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Starbucks leveraging Alibaba to convert China into a country of coffee lovers

In partnership with Alibaba, Starbucks is using its largest store to trial new concepts, including using technologies such as augmented reality.
Written by Asha Barbaschow, Contributor

Starbucks and Alibaba last year announced a partnership that sees the coffee company leverage the Chinese giant's technology and ecommerce platforms to break into a market historically dominated by tea.

The first initiative under the partnership was the introduction of Alipay at Starbucks' bricks-and-mortar stores in China.

The companies then in December opened the Starbucks Shanghai Roastery, which boasts the title of the largest Starbucks in the world and the second Roastery the company opened following the flagship Seattle store.

The two-storey, 30,000 square foot Shanghai Roastery was the first facility to integrate a "real-time, in-store, and online customer experience", which is powered by Alibaba's Mobile Taobao app and augmented reality (AR) technology.

Alibaba's location-based tech knows when a Mobile Taobao app user walks through the door and serves the customer up a webpage that includes features such as a floor map and menus.

By turning on Mobile Taobao's AR function, customers can also scan the store for details of the coffee bars, brewing methods, and the roasting process. There's also a handful of game-like features centred mostly around the two-story copper cask that holds the coffee once it's been roasted.

The store even boasts a 3D-printed tea bar, which serves as the first Starbucks-branded Teavana bar in China.

Hosting journalists at its Shanghai store in the lead up to Alibaba's 2018 11:11 Global Shopping Festival, it was explained that China is Starbucks' fastest-growing market, with just over 3,000 stores in 136 cities -- 600 of those are in Shanghai.

The companies have also partnered under the Chinese giant's New Retail initiative which is aimed at taking the online shopping experience to bricks-and-mortar stores, including by launching a virtual Starbucks store, accessible via mobile.

Alibaba developed a centralised online management hub for the coffee company's Starbucks Experience across multiple digital platforms, using data and AI to make a more personalised Starbucks visit for customers available on the Starbucks app and Alibaba's customer-facing mobile apps, including Taobao, Alipay, Tmall, and Koubei.

Alibaba CEO Daniel Zhang said the two companies shared the same vision to pioneer a new coffee culture and lifestyle in China through innovation and technology.

"Alibaba is thrilled to expand our existing partnership with Starbucks by leveraging our cutting-edge New Retail infrastructure and digital power to enable an unprecedented experience for consumers," Zhang said in a statement. "This partnership is again a testament to the success of our New Retail strategy."

As of mid-October, Starbucks began offering a delivery service in nine new cities in China -- in addition to Shanghai and Beijing -- through Alibaba's on-demand delivery platform Ele.me.

Starbucks China CEO Belinda Wong said at the time she has plans to launch the service at more than 2,000 stores across 30 cities by the end of the year.

Also under the Alibaba-Starbucks partnership is the establishment of "Star Kitchens" in Alibaba's Hema supermarket.

Currently, Starbucks has piloted the kitchen in two Hema locations, one in Alibaba's Hangzhou headquarters and another in Baodi Mall in Shanghai. Starbucks said the plan is to roll out the service to more Chinese cities over time.

Star Kitchens leverage Hema's fulfillment and delivery capabilities, further expanding the coffee company's delivery reach.

Disclosure: Asha Barbaschow travelled to 11.11 in Shanghai as a guest of Alibaba

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