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Noticias
1971 Seattle Pike Place Market 1ª Tienda en  Estados Unidos  Fotografías: Associated Press  www.apimages.com
1996 Store manager Ryota Tsunoda, far right, and Japanese employees serve customers at Starbucks Coffee Co.'s store in Ginza shopping district of Tokyo Friday morning, Aug. 2, 1996, the opening day of the Seattle, WA.-based coffee retailer's first overseas store. Tokyo 1ª Tienda fuera de  Estados Unidos
1999 Chinese customers try out the coffee at the opening ceremony of China's first Starbucks coffee retail store in Beijing Monday, Jan. 11, 1999. The store, located in a five-star hotel, is the first of 10 outlets planned for the Chinese capital in the next 18 months, with more in other major cities. China is the ninth market in Asia where the Seattle coffee company has opened stores Beijing 1ª Tienda en China
1999 A protestor climbs through the window of a downtown Seattle Starbucks Coffee shop after smashing the window with the garbage can lying on the sidewalk as WTO protests continued to clog city streets and cripple the conference Tuesday afternoon Nov. 30, 1999 Seattle Protestas en la cumbre de la Organización Mundial de Comercio (OMC)
1999 Tazo Quality Assurance employee Anthony Tellin prepares to taste Passion tea in Tazo's tasting lab in Portland, Ore., Tuesday, March 6, 2001. In 1999, Starbucks acquired Tazo for $9.1 million. Since then, it has supplied Starbucks coffeehouses with its teas, standing on the chain's shoulders to introduce people to one of the world's oldest drinks.  Portland Adquiere Tazo Productora de Té
2000 Beijing Shanghai Tokyo Just four years after opening its first overseas shop in Tokyo, the Seattle-based American coffee chain now has more than 250 stores in 10 Asian countries and is planning to more than double that by 2003. Más de 250 tiendas en Asia en 10 países
2000 A worker cleans the window of a Starbucks coffee shop in Beijing Wednesday November 1, 2000. The U.S. based company has opened more than a dozen stores in Beijing, where residents more used to drinking tea have developed a taste for coffee. Beijing Más de 12 tiendas
2001 A tray with Starbucks coffee and cups are being carried at the first coffeehouse in Continental Europe of U.S. Starbucks Coffee Co. that opened Wednesday, March 7, 2001 in Zurich, Switzerland. After perfecting its overseas technique in Asia, the Middle East and the U.K., the Seattle specialty coffee retailer will launch its European assault from a beachhead in Zurich. Zurich Después de Asia, Medio Oriente y  Reino Unido, se inicia la conquista de Europa
2001 Starbucks Coffee Co. staffs are busy at the opening of the Seattle-based coffee-chain giant's 208th shop in Japan, in Tokyo Tuesday, March 13, 2001. Since opening its first store here in August, 1996, Starbucks has built its brand image without costly advertising, shattering another stereotype about trend-setting in Japan. Tokyo Tienda No. 208 en Japón en 6 años
2001 Michael Shank, of Seattle, holds a protest sign outside a Starbucks coffee shop in Seattle, Monday, June 25, 2001, while protesting against the bovine growth hormone (rBST) and other genetically engineered ingredients. The Organic Consumer Association, despite the coffee retailer's previous pledge to meet many of the group's demands, wants Starbucks to stop using milk and other foods with genetically modified ingredients. Starbucks has made clear it agrees with the OCA on many issues. It plans to offer milk free of genetic tinkering at its more than 2,700 U.S. stores by the end of July. Seattle Organic Consumer  Association protesta el uso de leche con ingredientes  genéticamente modificados
2002 An unidentified Saudi customer sits outside a Starbucks coffee shop in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, on Feb. 12, 2002. In conservative Saudi Arabia, the Starbucks logo is usually seen without the siren whose long hair covers her breasts that is familiar to coffee-drinkers around the world. In business and politics, delicate revisions have been needed to overcome the many differences between the Islamic monarchy and the secular, liberal democracy of the United States.  Riyadh Logotipo modificado
2002 Starbuck's customers play the latest music CDs at a kiosk installed in the University Village store in Seattle, Thursday, May 23, 2002. The company is tailoring its product line to match the lifestyles of customers who want to relax. Along with its extensive line of coffee mugs, pots and beans; the coffee company is expanding its line of games and CDs.  Seattle Nueva línea de  juegos y CDs
2002 Nineteen year old German waitress Meike Haspel from Berlin smiles as she serves coffee at the first Starbucks coffee house in Germany in the capital Berlin Friday, May 24, 2002. Starbucks Coffee International , the world's leading speciality coffee producer and dealer and "Karstadt", Europe's leading department store, agreed on a joint venture for the federal republic in October 2001. Berlin Primera tienda  en Alemania
2002 Work continues on the exterior of Starbucks Coffee in preparation for opening in San Juan, Puerto Rico Wednesday, Aug. 27, 2002. The Old San Juan store will open Sept. 7 with others to follow in Puerto Rico and Mexico. This will be the Seattle-based coffee giant's first chain of stores in Latin America.  San Juan Primera tienda  en Latino América
2002 Starbucks  founder Howard Schultz, center, leaves the newly built  Starbucks  in Mexico City on Thursday, Sept. 5, 2002. The store will open its door to the public Friday. At left is  Starbuck's  president for Mexico, Alberto Torrado. The sign on the right reads: "Here you can find an old friend or a new one."  México D.F. Primera tienda  en México
2003 Chinese walk a hallway above a McDonalds restaurant and Starbucks Coffee outlet side-by-side in Beijing Tuesday, Feb. 11, 2003. China is promising more opportunities for foreign investors and more access for Chinese consumers to foreign goods under its 14-month-old membership in the free-trading World Trade Organization.  Beijing Incremento de inversión extranjera en China un año después de ingresar a la OMC
