Business

Caribou Coffee, No. 2 And Still Growing After 25 Years

By Dee DePass
Star Tribune (Minneapolis)

WWR Article Summary (tl;dr) Caribou Coffee marked 25 years in business this year. What started out as a tiny, Minnesota business is now the nation’s second-largest coffee chain.

Minneapolis

Caribou Coffee has come a long way since December 1992, when Kim Puckett would leave her frazzled husband to run their new coffee shop alone while she raced next door to hand out flyers to people standing in line for the movies.

She would dash back just in time to help serve the after-movie crowd.

“That was back in the day,” said co-founder John Puckett during a recent interview some 17 years after the couple sold their business. “We’d run out of milk and hand a customer a $20 bill to go get us more milk. Our customers were so loyal. They really gave us a chance. If it didn’t go well, we wouldn’t be here right now.”

Caribou Coffee, which marked its 25th year in business this month, is no longer the tiny Edina, Minn., business the Pucketts once steered with the help of long hours and cash infusions from friends, parents and investment banks. It is now the nation’s second-largest coffee chain.

Still retaining an updated version of the North Woods store decor, the business has 798 owned and franchised locations in 23 states, Washington, D.C., and 12 countries. Its beans sell in grocery stores in all 50 states, and the retail chain has the No. 1 coffee shop in Kuwait.

“Every bean that you buy in the world with the Caribou name is sourced by us, and every bean is roasted right here in Brooklyn Center. I am always kind of shocked that Minnesotans don’t know that,” said John Butcher, the former Target executive who became Caribou’s president in June.

He flies to Costa Rica and Colombia in a few weeks to meet with coffee farmers and to test and buy beans, Butcher said as he walked through the roastery and warehouse, where sky-high piles of coffee bags arrive by plane and truckload every week.

Inside the roastery, 50 workers operate giant silos, vacuums and other equipment that sorts, roasts, grinds and packages every bag of Caribou coffee, said Butcher.

Two hundred more work at the headquarters in other roles.

Butcher is one of the latest executives to lead the chain following several ownership changes, from the Pucketts, to the Crescent Capital investment arm of the First Islamic Bank of Bahrain and the renamed Arcapita.

In 2012, the chain was bought by the Luxembourg-based food and drink giant JAB Holdings Co. for $340 million.

In 1998, Caribou had 90 stores and $70 million in revenue. JAB won’t disclose Caribou’s current sales, but retail experts estimate that Caribou likely exceeds $500 million in annual revenue.

If Butcher gets his way, Caribou will grow even more. The strategy, pushed by Butcher and the new Caribou/Einstein Bros. Bagels CEO Sarah Spiegel, includes new stores and new products such as coffees on tap and a new “nitrogen-infused” coffee drink with a thick frothy head.

The strategy also includes marketing coups, such as being named the official coffee of the Super Bowl Host Committee. For weeks, 30 Minnesota employees experimented with 20 different beans from 12 countries before landing on just the right blend for the big game, Butcher said while holding a newly packaged bag of Bold North, a dark roast coffee with notes of caramel and oak.

Bold North will be featured prominently in U.S. Bank Stadium on game day Feb. 4.

It’s a bold move. Most people associate football with beer or energy drinks, not coffee, said Akshay Rao, a marketing professor at the University of Minnesota’s Carlson School of Management.

Still, the strategy could work, he said. “Any brand that gets associated with the Super Bowl has a huge audience right away and that is a good thing.”

Aside from stepped-up marketing, Caribou plans to add 25 new stores a year and to energize Caribou’s footprint in the Upper Midwest, officials said.

While Minnesota is Caribou’s largest market by far, with 279 stores, South Dakota has only 17 stores and Wisconsin, 28.

“So there’s opportunity. We want to be focused on the Upper Midwest,” Butcher said.

Company growth plans also include bulking up on carbs. Caribou is expanding its fledgling combination of “coffee and bagel” stores.

In 2014, JAB bought the Einstein Bros. Bagels chain for $364.5 million. It now has 47 owned and franchised stores featuring Caribou Coffee and Einstein bagel stores that sit right next door to each other. Seventy-eight 78 locations sell the two brands inside a single “Coffee & Bagels” store.

Last month, Caribou’s parent company bought the 270-store Bruegger’s Bagel chain for an undisclosed price. It remains to be seen how JAB will cross-market Bruegger’s and Caribou Coffee.

Rao, the U marketing professor, said Caribou may be wise to tread slowly.

“On the face of it, combining coffee and bagels appears to make sense. But if I was a consultant, I would urge them to go back and look at the fundamentals and see who really is their customer,” Rao said. “Millennials who go into coffee (shops) with their computers are not likely to be carb consumers.”

So he said the key question should be: “What else can Caribou offer to go with coffee?”

Finding the right focus is key when looking to expand, Rao said. Retailers like Target, Home Depot, Starbucks and Dunkin’ Donuts struggle with product mix and profit margins when trying to grow or enter new territories. They must intensely study the buying habits of prospective customers to ensure they get the culture right.

Butcher agrees that a customer-centric culture is important.

After years at Target, “I know how important culture is, and I was excited to be part of this Caribou culture,” Butcher said. “What I learned at Target is how to be hyper-focused on the customer and how to step back and learn what do people really want from our product and how do we access their needs.”

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