More

New Starbucks Logo Unveiled (PHOTO)


First Posted: 01/05/11 01:52 PM ET Updated: 05/25/11 07:25 PM ET

In this undated product image provided by Starbucks, the company's new 40-year anniversary logo is seen on a cup at right. Other cups bearing the company's logo from over the years, from left, 1971, 1987, and 1992, are also shown. (AP Photo/Starbucks)



Associated Press: Starbucks Corp. is giving its siren a facelift.

The world's largest coffee company is unveiling a new logo Wednesday that drops the words encircling its iconic sea nymph and gives her a few subtle updates.

Starbucks says the changes amount to more than nips and tucks to its favorite lady. The fresh look goes with a new direction for the company as it makes its way back from its toughest times in its 40-year history.

Prior versions of the logo helped build Starbucks into one of the world's best recognized brands, and the company felt it no longer needed to reinforce its name at every turn. The new wordless logo also is better suited to the company's expansion beyond coffee into a wider array of business lines and into more international markets.

Starbucks plans to unveil the logo to employees Wednesday and bring it to stores in March to coincide with its 40th anniversary.

"What is really important here is an evolutionary refinement of the logo, which is a mirror image of the strategy," said Howard Schultz, CEO of Starbucks. "This is not just, let's wake up one day and change our logo."

This is the fourth version of Starbucks' logo since the company's beginnings as a small coffee, tea and spice shop in Seattle in 1971. The first update came in 1987, taking the original bare-breasted siren in brown to a more stylized – and modest – version in green as the company began to expand. The image was further refined in the 1990s as the company went public and its growth soared.

Starbucks eventually suffered from its own success. It grew too far, too fast and began drawing criticism that it had become the Wal-Mart of coffee. Its luster further faded as the recession hit and consumers drank coffee at home or went to lower-priced competitors like McDonald's Corp., which had upped their coffee offerings. The coffee's giant's sales and stock price both fell.

Starbucks brought back founder Schultz to lead daily operations in 2008, closed hundreds of stores and cut jobs. It reemphasized training for employees, allowed customers to customize drinks more, opened stores with more local flavor, increased its Wi-Fi offerings and launched a rewards program.

The company also expanded its product lines – introducing Via, its first instant coffee. It increased its emphasis on beans, ice cream and other packaged goods sold in grocery stores. And it put a big push on its other business lines like Tazo tea and Seattle's Best Coffee. Starbucks ramped up its plans for international markets, like China, where it now has 400 stores on the mainland and plans to open hundreds more in coming years.

"We're sitting today with record revenue, record profit; the stock price is at a five-year high. This isn't an accident," Schultz said.

Starbucks leaders say the changes to the logo are in some ways a metaphor for the company dropping the boundaries of its own business and growing into new areas. Marketing experts agree.

"The brand is now evolving to a point where the coffee association is too confining and restrictive," said John Quelch, a marketing professor at Harvard Business School. "Starbucks is fundamentally selling an experience, but by no means is coffee the only part of the experience. It is important that they not have a logo that is too confining."

Starbucks looked to companies like Nike Inc. and Apple Inc., which had earned the clout with consumers to drop the words from their logos. And it closely watched the missteps of others, such as Gap Inc., which launched a new logo in October only to withdraw it after harsh criticism by customers and others.

Starbucks sees other changes ahead under its new banner: it's testing a system for customers to order and pay for coffee by mobile phone. It's seeking a way for rewards card holders to earn points buying Starbucks products at grocers or other stores. And it's considering offering beer and wine at night in some of its cafes. Starbucks also suggested it is looking at new food business opportunities, though company officials would not disclose details.

"I've never been more excited about the future of the company, I'll tell you that," Schultz said.

____

Retail writer Michael A. Lee contributed reporting from New York.


Quick Poll

Do you like the new Starbucks logo?

Yes, nice improvement.

No, bring back the last one.