2003 A server hands a coffee to a customer at a Starbucks in Lima, Peru on Tuesday, Aug.19, 2003. Starbucks Coffee International, a unit of Starbucks Coffee Co. (SBUX), opened its first store in South America in Peru on Tuesday, with plans to open another in Chile shortly.  Lima Primera tienda  en Sur América
2003 The West Coast's first McCafe in Mountain View, Calif., is shown Wednesday, Dec. 3, 2003, during its grand opening. The McDonald's hamburger franchise will start peddling delicacies such as skinny double mocas and roasted beef with balsamic vinegar on foccacia as it attempts to steal profits from Starbucks, Peet's Coffee & Tea and other upscale chains.  Mountain View Reacción de McDonald’s Primera tienda McCafé
2003 Colombia's President Alvaro Uribe, right, serves coffee during the inauguration of a new Juan Valdez coffee shop in Bogota, Wednesday, Dec. 10, 2003. The Colombian Coffee Federation, which represents more than half a million coffee growers, inaugurated its flagship coffee shop with plans to open 10 others in the United States and elsewhere to compete with the likes of Starbucks. The shops are a part of the federation's efforts to alleviate the suffering of coffee farmers devastated by a precipitous collapse in global coffee prices, forcing many to turn to the cultivation of illicit crops for survival. Bogotá Primera tienda  Juan Valdez
2004 Parisians peek into the new Starbucks coffee store after its official inauguration on Opera avenue in Paris Thursday, Jan. 15, 2004. The store, the first ever in France, will open to the public on Friday, while about ten are planned for the French capital over the next year.  París Primera tienda  en Francia
2004 Customers David Stugart, 65, bottom, and Michael Keigley, top, 32, both of Seattle select songs for their CD's as  Starbucks  Coffee Company unveiled the first Hear Music media bar Monday Oct. 18, 2004. The new service allows customers to burn personalized CD from a vast library of songs. Forty-five  Starbucks  retail locations will offer this new music service in the first phase of a multi-phased national roll-out.  Seattle Primer “Hear Music”  Bar de música con CDs a la medida
2004 A Chinese tourist takes a break in front of a  Starbucks  coffee shop in Shanghai, China, in this July 15, 2002 photo.  Starbucks  is suing a competitor in Shanghai over use of their shared Chinese name, the company said Thursday, Feb. 5, 2004 - the latest in a growing number of copyright suits involving foreign firms in China. Both companies use the same three Chinese characters in their names _ ``Xingbake.'' In Chinese, ``xing'' means ``star'' and ``bake'' (bah-kuh) is a phonetic rendition of ``-bucks.''  China Conflictos por nombre chino: Xinbake Xing = star Bake = bucks
2004 A worker cleans the windows of a Starsbuck coffee outlet in Qingdao, in east China's Shandong province Tuesday, June 22, 2004. The use of brand names similar to those of famous foreign brands is common throughout China. Lax laws and poor enforcement make it difficult for foreign companies to combat the trend, though Seattle-based  Starbucks  Corp. has taken legal action against at least one Chinese company in an effort to protect its name.  China Acciones legales por imitaciones
2004 New York City police officers, equipped with plastic handcuffs, line up in from of a  Starbucks  to keep protestors away from the coffee shop in New York on Saturday, Aug. 28, 2004. Several hundred protestors marched to different  Starbucks  chains to express their opinion of disapproval for the business practices of  Starbucks  and the upcoming Republican National Convention, which will be held in New York.  Nueva York Convención Partido Republicano Protección policial
2004 Peter Torrebiarte, general manager of Starbucks Coffee in Costa Rica, looks at the characteristics of a coffee plant on the Juan Vinas Coffee Plantation near Juan Vinas, Costa Rica, Wednesday, April 14, 2004. Costa Rica Plantaciones propias C.A.F.E Coffee and Farmer Equity
2005 Workers select coffee beans at the processing plant of the Esperanza Coffee Group in Matagalpa, 133km (82 miles) north of Managua, Nicaragua, Monday, Jan. 17, 2005. The  Starbucks  Coffee Company representatives are visiting Nicaragua to meet with national producers of coffee, and will buy approximately 70,000 quintals of Nicaraguan coffee.  Nicaragua Negociaciones de compra de café
2005 A customer is handed a coffee drink at a drivethru window at a  Starbucks , Dec. 12, 2005, in Seattle. The world's largest specialty coffee chain once shunned the drivethru concept, fearing it might alienate customers who like to come inside and sip their lattes while listening to music in cozy chairs. Eventually, it got hard to ignore coffee lovers' demand for a quick java fix without leaving the warmth of their driver's seats.  Seattle Primer “Drive-thru”
2005 Dunkin' Donuts employee Khari Janey works the register at a Boston branch of Dunkin' Donuts, Thursday, Jan. 13, 2005. The 55-year-old franchise chain is trying to hold onto its core customers while winning over some of the  Starbucks  crowd.  Dunkin’ Donuts Incursión en el mercado de cafés especiales
2006 Starbucks  breakfast sandwiches are displayed Feb. 22, 2006, at a  Starbucks  Corp. store in Seattle. As McDonald's Corp. and Burger King Corp. begin to offer premium coffee  Starbucks  is more than doubling the number of stores nationwide that sell hot breakfast sandwiches.  Seattle Starbucks inicia la venta de Sandwiches calientes para el Desayuno
2006 Gregg Clark, director of plant operations for  Starbucks  Corp.'s massive roasting plant in Kent, Wash., walks Monday, Aug. 7, 2006 through an area of the plant used for storing green coffee prior to roasting  Kent, Wa. Visita a la planta Recepción  de los granos
2006 Almost eerily and without a worker in sight, a coffee roaster at Starbucks Corp.'s massive roasting plant in Kent, Wash. empties a batch of beans into the cooling tray Monday, Aug. 7, 2006.  Kent, Wa. Visita a la planta Tostadora de Café Automatización
