RAJEEV PESHAWARIA
FREE PRESS; 222 PAGES
PART 1: SELF AND TEAM LEADERSHIP
1.1 ENERGIZE
The Self: Self-Leadership
HOWARD SCHULTZ: A JOURNEY OF
SELF-DISCOVERY
CHAIRMAN AND CEO OF STARBUCKS
Howard Schultz became CEO of Starbucks in
1987. Since then, Starbucks has grown
from a small local company with 6 stores and less than 100 employees to an
international brand with more than 16,000 stores in over 50 countries. Schultz grew up in government subsidized
housing in Brooklyn, New York. He was 7
when his father, a temporary truck driver, broke his leg and was stuck at home
for a month without income, health insurance, or workers compensation. Schultz could not understand why his father’s
company would not help them at a time like this, particularly since the accident
occurred at work.
Schultz went to Northern Michigan
University on an athletic scholarship.
After college, he got a job with Xerox Corp. in sales training
program. There he learned skills such as
selling, marketing, presenting, and cold-calling. Success came early as he sold more machines
than most of his peers over the next 3 years.
In 1979, he joined Perstorp U.S. subsidiary for its Hammerplast line of
house ware products in North Carolina selling component for kitchens and
furniture. Soon he was promoted to vice
president and general manager of Hammerplast.
He returned to New York and started overseeing all U.S. operations,
managing about 20 sales reps. He was
than 28 years old.
He came across the idea of creating the
Starbucks chain of stores purely by chance.
While still at Hammerplast, he noticed a small retailer was placing an
unusually large order for a manual drip coffeemaker. His investigation of the situation leads him
to Starbucks Coffee, Tea and Spice in Seattle, Washington. Schultz found out that Starbucks, a small company
with only 4 stores selling roasted coffee beans, were passionate about their
product. They recommended manual coffee
brewing. After touring the roasting
plant and spending time learning about the whole process of buying, roasting
and selling quality coffee, he was totally enamoured, and decided to work for
Starbucks.
While attending an international
housewares show, Schultz finally understood what he calls the romance of coffee
bars in Italy. Instead of selling just
high quality coffee beans, Starbucks also needed to sell freshly brewed coffee
in coffee bars. His partners were not
impressed with his ideas. They wanted to
remain coffee-bean retailers. It took
Schultz nearly a year of persistence to bring the partners around to agree to
test the idea. The partners give space
for a bar in one of the stores. The idea
was a runaway hit from the first day.
The store became a gathering place, and business continues to grow. Still the partners have no desire to dilute
the original mission of the company, selling coffee beans.
He then decided to leave Starbucks. He raised enough money to get Il Giornale off
the ground. From the moment the first
store opened for customers, sales exceeded expectations. By the end of the first year, the company had
3 others. When the owners of Starbucks
decided to sell their company, Schultz convince investors to give him the 4
million needed to buy Starbucks. The
acquisition was completed in August 1987 and the company was renamed Starbucks.
Howard Schultz, at 34, created America’s
biggest coffee company. He created a
company that put treating its people with respect and dignity. The retail industry is known for its high
employee churn and use of temporary workers.
Starbucks became the first American company to provide health-care
benefits to part-time employees.
NOTES TO THE CHAPTER
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to be continued.....
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