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Saturday, 18 May 2019

Add your own egg



Our nearest Starbucks is located in a shopping centre we visit every now and then. Recently we’ve tried to make sure we visit the centre round about 9.30 am because at that time in the morning the car park is almost empty and the whole place has that early morning start of the day feel to it. An hour later that atmosphere has gone completely, never to return until the following morning.

We quite like Starbucks although we would never visit the shopping centre merely to drink coffee there. We aren't quite that far gone. We used to dislike the coffee but presumably something has changed and presumably it wasn’t Starbucks coffee. No matter, coffee isn’t really the theme of this post.

As we sit there over our coffee watching the car park fill up we always notice how many Starbucks customers spend their time tapping away at laptops or conducting what is obviously some kind of informal business meeting. Others are fiddling with their phones, keeping the kids under control or just chatting. There is a quiet buzz, a sense that this is a brief period of deserved relaxation before other things have to be done, other matters have to be attended to.  

Although this coffee shop is a tiny part of a massive international business, the atmosphere feels relaxed, informal and somehow permanent. As if the place has been here in this shopping centre for many decades and will still be here for decades to come. Why is that? I look around the place, study the corporate decor, the tables, chairs, colour scheme, coffee displays and so on but I can’t really see how it’s done.

Presumably a great deal of effort goes into creating a corporate Starbucks ambience which in turn leads to the coffee shop atmosphere they want and as far as I can see it works. From a more traditional perspective it may not be the real thing because there is no amiable proprietor exchanging pleasantries, no obvious regulars and only a massive car park visible through the windows.

Yet there is that relaxed atmosphere - no doubt about it. As a coffee shop it works exactly as it should, as if someone somewhere calculated it to the nth decimal place and got it right. It works and the customers obviously absorb what it offers and like it whether they think about it or just accept it. In which case, where does this successful coffee shop atmosphere come from?

To answer that question we would usually think in terms of deep corporate cunning, psychological cues embedded in the advertising and product placement, the decor and the layout of tables and chairs, the colour schemes, materials, textures and an artfully placed settee all designed to pack them in with an illusory aura of spacious informality.

Except it isn’t an illusion because simple observation suggests that customers also create the atmosphere - the buzz, the sense of relaxation. They help create what they want, what brings comfort and a sense of belonging. Belonging to what? It doesn’t matter – something known, accepted and almost cool if you play it right. Everything customers do adds to the atmosphere, builds on the corporate template by flavouring it with the real thing, the human touch, the sense of contact and belonging.

One could easily go further and suggest that people like the reassurance of a massive corporate presence which is unmistakably there but isn’t obtrusive. Perhaps they like its sense of permanence, because corporate entities such as Starbucks are so massive that they do exude an air of permanence. Desirable or not, it works.

And what is not to like about comfortable permanence? One where you help make your own atmosphere? As genuine as a packet of cake mix perhaps, but even with cake mix you are sometimes required to add your own egg – to make it partly your cake rather than wholly theirs.

5 comments:

Sam Vega said...

Yes, I like Starbucks and dislike the other major corporate coffee-shops. I couldn't actually tell the coffee apart, and I have always thought that it was the corporate design factor which struck some kind of chord. One of the others (Costa? Caffe Nero?) seems to strain too hard at the ethnic look, with pictures of rugged looking Italians and urban scenes plastered all over the walls. Starbucks looks as if it was decorated by a bunch of West-Coast American students who are amiable and artistically inclined, but don't have a lot of money. They've just found some fairly muted colours, agreed that they would avoid gimmicks, and just slapped the paint on. It always gives the feel as if nothing will be demanded of you, and if you want to just sit there looking up some sources for your thesis, or maybe finishing your experimental novel, then go ahead....

For me, it only works when things are fairly quiet, as per your early morning example. A really busy Starbucks (most Central London ones) is, like all the others, really nasty.

Sackerson said...

Nice analogy. As you know, adding the egg to cake mix was a marketing thing, the mix could have done the lot including dried egg but research showed that people wanted to feel they'd contributed something to the creation.

Scrobs. said...

My only problem with Starbucks, is that I don't drink coffee any more!

Mrs O'Blene and I visited a national garden centre at its opening a few years ago, and the complimentary cup was so revolting, it even put me off Gold Blend the next day!

But Yorkshire Gold tea - now that is something special...

James Higham said...

One could easily go further and suggest that people like the reassurance of a massive corporate presence which is unmistakably there but isn’t obtrusive.

We'll be doing that today.

A K Haart said...

Sam - we have convinced ourselves that we can tell the difference between Starbucks and Costa. We don't visit any other major corporate apart from Caffe Nero once or twice and I think that's the one with pictures of rugged looking Italians. I think you are right about the Starbucks decor although I don't see much difference to Costa.

Sackers - yes I'm sure I remember reading about the egg idea ages ago while doing a piece of work on advertising. One day during a supermarket visit I'll read the ingredients of a modern cake mix.

Scrobs - try nettle tea if you are looking for something different. An acquired taste but not bad once you are used to it.

James - sounds good.