2006 Freshly-roasted coffee is stirred in a cooling tray at Starbucks Corp.'s massive roasting plant in Kent, Wash. Monday, Aug. 7, 2006.  Kent, Wa. Visita a la planta Enfriamiento de los granos recién tostados
2006 An automated machine fills coffee bags with ground coffee Monday, Aug. 7, 2006. In contrast to many tiny independent roasters in Seattle, where bags are filled by hand, Starbucks relies on automation.  Kent, Wa. Visita a la planta Empaque automatizado
2006 Workers at right folds boxes that will hold bags of freshly ground coffee produced at Starbucks Corp.'s massive roasting plant in Kent, Wash. Monday, Aug. 7, 2006. As other towns worry that Starbucks will run their local coffeeshops out of business, the owners of several of Seattle's most beloved independent coffee houses say they have found success in the shadow of Starbucks by accentuating the benefits of staying small.  Kent, Wa. Visita a la planta Empaque final  y distribución
2006 Jud Hendricks, left, greets Jerry Pierce, as they sit outside Caffe Ladro in Seattle Tuesday Aug. 1, 2006. Both are regulars at the independent coffee shop, which is located just down the street from a Starbucks. Although Seattle is the headquarters for corporate coffee giant Starbucks Corp., local independents are proving it's possible to survive and even thrive in the shadow of their much larger competitor.  Seattle, Wa. Competidores pequeños a la  sombra de  Starbucks
2006 Daniel Gross poses for a portrait outside a Starbucks coffee shop in the Lower Manhattan, Monday, Aug. 7, 2006, in New York. Starbucks Corp. has fired the co-founder of a union claiming to represent employees at six of its Manhattan coffee houses. Gross, a barista and organizer for IWW Starbucks Workers Union, a branch of the Industrial Workers of the World, said Monday that he is challenging his termination, which followed a company investigation into an allegation that he made a threatening remark to a district manager at a recent union rally.  Nueva York Brotes de  sindicalismo
2006 A bag of Starbucks Corp.'s new "Black Apron" specialty coffee, Rwanda Blue Bourbon, is shown with its decorative packaging Tuesday, Feb. 28, 2006 in Seattle. Starbucks, the world's largest specialty coffee retailer, announced Tuesday that it will start selling its first Rwandan-grown coffee in its North American stores starting March 13.  Seattle Introducción de café proveniente de Ruanda
2006 People pass by during the opening ceremony of the first Starbucks store in Brazil, in Sao Paulo, on Thursday, Nov. 30 , 2006.  Sao Paulo Primera tienda en Brasil
2007 15760  Tiendas en el Mundo 3320 Nuevas tiendas en 2007 9  Tiendas diarias
2007 Chinese passers-by walk past a  Starbucks  Coffee cafe in Shanghai 29 March 2007.  Starbucks  Corp., the biggest coffee-shop chain in the world, said it planned to source coffee from China for the first time as it expands in a country with more than 5,000 years of tea-drinking culture.  Starbucks  has been working with coffee farmers in southwest Chinas Yunnan province to help them meet sourcing standards and has sent coffee shipments to the United States for testing.  Starbucks  also plans to build a roasting plant in China, where its sales are outpacing market growth as Chinas coffee consumption is increasing 20 to 25 percent each year.  Shanghai Cultivos de café en China Provincia de Yunnan Planta tostadora Consumo de café +20 a 25% cada año en China
2007 Shareholders fill McCaw Hall as they listen to a speaker at the annual Starbucks Corp. shareholders meeting, Wednesday, March 21, 2007, in Seattle.  Seattle Reunión anual  de accionistas
2007 A handful of protesters picket before the annual Starbucks Corp. shareholders meeting, Wednesday, March 21, 2007, in Seattle. The small group of protesters criticized the company's stance on unions and its resistance of Ethiopia's attempts to trademark some bean names.  Seattle Reunión anual  de accionistas
2007 Starbucks Corp. chairman Howard Schultz, right, gives a pat to president and CEO Jim Donald as Donald is introduced before addressing the annual shareholders meeting in Seattle in this March 21, 2007.  Seattle Reunión anual  de accionistas CEO: Jim Donald desde 2005
2007 Starbucks Corp. chairman Howard Schultz waves goodbye to singer Paul McCartney as McCartney finishes an appearance via a video feed from London, during the Starbucks Corp. annual shareholders meeting, in this March 21, 2007, file photo, in Seattle. McCartney was introduced as the first artist signed to Starbucks new record label.  Seattle Reunión anual  de accionistas
2007 A barista heads out the door of a Starbucks coffee shop and past a poster advertising the upcoming release of Paul McCartney's new recording, Monday, June 4, 2007, in Seattle. Caffeine junkies who go to Starbucks for their daily fix will get a nonstop dose of McCartney's "Memory Almost Full" on Tuesday, June 5, 2007, as the coffee company's new record label releases its first CD. Starbucks Corp. estimates that some 6 million people will be among the first to hear the new album as they line up for their lattes in more than 10,000 stores in 29 countries, where it will be playing on continuous loop throughout the day.  Seattle Lanzamiento 1º album “ Hear Music Records” Paul McCartney
2007 Packets of Starbucks Corp.'s new line of "drinking chocolate" are shown Monday, Aug. 13, 2007. The drink -- to be initially sold in grocery and other food stores but not in Starbucks' traditional coffee houses -- is made at home on the stove or in the microwave by combining cubes of chocolate with milk.  Seattle Lanzamiento  Chocolate en cubos
2007 Anthony Carroll, manager of green coffee quality at Starbucks Corp., shows a group of food-industry writers and publicists the proper way to "slurp" coffee Monday,Aug. 13, 2007 during a "cupping workshop" given during a two-day "Starbucks Scholars". "Cupping," is the specialized process of tasting various blends and roasts of coffee.  Seattle Seminario de capacitación para medios “Starbucks Scholars”
2007 Major Cohen, a coffee and tea education specialist at Starbucks Corp., pours boiling water into cups of different types of Starbucks coffee grounds Monday,Aug. 13, 2007 in preparation for a "cupping workshop".  Seattle Seminario de capacitación para medios “Starbucks Scholars”
