Starbucks' new Chairman and CEO Brian Niccol wants customers to get their orders hand-delivered by a barista in four minutes or less, a goal that will be central as he tries to reinvigorate the company's sagging sales.
''We have to make it easier for our customers to get a cup of coffee,'' Niccol said in his first conference call with investors since joining Starbucks in September.
Niccol said about half of the company's transactions are now completed in four minutes or less. He wants to focus on the bottlenecks that delay the other half, from inadequate staffing during rush periods to slow ovens cooking food to Starbucks' overly complex menu.
''When you start to use that metric, you quickly discover where our stores have a real problem,'' Niccol said. ''We're going to be maniacal about getting after it.''
Niccol said Starbucks will start with faster service at the counter, with mobile orders and drive-thru orders to follow.
Niccol said Starbucks needs to pare down its food and drink offerings so baristas can focus on making fewer things consistently.
First on the chopping block: Starbucks' Oleato olive-oil infused beverages, which will be discontinued from most locations beginning in early November. They will still be available at some locations in Italy, Japan and China.
The decision breaks a link to longtime Starbucks leader Howard Schultz, who came up with the idea for Oleato after visiting an olive oil producer in Sicily. Schultz called the beverage a ''transformational idea'' when he introduced it in Italy in early 2023. It went on sale in the U.S. earlier this year.