Why Starbucks??

      Why i choose starbucks??

Yeah..because i think starbucks is the most popular coffee shop in the world,, and i want to try to give my opinion about logo design of it.

   Chain coffeehouses have been sprouting up across the landscape and raking in billions not just by selling coffee and treats, but by conjuring an escape from the everyday demands of home and work. Most successful in garnering the coveted iconic status in popular culture, Starbucks benefits from customers' attachments with their perceived luxury. Located in 36 countries in addition to all 50 of the United States (Starbucks, 2006), Starbucks' Siren green logo is recognizable worldwide as the epitome of the coffeehouse culture popular as of late. Interrogating Oldenburg's (1999) "third place", I argue how Starbucks' coffeehouses work as an informal public gathering place that ciphers an escape from everyday pressures and an ideal space to gather with others. This examination of the ways in which informal public gathering places present themselves is a way to expand the work of visual rhetoric, usually directed toward matters of commemorative rhetoric and exhibitions. Unlike these highly ideological texts frequented because of their meaning within the context of the moment or event commemorated, everyday spaces often go unquestioned as merely a routine part of our daily existence. Instead, I argue how these places are potent nodes where our individual and collective identities are publicly performed. Additionally, the stores' products are a critical component of the cultural meaning, attaching patrons to the idea of the establishment, thus creating commodity cultures realized through consumption. Drawing from a Marxist conception of commodity culture, this project explores how these physical environments and their products implicate cultural meaning. I argue that Starbucks as an everyday space is comprised of a series of appealing rhetorical symbols that constitute a status-conscious image that patrons seek. The importance of commodities to public identity performances are readily accepted and performed within Starbucks daily. This interplay between corporate persuasive appeals and our understanding of an image ideal associated with stylized products and environment creates commodity selves that publicly perform identities reflective of the ways of being informal public gathering places suggest.
TypePublic (NASDAQSBUX)
FoundedIn 1971 across from Pike Place Market in Seattle, Washington
Founder(s)Zev SiegelJerry Baldwin andGordon Bowker
HeadquartersSeattleWashingtonUSA
Key people
Martin Coles, President, Starbucks International
Stephen Gillett, Chief Information Officer
Industry
Retail Coffee and Tea
Products
Made-to-order beverages
Bottled beverages
ServicesCoffee
Revenue US$9.411 billion (2007)
Operating income US$1.053 billion (2007)
Net income US$672.64 million (2007)
Total assetsUS$5.343 billion (2007)
Total equityUS$2.284 billion (2007)
Employees172,000 (2008)[1]
Subsidiaries
Starbucks Coffee Company
WebsiteStarbucks.com

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