2007 Keith Hutjens, director of tea procurement with Tazo Tea conducts a tea tasting Monday, Aug. 13, 2007 during a two-day "Starbucks Scholars" media seminar at Starbucks Corp. headquarters in Seattle. Tazo is owned by Starbucks Corp.  Seattle Seminario de capacitación para medios “Starbucks Scholars”
2007 Starbucks chairman Howard Schultz, left, greets a group of apron-clad food-industry writers and publicists taking part in a "cupping workshop" Monday,Aug. 13, 2007 during a two-day "Starbucks Scholars" media seminar at Starbucks Corp. headquarters in Seattle.  Seattle Seminario de capacitación para medios “Starbucks Scholars”
2007 Russian-style matryoshka coffee mugs on sale in Russia's first Starbucks Coffee Shop on opening day at the Mega shopping mall in Khimki, just north of Moscow, Russia on September 6, 2007  Moscú Primera tienda en Rusia
2007 A person holds a Starbucks Coffee card Wednesday, Nov. 31, 2007 in Pennington, N.J. Starbucks Corp. releases first-quarter earnings after the bell.  Starbucks Card 160 millones  de tarjetas
2007 In this image provided by Starbucks Corp., a "Song of the Day" card featuring acoustic singer KT Tunstall is shown. Beginning Oct. 2, 2007, Starbucks plans to give away 50 million free digital songs to customers in all its domestic coffee houses to promote a new wireless iTunes music service about to debut in select markets through a partnership with Apple Inc. Baristas in the company's more than 10,000 U.S. stores will hand out 1.5 million "Song of the Day" cards each day, which can be redeemed on Apple's online music store.  “ Song of the Day” Convenio con Apple iTunes 1,5 millones de tarjetas/día 50 millones de canciones
2008 Krista Miller sips a cappuccino at a Starbucks coffee shop in Seattle Friday, Jan. 25, 2008. It's been almost a year since Chairman Howard Schultz' bitterly candid memo bemoaning "the watering down of the Starbucks experience" landed with a thud on the desks of the coffee chain's top executives. Mincing no words, he said the company's unbridled growth had sapped the soul out of its stores and sounded a rallying cry to shift the focus back onto the customer.  Starbucks on Monday, Jan. 7, 2008 announced that it is firing Jim Donald and giving the CEO job back to Schultz. Schultz:  “Se está aguando la experiencia Starbucks”
2008 A Starbucks customer drinks coffee in Palo Alto, Calif., Tuesday, Feb. 26, 2008. Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz has announced the closure, starting at 5:30 p.m. local time, to energize 135,000 employees. Starbucks' 7,100 stores across America will participate in the brief barista re-education.  Jornada de Reeducación 135.000 empleados 7.100 tiendas en USA Cierre simultáneo
2008 Starbucks store manager Justin Chapple watches a message from CEO Howard Schultz at a Starbucks in New York, Tuesday, Feb. 26, 2008. Nearly 7,100 company-operated Starbucks stores across the U.S., all except the licensed shops in supermarkets, airports, malls, hotels and the like, were to close at 5:30 p.m. local time so some 135,000 employees could go through about three hours of training.  Jornada de Reeducación 135.000 empleados 7.100 tiendas en USA Cierre simultáneo
2008 Stephanie Axelrod works on her laptop Monday, Feb. 11, 2008, at a Starbucks Corp. store near the University of Washington in Seattle. Starbucks and AT&T Inc. will start offering a mix of free and paid wireless Internet service in most of the international coffee retailer's U.S. shops, beginning this spring.  Seattle Convenio con AT&T WiFi en las tiendas internacionales
2008 Reunión anual  de accionistas 2008
2008 Starbucks Corp. Chairman and Chief Executive Howard Schultz speaks in front of a graph charting the price of Starbucks stock Wednesday, March 19, 2008 at the company's annual shareholders meeting in Seattle. Starbucks' stock has been falling steadily for more than a year, losing more than half its value since late 2006, when it was trading at close to $40 a share.  Reunión anual  de accionistas 2008
2008 The newly designed  Starbucks  cup is seen Wednesday, April 30, 2008, at a  Starbucks  location in Alameda, Calif.  Starbucks  Corp. said Wednesday its fiscal second-quarter profit fell 28 percent as U.S. consumers responded to rising food and gas prices by making fewer latte runs. For the quarter ended March 30,  Starbucks ' net income sank to $108.7 million, or 15 cents per share, from $150.8 million, or 19 cents a share in the same period last year.  Resultados  1º Trimestre Utilidades  ↓ 28% $150 M (Q1/07)    $108 M (Q1/08) 100 tiendas cerradas 600 despidos
2008 Starbucks Corp. Chief Technology Officer Chris Bruzzo holds hand-written comment cards as he stands in front of a live screen of the new Web site Wednesday, March 19, 2008 at Starbucks' annual shareholders meeting in Seattle. Coffee-obsessed consumers started chiming in as soon as the Web site inviting customers to pitch ideas for reviving its struggling U.S. business went live Buscando nuevas ideas: www.mystarbucksidea.com
2008 Starbucks se retira del negocio de la música Emmylou Harris performs for a crowd gathered in Seattle, Tuesday, March 30, 2004, for the Starbucks 12th Annual Meeting of Shareholders. The Seattle based company is recognized as a global brand of coffee and plans to venture into music stores selling custom made cds on site. Harris helped launch the HEAR MUSIC aspect of Starbuck's business projects.
2008 Starbucks recently purchased Coffee Equipment, a Seattle company that makes the Clover machine. Some Starbucks stores, like this one in Seattle, now use the Clover.  Starbucks adquiere Coffee Equipment  fabricante de las cafeteras Clover
2008 "This is the first time our business is under pressure - it's a character test. But it's not about the economy. We don't want to use that as an excuse. And it's not about the competition. Don't believe the media hype. There's no coffee war going on. This is about us. We somehow evolved from a culture of entrepreneurship, creativity and innovation to a culture of, in a way, mediocrity and bureaucracy."
