people go to law school to become a lawyer. In my case, I had a three-step path. Luckily, my uncle [Jeffrey Brotman] went to University of Washington law school, then had a law career and then started Costco. He mentored me on this idea that law school is an amazing opportunity for young people – or frankly people of any age – to learn to think like a lawyer.

That is similar to what I just mentioned about my liberal arts education. By focusing on business law, at an early age in your legal career you could have access to board rooms and CEOs and CFOs in a way that no one else could at that stage in their legal career. Because you’re not a litigator; you’re a business lawyer. And business lawyers, particularly 20 years ago, were a rarity.

There was no track for business law at law school, so if you took it upon yourself to become a business lawyer you could become part of this small group going to boardrooms. And if you want to go into business, you want to have access to boardrooms so that you can learn and watch and operate on that playground.

To my uncle’s annoyance, I quit my law practice after two years, got the entrepreneurial bug and started PlayNetwork. I think the grand plan was for me to practice law for another five years. Probably in hindsight I should have. But my entrepreneurial passion overtook my career logic.

As chief digital officer for Starbucks and CDO Club’s U.S. Chief Digital Officer of the Year, you’re the tip of the tech spear for an innovative company. Have you always been an early technology adopter?

I have been, although honestly I wouldn’t describe myself that way. But when others now see what I’ve done from starting PlayNetwork to being involved at Corbis and now getting involved here as chief digital officer, they tell me they remember me from junior high school and high school always having the first version of the computer – whether it was an Atari system or a Commodore computer when I was a kid. They remind me that when it came to digital music, I was the very first person anyone knew who had a CD player. I never coded anything in my life, outside of those classes in school, so I’m not a technologist. I’m a digital guy.

Mobile Order & Pay has been your focus for some time now. What is the biggest surprise you encountered in developing Mobile Order & Pay and rolling it out nationally?

It took a year of intense work before we even launched it amongst a tight-knit group of different functions. This is core to operations now. We designed Mobile Order & Pay to be seamlessly integrated into the operational flow, for both the partners in the store and the customers in the store. But also for how the production engine works. How the hand-off plane works (where customers pick up their orders). How the routines for the partners work.

We designed it from day one with the goal of making this a seamlessly integrated feature set and platform, much like we did with drive-thru, as a company. We had to have Operations be a key partner to this core of different functions that came together to work on this. What surprised me the most was how similarly operators in our company and the digital team think.  It was fascinating.

Both teams, I think, are very entrepreneurial. Both teams are extremely customer-centric and thought, “Let’s not engineer this in a way to make it the way we want it. Let’s think of the customer experience first, and the partner experience is part of that. Don’t let the tail wag the dog.” I think the operators found a long-lost cousin in Digital.

The program would not be the success it is today if there wasn’t that partnership between those two groups. It was not a matter of just some master plan and everyone got onboard. It was co-created by a number of different groups: the Technology group, the Operations group, the Digital group, the Marketing group, the Loyalty group. We all got in a room and designed it together and the partnership was great.

You emphasize learning as a key component of what you do in the digital realm. Who are your teachers?

I grew up reading business biographies. My dad and uncle would read business biographies when they were in their thirties and forties and I would always read the hand-me-down business biographies. I still read every business biography that I can get my hands on. You can see on my desk: a book about how Twitter was founded; a book about Jeff Bezos and how Amazon was founded; this is a Hillary Rodham Clinton book; here’s a biography about Ariana Huffington; here’s one about Apple. I tend to read a lot about Apple.

I learn a lot from what other consumer-facing digital companies are doing, particularly out of Silicon Valley. What is Jack Dorsey doing with Square and Twitter? What is Mark Zuckerberg doing with Facebook? I look at apps and think about what Starbucks can do to enhance our relationship with our customers – as opposed to what other retailers or other restaurant companies are doing.

When was the last time you were totally unreachable by phone or computer?

That’s a hard one. I remember once telling everyone that I’m not going to be reachable for a week and I’m really going to try to unplug. But that was a couple of years ago, to be honest. I should probably do it more often.

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For more information on this news release, contact Starbucks Newsroom.

