Over at the Church of the Customer, Ben and Jackie introduced the blog world to John Winter Smith and his quest to visit every Starbucks company-owned location in the world. So far, he has visited nearly 4,300 locations in North America, UK, and Japan. WOW! That is fanatical behavior becoming of an evangelist!
In their post, Jackie writes the following:
"Ultimate evangelists like Winter don't turn up every day. He's generating lots of favorable press on his own. Starbucks should embrace Winter in every conceivable way. Promote his visits. Lend him a car with the Starbucks logo on the side. (Winter sleeps in his old car with no air conditioning when he goes on his frequent Starbucks road trips.) He's authentic, not a schlocky spokesthing. Make him a hero. Starbucks, your Jared is here."
Here at Brand Autopsy we have a different take on Winter becoming the "Starbucks Jared." We contend Starbucks should acknowledge Winter in an ongoing manner, just not in every conceivable way that Subway acknowledges and promotes Jared.
Someone like Winter is good for those folks who LOVE Starbucks - it makes those who visit 3x a day feel better because they can say, "At least I’m not that Winter guy going to ALL the stores… Now, that’s freakish!"
As Ben and Jackie have taught us, customer evangelists exhibit fanatical behavior (some more fanatical than others). Jared fanatically used Subway to better himself by losing 245 pounds. His actions of eating Subway sandwiches to improve his health plays into Subway's branding strategy of being a more healthy alternative to the other fast food chains. Jared is a credible* spokesperson/evangelist for Subway because his personal goals were/are more in line with the business/branding goals of Subway.
*(he's credible in a 30-second spot to the masses, but he is still only the 1 in 123 million who has seen results from a Subway diet. I'm sure the fine print reads -> "Individual results may vary. Not typical weight loss.")
Winter’s goal of visiting every Starbucks in the world is fanatical evangelist behavior. However, his goal does not mesh with Starbucks goals. Winter’s goal perpetuates the perception (and in many ways the reality) that Starbucks is ubiquitous, that Starbucks is everywhere. Starbucks is trying not to promote its ubiquity and that is why Winter wouldn’t make for a credible Starbucks spokesperson.
Winter would be a more credible spokesperson, along the lines of Jared, if he exhibited a passion for aspects of Starbucks beyond its massive reach such as Starbucks involvement in local communities, its coffee quality, its business practices, etc.
If you read Winter’s travel logs, you’ll notice that he admits to gagging and nearly vomiting after drinking too much Starbucks. (Ouch.) That behavior is not becoming of a Starbucks spokesperson. In fact, this conjures up images of Morgan Spurlock, of Super Size Me fame, and his McBurps, McNausea, and McRegurgitation after downing too many Big Macs.
Imagine if a documentary was made chronicling Winter’s journey … it could be called, “Ubiquitize Me.” (Double ouch.)
For the record, we think Starbucks should ACKNOWLEDGE Winter in an ongoing manner just not as Subway acknowledges Jared.
Instead of featuring Winter in marketing/advertising campaigns, we contend Starbucks SHOULD…
Empower Winter to fulfill his passion by sending him an updated quarterly roster of newly opened stores
Send Winter a personalized Starbucks Card (with his photo on it) and upload dollars to it on a quarterly basis
Invite Winter to Seattle to tour the Starbucks HQ, have a cupping with the Starbucks Coffee Dept., and have a cup of coffee with Howard Schultz
We also agree Starbucks SHOULD consider making a donation to a charity each time Winter visits a new store. (That is Jackie's great idea).
(In return, Starbucks should politely ask Winter to stop saying the coffee is making him sick).
That’s Brand Autopsy’s take … what’s yours?
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