Continuará…

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Starbucks noticias

  • 2. 1971 Seattle Pike Place Market 1ª Tienda en Estados Unidos Fotografías: Associated Press www.apimages.com
  • 3. 1996 Store manager Ryota Tsunoda, far right, and Japanese employees serve customers at Starbucks Coffee Co.'s store in Ginza shopping district of Tokyo Friday morning, Aug. 2, 1996, the opening day of the Seattle, WA.-based coffee retailer's first overseas store. Tokyo 1ª Tienda fuera de Estados Unidos
  • 4. 1999 Chinese customers try out the coffee at the opening ceremony of China's first Starbucks coffee retail store in Beijing Monday, Jan. 11, 1999. The store, located in a five-star hotel, is the first of 10 outlets planned for the Chinese capital in the next 18 months, with more in other major cities. China is the ninth market in Asia where the Seattle coffee company has opened stores Beijing 1ª Tienda en China
  • 5. 1999 A protestor climbs through the window of a downtown Seattle Starbucks Coffee shop after smashing the window with the garbage can lying on the sidewalk as WTO protests continued to clog city streets and cripple the conference Tuesday afternoon Nov. 30, 1999 Seattle Protestas en la cumbre de la Organización Mundial de Comercio (OMC)
  • 6. 1999 Tazo Quality Assurance employee Anthony Tellin prepares to taste Passion tea in Tazo's tasting lab in Portland, Ore., Tuesday, March 6, 2001. In 1999, Starbucks acquired Tazo for $9.1 million. Since then, it has supplied Starbucks coffeehouses with its teas, standing on the chain's shoulders to introduce people to one of the world's oldest drinks. Portland Adquiere Tazo Productora de Té
  • 7. 2000 Beijing Shanghai Tokyo Just four years after opening its first overseas shop in Tokyo, the Seattle-based American coffee chain now has more than 250 stores in 10 Asian countries and is planning to more than double that by 2003. Más de 250 tiendas en Asia en 10 países
  • 8. 2000 A worker cleans the window of a Starbucks coffee shop in Beijing Wednesday November 1, 2000. The U.S. based company has opened more than a dozen stores in Beijing, where residents more used to drinking tea have developed a taste for coffee. Beijing Más de 12 tiendas
  • 9. 2001 A tray with Starbucks coffee and cups are being carried at the first coffeehouse in Continental Europe of U.S. Starbucks Coffee Co. that opened Wednesday, March 7, 2001 in Zurich, Switzerland. After perfecting its overseas technique in Asia, the Middle East and the U.K., the Seattle specialty coffee retailer will launch its European assault from a beachhead in Zurich. Zurich Después de Asia, Medio Oriente y Reino Unido, se inicia la conquista de Europa
  • 10. 2001 Starbucks Coffee Co. staffs are busy at the opening of the Seattle-based coffee-chain giant's 208th shop in Japan, in Tokyo Tuesday, March 13, 2001. Since opening its first store here in August, 1996, Starbucks has built its brand image without costly advertising, shattering another stereotype about trend-setting in Japan. Tokyo Tienda No. 208 en Japón en 6 años
  • 11. 2001 Michael Shank, of Seattle, holds a protest sign outside a Starbucks coffee shop in Seattle, Monday, June 25, 2001, while protesting against the bovine growth hormone (rBST) and other genetically engineered ingredients. The Organic Consumer Association, despite the coffee retailer's previous pledge to meet many of the group's demands, wants Starbucks to stop using milk and other foods with genetically modified ingredients. Starbucks has made clear it agrees with the OCA on many issues. It plans to offer milk free of genetic tinkering at its more than 2,700 U.S. stores by the end of July. Seattle Organic Consumer Association protesta el uso de leche con ingredientes genéticamente modificados
  • 12. 2002 An unidentified Saudi customer sits outside a Starbucks coffee shop in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, on Feb. 12, 2002. In conservative Saudi Arabia, the Starbucks logo is usually seen without the siren whose long hair covers her breasts that is familiar to coffee-drinkers around the world. In business and politics, delicate revisions have been needed to overcome the many differences between the Islamic monarchy and the secular, liberal democracy of the United States. Riyadh Logotipo modificado
  • 13. 2002 Starbuck's customers play the latest music CDs at a kiosk installed in the University Village store in Seattle, Thursday, May 23, 2002. The company is tailoring its product line to match the lifestyles of customers who want to relax. Along with its extensive line of coffee mugs, pots and beans; the coffee company is expanding its line of games and CDs. Seattle Nueva línea de juegos y CDs
  • 14. 2002 Nineteen year old German waitress Meike Haspel from Berlin smiles as she serves coffee at the first Starbucks coffee house in Germany in the capital Berlin Friday, May 24, 2002. Starbucks Coffee International , the world's leading speciality coffee producer and dealer and "Karstadt", Europe's leading department store, agreed on a joint venture for the federal republic in October 2001. Berlin Primera tienda en Alemania
  • 15. 2002 Work continues on the exterior of Starbucks Coffee in preparation for opening in San Juan, Puerto Rico Wednesday, Aug. 27, 2002. The Old San Juan store will open Sept. 7 with others to follow in Puerto Rico and Mexico. This will be the Seattle-based coffee giant's first chain of stores in Latin America. San Juan Primera tienda en Latino América
  • 16. 2002 Starbucks founder Howard Schultz, center, leaves the newly built Starbucks in Mexico City on Thursday, Sept. 5, 2002. The store will open its door to the public Friday. At left is Starbuck's president for Mexico, Alberto Torrado. The sign on the right reads: "Here you can find an old friend or a new one." México D.F. Primera tienda en México
  • 17. 2003 Chinese walk a hallway above a McDonalds restaurant and Starbucks Coffee outlet side-by-side in Beijing Tuesday, Feb. 11, 2003. China is promising more opportunities for foreign investors and more access for Chinese consumers to foreign goods under its 14-month-old membership in the free-trading World Trade Organization. Beijing Incremento de inversión extranjera en China un año después de ingresar a la OMC