FOLLOW HUFFPOST FOOD

In this undated product image provided by Starbucks, the company's new 40-year anniversary logo is seen on a cup at right. Other cups bearing the company's logo from over the years, from left, 1971, 1...
In this undated product image provided by Starbucks, the company's new 40-year anniversary logo is seen on a cup at right. Other cups bearing the company's logo from over the years, from left, 1971, 1...
Filed by Colin Sterling  |  Report Corrections
 
 
  • Comments
  • 305
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4 5  Next ›  Last »  (12 total)
06:11 PM on 01/19/2011
I don't really care. I'll still enjoy my very occasional Starbucks. No more no less.
04:32 PM on 01/19/2011
If it aint broke, don't fit it.
04:33 PM on 01/19/2011
Or ironically, fix :)
05:28 PM on 01/18/2011
Haha... I love how zooming in periodically is considered a redesign in this case, especially when the end cost will be gajillions in company collateral changes.

Maybe the next logo redesign will reveal coffee stains on her teeth??
05:15 PM on 01/14/2011
In terms of the public look of the company, it marks a visual change. But what does it really signify? Check it out at: http://www.abstraktmg.com/blog/post/2011/01/12/RIP-Starbucks-Logo-How-New-Look-May-Offer-Peek-Into-Future.aspx
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
blurredmolly
Was you ever bit by a dead bee?
07:36 AM on 01/14/2011
Did they ban the boobies?
06:28 PM on 01/12/2011
How am I supposed to know what multimillion dollar wasting company I'm drinking from with no words on my non biodegradable cup? I didn't spend tens of thousands of dollars in college to look at pics on my coffee cup...
02:34 AM on 01/10/2011
This will go down as the dumbest waste of money ever.. And they will have to change it again to correct this mistake.
07:01 PM on 01/08/2011
Looks cheap, is cheap, one color minimal graphics etc...
07:58 AM on 01/08/2011
she used to have boobs, but all the "boobs" protested and they were removed... I say bring back the boobs
07:29 AM on 01/08/2011
This company is keenly focused on the environment and sustainability and now it will spend millions on replacement signs and everything else for what?Everyone knows Sstarbucks sells coffee and no logo change is going to change that reality. That's like Budwiser Beer changing it's logo because it was expanding into pantyhose.
09:25 PM on 01/07/2011
I don't like it. They need to change is back.
08:32 PM on 01/07/2011
I think the new Starbucks logo is too visually complex. I compared it with other major brands that use logos without their names in them, like Target, McDonalds and Nike. The average for these other brands was about 2-3 "visual elements" in their logos, but because the mermaid is line art and some of the lines bleed to the edge of the logo, it looks like it has 27 visual elements (counting each line as an element). I posted some detail and visual comparisons at http://analy.tc/g71kXc.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Judy363
Fighting the good fight
12:19 AM on 01/09/2011
wow, you're really taking this kinda far aren't ya? I say we break down each one thousandth of an inch of green and see exactly how each microscopic dot is placed thereby being able to see the inner workings of the ... ok I'm done.
photo
Js420
Another beautiful sunny day!
04:13 PM on 01/07/2011
If anything, they should give her boobs
photo
derrickhoyle
...it's a league game, Smokey.
06:52 PM on 01/07/2011
Like the original.
09:23 AM on 01/07/2011
Over-roasted. Nonetheless, iconic brand, and taking the name out of the logo is a huge mistake...that logo has been seen constantly in product placement on movies and TV. The logo type is a big part of the logo.This is a major brand image change. Bad idea. Leverage the brand in the face of big competition. Don't water it down. This is what I do for a living. Bad, bad, bad move.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MexiChick67
Que? Que? Queee?
02:39 AM on 01/07/2011
Back in the mid-80s a friend of mine would buy a bunch of Starbucks coffee in Seattle and bring it down to Southern California. She and her husband were gaga for the stuff. I remember that they had both mugs & coasters with the 'immodest' mermaid on them. I thought it was a hoot! Bet those goodies would fetch a good price on EBay.