Starbucks' Billion-Dollar Delivery Business | Fast Five Shorts
Starbucks just revealed that delivery has become a $1 billion annual business, growing 30% year-over-year—and it's changing everything about how we think about coffee shops. With 40% of delivery orders including food, this massive revenue stream raises critical questions about Brian Nichol's turnaround strategy.
Should Starbucks double down on automation and dark cafes, or invest in improving the in-store experience? Chris and Anne debate the future of Starbucks as delivery continues to explode.
Sponsored by the A&M Consumer and Retail Group, Mirakl, Ocampo Capital, Infios, and Quorso.
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#starbucks #coffeedelivery #brianniccol #starbucksstrategy #deliveryservices #ghostkitchens #coffeeshop #retailstrategy #automation #mobilepickup
Coffee delivery is now a $1 billion business for Starbucks.
Speaker AWho knew?
Speaker AAccording to CNBC, Starbucks said last week that its annual delivery sales crossed the Milestone in fiscal 2025, which ended on Sept. 30.
Speaker AIn the company's fiscal fourth quarter, delivery sales climbed in almost 30% compared with the year ago, period.
Speaker AExecutives said 30% and deliveries growing 30% at Starbucks.
Speaker AAnd I'm curious, does the fact that Starbucks now sells $1 billion of coffee a year via delivery change your thinking on Brian Nichols turnaround strategy?
Speaker BNo.
Speaker BI still think if anything, this tells you you need to automate the hell out of your business.
Speaker BYou need to figure, you need to like shift gears from this like coffee shop experience and look at the potential growth on your hands here.
Speaker BBring back the pickup only.
Speaker BStores don't even put a storefront in front of them.
Speaker BThey could just be ghost kitchen coffee making operations where everything's automated so that you can get things to customers quickly.
Speaker BAnd that's because they know they're going to get exactly what they want every single time they order Starbucks, not just for coffee, but also food.
Speaker BThey said 40% of these orders are including food because you have to help people justify those delivery costs.
Speaker BAnd I think what this is showing me is that it already is being delivered accurately and in good condition.
Speaker BLike the coffee still hot.
Speaker BSo how do you keep that engine going?
Speaker BAnd that to me is what I would be focused on if I was Brian Nichol and team at Star at Starbucks.
Speaker BBut what, what about you?
Speaker BI mean, does this change?
Speaker BYou're, you're pro coffee shop where.
Speaker BWhat do you think this has?
Speaker BWhat impact do you think this has?
Speaker AI am, but I am, but I think I'm changing.
Speaker AI'm coming to come into your side a little bit more.
Speaker AI think there's some nuance to the argument though.
Speaker ABut like I think this is the bullet in the chamber for your argument, for what you've long espoused on this show.
Speaker AYou know, because with 30%, that's just, that just tells me 30% growth rate and delivering a billion dollar business.
Speaker AThat just tells me, like you said, there's just a hell of a lot of people that want their coffee.
Speaker AThey don't want the Starbucks experience.
Speaker AIt's absolutely meaningless to them.
Speaker AThey just want the addiction.
Speaker AThey just want the product that they love.
Speaker ASo, you know, I think you're right.
Speaker AYou got to go the way of like dark cafes and figure out a way to push orders through them.
Speaker AThe other point I hadn't thought about until you just mentioned it.
Speaker AToo is like, yeah, you tried the mobile pickup only stores and things like that.
Speaker ABut like, you didn't market them.
Speaker ALike, you know, like, how did you, how did you bring those to market?
Speaker AHow did you tell people about them?
Speaker ABecause like, for me, given the fact that now when I go to the, when I go to a Starbucks, I'm not only waiting in line for mobile pickup orders, there's people doing delivery orders too that are waiting to pick up their orders and it's taking a lot of time.
Speaker AAnd so I'm standing in line for a really long time.
Speaker AAnd so, so with all that said, like, tell me that there's a location where I can just go pick it up and hopefully it's faster.
Speaker AYeah, I'm all in.
Speaker ABut with that said, I think both ideas can be true at the same time.
Speaker AAnd that's what Omni is all about because I'm still going into Starbucks with large queues of pickup orders, but the stores are also still full.
Speaker ASo I think that's a dynamic here at Place.
Speaker ASo I think you have to improve both.
Speaker ABut what this tells me is hopefully he's got the punchline to the joke here and this is a really telling statistic on that.
Speaker AAnd my hunch is that he does.
Speaker ABut the other point of this is I think it's going to take more time to figure this out and more investment to figure it out than just leaning in on the stores.
Speaker AOn the stores, the operations, you know, keeping the employees happy, which I think is the right starting point.
Speaker ABut then you've got to figure out how to supply the infrastructure to make this happen quicker.
Speaker ABut you take the last word here.
Speaker AWhat do you think?
Speaker BYeah, I, I mean, I don't have much to add.
Speaker BI think they, they've got to figure out both operations if they are going to do it that way.
Speaker BBut you have to be pressing the gas on the automation and on this, keeping this delivery top of mind for people.
Speaker BOtherwise people are going to sneak up and, and catch up to you on it and, and that profit could slip quickly.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BSo yes.
Speaker BBrian.
Speaker BBrian, get your coffee ghost kitchens up and running.
Speaker BWe're ready.
Speaker BWe're ready for them.
Speaker AYeah, we are.