  • 18. 2003 A server hands a coffee to a customer at a Starbucks in Lima, Peru on Tuesday, Aug.19, 2003. Starbucks Coffee International, a unit of Starbucks Coffee Co. (SBUX), opened its first store in South America in Peru on Tuesday, with plans to open another in Chile shortly. Lima Primera tienda en Sur América
  • 19. 2003 The West Coast's first McCafe in Mountain View, Calif., is shown Wednesday, Dec. 3, 2003, during its grand opening. The McDonald's hamburger franchise will start peddling delicacies such as skinny double mocas and roasted beef with balsamic vinegar on foccacia as it attempts to steal profits from Starbucks, Peet's Coffee & Tea and other upscale chains. Mountain View Reacción de McDonald’s Primera tienda McCafé
  • 20. 2003 Colombia's President Alvaro Uribe, right, serves coffee during the inauguration of a new Juan Valdez coffee shop in Bogota, Wednesday, Dec. 10, 2003. The Colombian Coffee Federation, which represents more than half a million coffee growers, inaugurated its flagship coffee shop with plans to open 10 others in the United States and elsewhere to compete with the likes of Starbucks. The shops are a part of the federation's efforts to alleviate the suffering of coffee farmers devastated by a precipitous collapse in global coffee prices, forcing many to turn to the cultivation of illicit crops for survival. Bogotá Primera tienda Juan Valdez
  • 21. 2004 Parisians peek into the new Starbucks coffee store after its official inauguration on Opera avenue in Paris Thursday, Jan. 15, 2004. The store, the first ever in France, will open to the public on Friday, while about ten are planned for the French capital over the next year. París Primera tienda en Francia
  • 22. 2004 Customers David Stugart, 65, bottom, and Michael Keigley, top, 32, both of Seattle select songs for their CD's as Starbucks Coffee Company unveiled the first Hear Music media bar Monday Oct. 18, 2004. The new service allows customers to burn personalized CD from a vast library of songs. Forty-five Starbucks retail locations will offer this new music service in the first phase of a multi-phased national roll-out. Seattle Primer “Hear Music” Bar de música con CDs a la medida
  • 23. 2004 A Chinese tourist takes a break in front of a Starbucks coffee shop in Shanghai, China, in this July 15, 2002 photo. Starbucks is suing a competitor in Shanghai over use of their shared Chinese name, the company said Thursday, Feb. 5, 2004 - the latest in a growing number of copyright suits involving foreign firms in China. Both companies use the same three Chinese characters in their names _ ``Xingbake.'' In Chinese, ``xing'' means ``star'' and ``bake'' (bah-kuh) is a phonetic rendition of ``-bucks.'' China Conflictos por nombre chino: Xinbake Xing = star Bake = bucks
  • 24. 2004 A worker cleans the windows of a Starsbuck coffee outlet in Qingdao, in east China's Shandong province Tuesday, June 22, 2004. The use of brand names similar to those of famous foreign brands is common throughout China. Lax laws and poor enforcement make it difficult for foreign companies to combat the trend, though Seattle-based Starbucks Corp. has taken legal action against at least one Chinese company in an effort to protect its name. China Acciones legales por imitaciones
  • 25. 2004 New York City police officers, equipped with plastic handcuffs, line up in from of a Starbucks to keep protestors away from the coffee shop in New York on Saturday, Aug. 28, 2004. Several hundred protestors marched to different Starbucks chains to express their opinion of disapproval for the business practices of Starbucks and the upcoming Republican National Convention, which will be held in New York. Nueva York Convención Partido Republicano Protección policial
  • 26. 2004 Peter Torrebiarte, general manager of Starbucks Coffee in Costa Rica, looks at the characteristics of a coffee plant on the Juan Vinas Coffee Plantation near Juan Vinas, Costa Rica, Wednesday, April 14, 2004. Costa Rica Plantaciones propias C.A.F.E Coffee and Farmer Equity
  • 27. 2005 Workers select coffee beans at the processing plant of the Esperanza Coffee Group in Matagalpa, 133km (82 miles) north of Managua, Nicaragua, Monday, Jan. 17, 2005. The Starbucks Coffee Company representatives are visiting Nicaragua to meet with national producers of coffee, and will buy approximately 70,000 quintals of Nicaraguan coffee. Nicaragua Negociaciones de compra de café
  • 28. 2005 A customer is handed a coffee drink at a drivethru window at a Starbucks , Dec. 12, 2005, in Seattle. The world's largest specialty coffee chain once shunned the drivethru concept, fearing it might alienate customers who like to come inside and sip their lattes while listening to music in cozy chairs. Eventually, it got hard to ignore coffee lovers' demand for a quick java fix without leaving the warmth of their driver's seats. Seattle Primer “Drive-thru”
  • 29. 2005 Dunkin' Donuts employee Khari Janey works the register at a Boston branch of Dunkin' Donuts, Thursday, Jan. 13, 2005. The 55-year-old franchise chain is trying to hold onto its core customers while winning over some of the Starbucks crowd. Dunkin’ Donuts Incursión en el mercado de cafés especiales
  • 30. 2006 Starbucks breakfast sandwiches are displayed Feb. 22, 2006, at a Starbucks Corp. store in Seattle. As McDonald's Corp. and Burger King Corp. begin to offer premium coffee Starbucks is more than doubling the number of stores nationwide that sell hot breakfast sandwiches. Seattle Starbucks inicia la venta de Sandwiches calientes para el Desayuno
  • 31. 2006 Gregg Clark, director of plant operations for Starbucks Corp.'s massive roasting plant in Kent, Wash., walks Monday, Aug. 7, 2006 through an area of the plant used for storing green coffee prior to roasting Kent, Wa. Visita a la planta Recepción de los granos
  • 32. 2006 Almost eerily and without a worker in sight, a coffee roaster at Starbucks Corp.'s massive roasting plant in Kent, Wash. empties a batch of beans into the cooling tray Monday, Aug. 7, 2006. Kent, Wa. Visita a la planta Tostadora de Café Automatización
