Starbucks is trialling a new coffee called Starbucks Via in its London cafés. Unlike the chain's traditional fare, it is an instant coffee that offers consumers the opportunity to enjoy their favourite brew in the comfort of their own homes.
What is driving the product launch is no mystery. Via is an attempt to retain sales, albeit less profitable ones, from recession-hit consumers who are spending less on life's little luxuries,
like Grande Caffè Lattes.
Meanwhile, in Zurich, football governing body FIFA has decided to kick off a major product diversification, too. It is to complement its existing business, running some of the world's biggest sporting tournaments, by getting into clothing. In August, FIFA will launch five clothing ranges linked to football and the 2010 World Cup, in South Africa.
Both of these initiatives, like the vast majority of new launches, are likely to fail. Yet, one of them is much more risky. They may appear to be similar attempts at diversification, but one is a line extension, while the other is a brand extension. Although most marketers struggle to differentiate between these two concepts, the distinction has critical implications.
FIFA's clothing is an example of a brand extension. Here, a company leaps from its existing category (running football competitions) and uses its brand awareness to open a bridge into a completely new category (clothing). A great deal of research has been done on brand extensions over the past 20 years and we know a lot about how they work and why they usually fail.
We also know something crucial about the impact FIFA's clothing will have on its reputation as a footballing organisation: none whatsoever. When you embark on a brand extension like this, it's unlikely that the new venture will do any damage to the original brand, even if it is executed badly.
Starbucks' Via, however, is an entirely different cup of coffee altogether. It is a line extension, which means a company uses its brand to launch an additional product or service in its existing category. The good news is that line extensions are easier to develop, and often more successful, than fanciful brand extension ventures.
However, the bad news is that when a line extension fails, particularly when it offers a poor experience, the fact that it is in the same category as its parent brand poses a much greater risk of damage to that brand. And so it is with Via. According to Starbucks, its brand derives much of its equity from its cafés. It describes these as ‘a haven' where taking ‘a break from the worries outside' builds a ‘sense of belonging' among consumers.
Via offers none of these attractions. It will be consumed in cold kitchens with a kettle for company and none of the usual Starbucks comforts on hand.
By selling Via in its cafés, Starbucks has also ensured that this contradictory experience will have an impact solely on existing customers. They will have their brand associations undermined while being simultaneously offered a lower-priced, lower-margin alternative.
It seems to me that with every cup of Via, Starbucks hurts itself. It becomes instantly ready, rather than expertly produced; a cheap domestic pick-me-up, rather than a warm escape to comfort; a commodity coffee, rather than a Starbucks.
As usual, the greatest threat to a strong brand comes not from its competitors but from itself. When times are tough, a poor strategy and financial pressures make for an unpalatable blend indeed.
Mark Ritson is an associate professor of marketing and consultant to some of the world's biggest brands
30 seconds on Starbucks Via Ready Brew
- Starbucks announced its Via instant coffee on 17 February. Its long roll-out began in Seattle and Chicago from 3 March; the coffee has been available from selected London Starbucks stores since 25 March. More outlets will be added later this year.
- Chief executive Howard Schultz said Starbucks had been developing the product for 20 years with the aim of making it taste the same as the fresh coffee brewed daily in its 15,000 retail locations around the world. Such care was taken to avoid devaluing the brand.
- In the US, filter coffee dominates in homes; elsewhere, instant is far more popular. In the UK, instant accounts for 81% of retail coffee sales; in Japan, another key Starbucks market, the figure is 63%.
- From the start of this month, Via has been available for easyJet passengers to buy on flights from Newcastle, London Stansted, Gatwick and Madrid. The coffee company's Gourmet Hot Cocoa and four Tazo tea variants are also available.