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Starbucks sells 24 stores in Australia to 7-Eleven owner

By Korea Herald
Published : May 28, 2014 - 20:47
SYDNEY (AFP) ― The owners of the 7-Eleven chain in Australia have taken control of coffee giant Starbucks’ struggling local operations in a bid to turn around its fortunes, the company said on Wednesday.

While the iconic U.S. brand dominates in some parts of the world, it has failed to gain a foothold in a long robust Australian coffee market and only has 24 stores.

The Withers Group, which has built its convenience store operations to include 600 outlets, has now acquired the local Starbucks license from its U.S. parent for an undisclosed sum.

“Our aim will be to make Starbucks the most successful coffee chain in Australia,” Withers Group chief executive Warren Wilmot told reporters.

The logo for Starbucks Corp. is displayed in Melbourne, Australia. (Bloomberg)


“Our intention is to capitalize on the skills of the broader Withers group of companies in successfully bringing an international brand to Australia, and adapting it to suit the local market.”

Achieving successes with the Starbucks brand on the scale of what has been achieved with 7-Eleven will be a major challenge given the coffee chain has struggled since opening its first store in Sydney in 2000.

After years of losing money, it closed about 60 shops in 2008 and sacked almost 700 staff, unable to compete with a sophisticated coffee culture where customers already knew the difference between a macchiato and an affogato.

A wave of post-war immigrants from Turkey, Greece and particularly Italy means that for decades Australians had been enjoying the “coffee experience” Starbucks popularized in the United States.

The Withers Group, run by one of Australia’s wealthiest families, indicated that Starbucks stores would now be operated by the group, rather than franchisees, and that they would remain independent from 7-Eleven.

“It’s really going to bring the future potential of Starbucks to life,” Starbucks China and Asia Pacific president, Jeff Hansberry, told Fairfax Media.

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