Starbucks To Sell Beer and Wine At Up To 6 LA Area Stores
- Coffee giant believes alcohol is key to continuing world domination
It’s made its name helping to get Americans wound up for the day with a fresh cup of coffee.
Now Starbucks is offering a way to wind down after announcing plans to begin selling beer and wine.
The company will start the trial in a small number of cafes in Atlanta and Southern California by the end of this year as it explores an expansion beyond morning coffee and afternoon pick-me-ups.
The coffee giant has for the last two years been testing a more community-oriented store concept to boost after office hours traffic.
Aside from the usual line-up of pastries, these stores sell savory, small plate options and beer and wine in addition to the selection of coffees and tea.
The world’s biggest coffee chain started selling such items at a neighborhood Seattle cafe in October 2010. Five stores in the Seattle area and one in Portland, Oregon, now offer the extended menu.
The company, which already has announced plans to bring the new items to five to seven Chicago-area cafes by the end of 2012, also is testing wine and beer sales in Spain.
‘As our customers transition from work to home, many are looking for a warm and inviting place to unwind and connect with the people they care about,’ Clarice Turner, Starbucks’ senior vice president of U.S. operations, said in a news release.
The company does not expect to sell alcohol in all of its nearly 11,000 U.S. cafes.
Quick-service restaurant chains in the United States are adding morning and late-night menus, extending food and drink options and lengthening operating hours in an effort to boost sales.
Starbucks, Burger King and Sonic Corp are among the chains experimenting with alcohol sales in the United States.
Seattle-based Starbucks, which is coming off a successful restructuring, recently has reported some of the industry’s strongest sales trends. Its shares fell about 1.6 percent to $47.38 in afternoon trading on Monday, but are up more than 40 percent from a year ago.
The company, which already offers breakfast and lunch, hopes its latest effort will ring up more late afternoon and evening sales.
Such efforts have their critics.
California-based industry watchdog Alcohol Justice has criticized alcohol sales by Starbucks and fast-food chain Burger King, which offers beer at its new Whopper Bar restaurants.
Sarah Mart, the group’s director of research, said many U.S. neighborhoods already have plenty of bars, restaurants and stores that sell alcohol.
‘The more places that open, the more risk there is of alcohol-related harm’ such as underage drinking, Mart said.
source: Daily Mail
By Simon Tomlinson
Related posts:
- Busy NYC Starbucks block sockets to free up seats
- U.S. sues Starbucks for firing dwarf from barista job
- Starbucks Workers Plan Chile Strike
- Apple begins shipping white iPhone 4s to stateside retail stores
- Amazon Kindle 3G Coming to AT&T Stores Nationwide
- Ikea stores in France, Belgium and Holland attacked with fireworks
- Apple Passes Exxon As Most Valuable U.S. Company
- Eminem’s ‘Recovery’ Becomes First Album to Sell 1 Million Downloads
- Nokia to Sell off Luxury Phone Brand “Vertu”
- Pierre Cardin to sell his fashion house for 1 billion EUR


