 

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Starbucks chief digital officer Brotman: Mobile Order & Pay expands to all company-owned U.S. stores ahead of schedule

Starbucks chief digital officer Brotman: Mobile Order & Pay expands to all company-owned U.S. stores ahead of schedule

Kevin Johnson named Starbucks president and COO with focus on Starbucks information technology, mobile and digital platforms

SEATTLE, 2015-3-2 — /EPR Retail News/ — Long before Kevin Johnson was named Starbucks president and chief operating officer, and a decade before being appointed to the company’s board of directors, he was a Starbucks customer.

“Like everyone else, I started walking into my local Starbucks for coffee and became a part of what millions of people now consider to be their daily ritual,” said Johnson. “What I noticed then, and what I continue to appreciate now, is the authentic and thoughtful ways partners (employees) create a great experience for customers and bring the brand to life.”

With partners and customers in mind, today Johnson begins his new role with Starbucks. In January, Starbucks announcedJohnson would join the company’s senior leadership team following Troy Alstead’s decision to take a sabbatical after 23-years with Starbucks.

As Starbucks president and coo, Johnson will manage all operational functions including the global businesses of Starbucks in the Americas, EMEA and China/Asia Pacific. He will also oversee Starbucks global supply chain which works with more than 21,000 stores in 66 countries worldwide. From coffee to cups to chairs and more, the global supply team manages more than 85,000 outbound deliveries per week to Starbucks retail stores, distribution channels and outlets.

Johnson will draw on his decades of experience in the tech industry to direct Starbucks information technology, and mobile and digital platforms.  He’s a longtime tech leader having served as CEO of Juniper Networks and as a Microsoft executive. At Microsoft, he led worldwide sales, marketing and services which gave him key insights in running a large customer-facing global operation. Johnson said he has a “great deal of passion for innovation and the role technology plays in improving lives.”

“The digital revolution has put mobile devices in the hands of consumers and cloud computing enables new types of services. The businesses that utilize technology to enhance their customers’ experiences are going to be the big winners in the years to come. I’d definitely put Starbucks in that category,” Johnson said.

He has helped guide Starbucks digital strategy since joining the company’s board of directors in 2009 – the same year the company introduced its My Starbucks Rewards loyalty program which now has more than nine million members. The most recent innovation for customers, the launch of Mobile Order & Pay, will expand and the company will debut mobile delivery via the Starbucks app later this year.

“The opportunity for me to be a part of Starbucks, which is clearly a leader in the digital space, is both very exciting and humbling,” he said.

Johnson’s commitment to digital innovation extends to nonprofit businesses. He was a founding board member of NPower, an organization that provides other nonprofits with access to technology and the skills needed to fulfill their social missions. That includes helping young adults and veterans through free tech and professional skills training. Johnson is also involved with Catalyst, a leading nonprofit that focuses on expanding opportunities for women in business. And he supports Youth Eastside Services, one of the largest providers of youth and family counseling assistance in the Seattle area.

Family is at the “center of my world,” said Johnson, who grew up with his brother and sister in a small town in New Mexico. Johnson’s father was a theoretical physicist; his mother a pediatric nurse.

“I hope that I’ve taken on the best of my parents’ characteristics – the analytical, logical thoughtful nature of my father and the compassionate and caring characteristics of my mother,” he added. Kevin and June Johnson have two sons, ages 27 and 30, and one grandchild.

About Starbucks
Since 1971, Starbucks Coffee Company has been committed to ethically sourcing and roasting high-quality arabica coffee. Today, with more than 21,000 stores around the globe, Starbucks is the premier roaster and retailer of specialty coffee in the world. Through our unwavering commitment to excellence and our guiding principles, we bring the unique Starbucks Experience to life for every customer through every cup. To share in the experience, please visit our stores or online at Starbucks.com and news.starbucks.com

For more information on this news release, contact the Starbucks Newsroom.

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Kevin Johnson appointed as president and chief operating officer Starbucks Corporation

Kevin Johnson named Starbucks president and COO with focus on Starbucks information technology, mobile and digital platforms