The Korea Herald

지나쌤

Starbucks’ new word-free logo debuts

By 이현주

Published : March 9, 2011 - 18:50

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SEATTLE (AP) ― Starbucks customers saw something new Tuesday when they sipped their coffee.

The Seattle-based company rolled out its new words-free logo Tuesday on all its cups. Signs also changed at a handful of stores, and the new logo will show up on more storefronts in the future.

The Associated Press first reported in January that Starbucks was updating its logo and would introduce it this month in conjunction with its 40-year anniversary.

Starbucks on Tuesday also introduced a number of new coffee flavors and baked goods as part of the anniversary celebration. In addition, Starbucks said Tuesday it plans to roll out its Via instant coffee in China starting in April, according to a report in the Wall Street Journal.
A coffee cup bearing the new Starbucks Corp. logo is shown in Seattle on Tuesday. (AP-Yonhap News) A coffee cup bearing the new Starbucks Corp. logo is shown in Seattle on Tuesday. (AP-Yonhap News)

The new products include a cocoa cappuccino, a new coffee blend and a new line of small dessert treats called Starbucks Petites. They include mini cupcakes and “cake pops,” small sweets on a stick.

The new logo, which drops the words “Starbucks Coffee,” is better suited to the company’s expansion beyond coffee and cafes into a wider array of products sold at other retailers and into more international markets, the company says.

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 siren in brown to a more stylized 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. After the recession hit in 2007, its sales were hurting. Starbucks brought back founder Schultz to lead daily operations in 2008, closed hundreds of stores and cut jobs.

Since then, it has allowed customers to customize drinks more, opened stores with more local flavor, increased its Wi-Fi offerings and launched a rewards program.

Its sales have rebounded, and its fiscal 2010 profit was more than double what it earned in 2009.