  • 33. 2006 Freshly-roasted coffee is stirred in a cooling tray at Starbucks Corp.'s massive roasting plant in Kent, Wash. Monday, Aug. 7, 2006. Kent, Wa. Visita a la planta Enfriamiento de los granos recién tostados
  • 34. 2006 An automated machine fills coffee bags with ground coffee Monday, Aug. 7, 2006. In contrast to many tiny independent roasters in Seattle, where bags are filled by hand, Starbucks relies on automation. Kent, Wa. Visita a la planta Empaque automatizado
  • 35. 2006 Workers at right folds boxes that will hold bags of freshly ground coffee produced at Starbucks Corp.'s massive roasting plant in Kent, Wash. Monday, Aug. 7, 2006. As other towns worry that Starbucks will run their local coffeeshops out of business, the owners of several of Seattle's most beloved independent coffee houses say they have found success in the shadow of Starbucks by accentuating the benefits of staying small. Kent, Wa. Visita a la planta Empaque final y distribución
  • 36. 2006 Jud Hendricks, left, greets Jerry Pierce, as they sit outside Caffe Ladro in Seattle Tuesday Aug. 1, 2006. Both are regulars at the independent coffee shop, which is located just down the street from a Starbucks. Although Seattle is the headquarters for corporate coffee giant Starbucks Corp., local independents are proving it's possible to survive and even thrive in the shadow of their much larger competitor. Seattle, Wa. Competidores pequeños a la sombra de Starbucks
  • 37. 2006 Daniel Gross poses for a portrait outside a Starbucks coffee shop in the Lower Manhattan, Monday, Aug. 7, 2006, in New York. Starbucks Corp. has fired the co-founder of a union claiming to represent employees at six of its Manhattan coffee houses. Gross, a barista and organizer for IWW Starbucks Workers Union, a branch of the Industrial Workers of the World, said Monday that he is challenging his termination, which followed a company investigation into an allegation that he made a threatening remark to a district manager at a recent union rally. Nueva York Brotes de sindicalismo
  • 38. 2006 A bag of Starbucks Corp.'s new "Black Apron" specialty coffee, Rwanda Blue Bourbon, is shown with its decorative packaging Tuesday, Feb. 28, 2006 in Seattle. Starbucks, the world's largest specialty coffee retailer, announced Tuesday that it will start selling its first Rwandan-grown coffee in its North American stores starting March 13. Seattle Introducción de café proveniente de Ruanda
  • 39. 2006 People pass by during the opening ceremony of the first Starbucks store in Brazil, in Sao Paulo, on Thursday, Nov. 30 , 2006. Sao Paulo Primera tienda en Brasil
  • 40. 2007 15760 Tiendas en el Mundo 3320 Nuevas tiendas en 2007 9 Tiendas diarias
  • 41. 2007 Chinese passers-by walk past a Starbucks Coffee cafe in Shanghai 29 March 2007. Starbucks Corp., the biggest coffee-shop chain in the world, said it planned to source coffee from China for the first time as it expands in a country with more than 5,000 years of tea-drinking culture. Starbucks has been working with coffee farmers in southwest Chinas Yunnan province to help them meet sourcing standards and has sent coffee shipments to the United States for testing. Starbucks also plans to build a roasting plant in China, where its sales are outpacing market growth as Chinas coffee consumption is increasing 20 to 25 percent each year. Shanghai Cultivos de café en China Provincia de Yunnan Planta tostadora Consumo de café +20 a 25% cada año en China
  • 42. 2007 Shareholders fill McCaw Hall as they listen to a speaker at the annual Starbucks Corp. shareholders meeting, Wednesday, March 21, 2007, in Seattle. Seattle Reunión anual de accionistas
  • 43. 2007 A handful of protesters picket before the annual Starbucks Corp. shareholders meeting, Wednesday, March 21, 2007, in Seattle. The small group of protesters criticized the company's stance on unions and its resistance of Ethiopia's attempts to trademark some bean names. Seattle Reunión anual de accionistas
  • 44. 2007 Starbucks Corp. chairman Howard Schultz, right, gives a pat to president and CEO Jim Donald as Donald is introduced before addressing the annual shareholders meeting in Seattle in this March 21, 2007. Seattle Reunión anual de accionistas CEO: Jim Donald desde 2005
  • 45. 2007 Starbucks Corp. chairman Howard Schultz waves goodbye to singer Paul McCartney as McCartney finishes an appearance via a video feed from London, during the Starbucks Corp. annual shareholders meeting, in this March 21, 2007, file photo, in Seattle. McCartney was introduced as the first artist signed to Starbucks new record label. Seattle Reunión anual de accionistas
  • 46. 2007 A barista heads out the door of a Starbucks coffee shop and past a poster advertising the upcoming release of Paul McCartney's new recording, Monday, June 4, 2007, in Seattle. Caffeine junkies who go to Starbucks for their daily fix will get a nonstop dose of McCartney's "Memory Almost Full" on Tuesday, June 5, 2007, as the coffee company's new record label releases its first CD. Starbucks Corp. estimates that some 6 million people will be among the first to hear the new album as they line up for their lattes in more than 10,000 stores in 29 countries, where it will be playing on continuous loop throughout the day. Seattle Lanzamiento 1º album “ Hear Music Records” Paul McCartney
  • 47. 2007 Packets of Starbucks Corp.'s new line of "drinking chocolate" are shown Monday, Aug. 13, 2007. The drink -- to be initially sold in grocery and other food stores but not in Starbucks' traditional coffee houses -- is made at home on the stove or in the microwave by combining cubes of chocolate with milk. Seattle Lanzamiento Chocolate en cubos
  • 48. 2007 Anthony Carroll, manager of green coffee quality at Starbucks Corp., shows a group of food-industry writers and publicists the proper way to "slurp" coffee Monday,Aug. 13, 2007 during a "cupping workshop" given during a two-day "Starbucks Scholars". "Cupping," is the specialized process of tasting various blends and roasts of coffee. Seattle Seminario de capacitación para medios “Starbucks Scholars”
  • 49. 2007 Major Cohen, a coffee and tea education specialist at Starbucks Corp., pours boiling water into cups of different types of Starbucks coffee grounds Monday,Aug. 13, 2007 in preparation for a "cupping workshop". Seattle Seminario de capacitación para medios “Starbucks Scholars”
