How Starbucks is using AI to fuel its growth, deepen customer relationships

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Starbucks (SBUX) is creating a future in which artificial intelligence and digital technology will help the coffee giant fuel its growth.

In an exclusive interview with Yahoo Finance Live this week, Starbucks COO and group president Roz Brewer described the tech-enabled future of the coffee chain's growing drive-thru stores, including customizable menu boards that leverage A.I. to suggest beverage and food items based on factors such as the weather, time of day, store inventory, popularity, community preferences and the customer's purchase history.

“[It's] helping us actually really speak to the customer and help them decide, but also, it's improving what we could see in terms of expanding tickets and being suggestive about what a customer might be interested in,” Brewer explained.

Starbucks' internal artificial intelligence program, known as "Deep Brew," is allowing the coffee giant to innovate and experiment with machine learning and artificial intelligence not only to personalize its drive-thru experience but also to automate time-consuming tasks such as inventory management and preventive maintenance on its internet of things (IoT) connected espresso machines.

“We're using a lot of the business intelligence we're gaining from A.I. not only to accommodate directly the customer experience but even the partners' experience,” Brewer said.

Fueling store growth

Starbucks, which has long established itself as a destination — or a "third place" between work and home, as the company likes to call it — says technology will continue to play a critical role as it emerges from the depths of the COVID-19 pandemic and plans to ignite future growth. Before COVID-19, approximately 80% of U.S. store transactions were already “on the go.”

As Starbucks reopened its stores following initial pandemic lockdowns, the coffee chain adapted to social distancing via contactless pickup, mobile ordering, and less in-store traffic. Starbucks also saw its customers migrate from dense metro centers to suburbs, from cafes to drive-thrus, and from early morning coffee runs to more mid-morning and weekend visits.

At its biennial investor day this month, Starbucks said it plans to expand from 33,000 stores worldwide across more than 80 markets to 55,000 stores across 100 markets by 2030, a move CFO Pat Grismer described as “a level that is currently unmatched by any other single food and beverage retail concept, fueled by unparalleled brand appeal globally and strong unit-level economics.”

In the U.S., the area Brewer oversees and the coffee chain's largest market, Starbucks plans to add 800 stores each year, reaching 16,000 company-owned locations by 2023.