Starbucks turns to a celebrity CEO as it struggles to define itself for an era of mobile orders

To Howard Schultz, the chaos he observed at a Starbucks in Chicago one recent morning summed up the troubles of the company he long led as chairman and CEO.

Commuters tumbled off trains and into a Starbucks store to pick up the orders they had placed on their cellphones. Drinks weren’t ready when the mobile app said they would be. Customers couldn’t tell which beverage was theirs.

“Everyone shows up and all of a sudden we’ve got a mosh pit,” Schultz said during a June episode of the podcast “Acquired.” “That’s not Starbucks.”

Fifty-three years after its founding, the Seattle coffee giant is unhappy with what it’s become – and trying to figure out how to meet customers’ changing needs without losing its coffeehouse roots. To recapture what once made it special — and turn around sagging sales — Starbucks is turning to Brian Niccol, an experienced marketer who previously led Taco Bell and Chipotle.

Niccol takes over as Starbucks’ chairman and chief executive on Monday.

With nearly 40,000 stores around the world, Starbucks feels like it’s on nearly every corner, but its premium prices are a turnoff to many customers who just want a quick jolt of caffeine, analysts say. At a Manhattan Starbucks, a medium Pumpkin Spice Latte is now almost $8.

Even convenience stores like Wawa now offer great coffee, noted Chris Kayes, a professor of management at The George Washington University. Consumers who want a higher-end coffee experience, meanwhile, are seeking out independent cafes or upscale chains like Blue Bottle.

“From a marketing perspective, Starbucks has really lost its way,” Kayes said.

Kayes called Niccol a highly regarded “celebrity CEO” who has proven he can turn around a struggling company. When Niccol arrived at Chipotle in 2018, the Mexican chain was reeling from multiple food poisoning outbreaks. Five years later, its annual sales had nearly doubled.

Since he was named Starbucks’ incoming CEO on Aug. 13, Niccol has been visiting U.S. stores, listening to baristas and observing the challenges the brand is facing, Starbucks said.

“We look forward to the fresh ideas that Brian will bring to our business,” the company said in a statement.

Streamlining Starbucks’ menu is key to eliminating the kind of disarray Schultz reported seeing in Chicago, said Phil Kafarakis, president and CEO of the International Foodservice Manufacturers’ Association trade group. Niccol needs to figure out who Starbucks’ core customers are, what they like to drink and then start trimming the excess, Kafarakis said.