  • 50. 2007 Keith Hutjens, director of tea procurement with Tazo Tea conducts a tea tasting Monday, Aug. 13, 2007 during a two-day "Starbucks Scholars" media seminar at Starbucks Corp. headquarters in Seattle. Tazo is owned by Starbucks Corp. Seattle Seminario de capacitación para medios “Starbucks Scholars”
  • 51. 2007 Starbucks chairman Howard Schultz, left, greets a group of apron-clad food-industry writers and publicists taking part in a "cupping workshop" Monday,Aug. 13, 2007 during a two-day "Starbucks Scholars" media seminar at Starbucks Corp. headquarters in Seattle. Seattle Seminario de capacitación para medios “Starbucks Scholars”
  • 52. 2007 Russian-style matryoshka coffee mugs on sale in Russia's first Starbucks Coffee Shop on opening day at the Mega shopping mall in Khimki, just north of Moscow, Russia on September 6, 2007 Moscú Primera tienda en Rusia
  • 53. 2007 A person holds a Starbucks Coffee card Wednesday, Nov. 31, 2007 in Pennington, N.J. Starbucks Corp. releases first-quarter earnings after the bell. Starbucks Card 160 millones de tarjetas
  • 54. 2007 In this image provided by Starbucks Corp., a "Song of the Day" card featuring acoustic singer KT Tunstall is shown. Beginning Oct. 2, 2007, Starbucks plans to give away 50 million free digital songs to customers in all its domestic coffee houses to promote a new wireless iTunes music service about to debut in select markets through a partnership with Apple Inc. Baristas in the company's more than 10,000 U.S. stores will hand out 1.5 million "Song of the Day" cards each day, which can be redeemed on Apple's online music store. “ Song of the Day” Convenio con Apple iTunes 1,5 millones de tarjetas/día 50 millones de canciones
  • 55. 2008 Krista Miller sips a cappuccino at a Starbucks coffee shop in Seattle Friday, Jan. 25, 2008. It's been almost a year since Chairman Howard Schultz' bitterly candid memo bemoaning "the watering down of the Starbucks experience" landed with a thud on the desks of the coffee chain's top executives. Mincing no words, he said the company's unbridled growth had sapped the soul out of its stores and sounded a rallying cry to shift the focus back onto the customer. Starbucks on Monday, Jan. 7, 2008 announced that it is firing Jim Donald and giving the CEO job back to Schultz. Schultz: “Se está aguando la experiencia Starbucks”
  • 56. 2008 A Starbucks customer drinks coffee in Palo Alto, Calif., Tuesday, Feb. 26, 2008. Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz has announced the closure, starting at 5:30 p.m. local time, to energize 135,000 employees. Starbucks' 7,100 stores across America will participate in the brief barista re-education. Jornada de Reeducación 135.000 empleados 7.100 tiendas en USA Cierre simultáneo
  • 57. 2008 Starbucks store manager Justin Chapple watches a message from CEO Howard Schultz at a Starbucks in New York, Tuesday, Feb. 26, 2008. Nearly 7,100 company-operated Starbucks stores across the U.S., all except the licensed shops in supermarkets, airports, malls, hotels and the like, were to close at 5:30 p.m. local time so some 135,000 employees could go through about three hours of training. Jornada de Reeducación 135.000 empleados 7.100 tiendas en USA Cierre simultáneo
  • 58. 2008 Stephanie Axelrod works on her laptop Monday, Feb. 11, 2008, at a Starbucks Corp. store near the University of Washington in Seattle. Starbucks and AT&T Inc. will start offering a mix of free and paid wireless Internet service in most of the international coffee retailer's U.S. shops, beginning this spring. Seattle Convenio con AT&T WiFi en las tiendas internacionales
  • 59. 2008 Reunión anual de accionistas 2008
  • 60. 2008 Starbucks Corp. Chairman and Chief Executive Howard Schultz speaks in front of a graph charting the price of Starbucks stock Wednesday, March 19, 2008 at the company's annual shareholders meeting in Seattle. Starbucks' stock has been falling steadily for more than a year, losing more than half its value since late 2006, when it was trading at close to $40 a share. Reunión anual de accionistas 2008
  • 61. 2008 The newly designed Starbucks cup is seen Wednesday, April 30, 2008, at a Starbucks location in Alameda, Calif. Starbucks Corp. said Wednesday its fiscal second-quarter profit fell 28 percent as U.S. consumers responded to rising food and gas prices by making fewer latte runs. For the quarter ended March 30, Starbucks ' net income sank to $108.7 million, or 15 cents per share, from $150.8 million, or 19 cents a share in the same period last year. Resultados 1º Trimestre Utilidades ↓ 28% $150 M (Q1/07)  $108 M (Q1/08) 100 tiendas cerradas 600 despidos
  • 62. 2008 Starbucks Corp. Chief Technology Officer Chris Bruzzo holds hand-written comment cards as he stands in front of a live screen of the new Web site Wednesday, March 19, 2008 at Starbucks' annual shareholders meeting in Seattle. Coffee-obsessed consumers started chiming in as soon as the Web site inviting customers to pitch ideas for reviving its struggling U.S. business went live Buscando nuevas ideas: www.mystarbucksidea.com
  • 63. 2008 Starbucks se retira del negocio de la música Emmylou Harris performs for a crowd gathered in Seattle, Tuesday, March 30, 2004, for the Starbucks 12th Annual Meeting of Shareholders. The Seattle based company is recognized as a global brand of coffee and plans to venture into music stores selling custom made cds on site. Harris helped launch the HEAR MUSIC aspect of Starbuck's business projects.
  • 64. 2008 Starbucks recently purchased Coffee Equipment, a Seattle company that makes the Clover machine. Some Starbucks stores, like this one in Seattle, now use the Clover. Starbucks adquiere Coffee Equipment fabricante de las cafeteras Clover
  • 65. 2008 "This is the first time our business is under pressure - it's a character test. But it's not about the economy. We don't want to use that as an excuse. And it's not about the competition. Don't believe the media hype. There's no coffee war going on. This is about us. We somehow evolved from a culture of entrepreneurship, creativity and innovation to a culture of, in a way, mediocrity and bureaucracy."