Technology

Starbucks already rolling out mobile order for Android

SEATTLE -- After a successful run in the Pacific Northwest and in states such as Alabama, Florida and Texas, Starbucks on Tuesday extended its mobile order and pay feature nationwide.

That means people in New York, Chicago and San Francisco can now order a latte on their smartphones, just as many Portlanders, Angelenos and Seattleites have in the past few months.

The Seattle-based coffee giant also enabled the feature, previously available only on Apple devices, on its Android app, expanding its universe to the other half of smartphone users.

The moves were announced at a New York investors conference in early September. At the time the announcement surprised analysts, because until then the company had hinted toward a holiday-season rollout for the technology.

According to Starbucks executives, the feature was so popular, allowing coffee drinkers to skip long lines as they order and pay for their drinks on their smartphones, that they accelerated the expansion.

"The rollout has gone better than we expected" among both customers and staffers, says Adam Brotman, the executive in charge of Starbucks' digital efforts.

Brotman won't say exactly how much mobile order and

pay has boosted sales.

But David Palmer, a longtime Starbucks analyst who works for RBC Capital Markets, says it's as much as a 2 percent bump, which for a company with $19 billion in expected sales this year means hundreds of millions of dollars.

Some baristas have expressed concern in online forums about whether bypassing the counter dilutes Starbucks' oft-stated vow to create a human connection between its staff and customers. Brotman, in an interview, acknowledged that at first, some baristas were "a little afraid, or a little tentative," but that overall they've embraced mobile order and pay.

"It just shifts the connection between the partner and the customer to the area where the customer picks up the food and beverage," and surveys have shown more satisfaction among customers and staffers, he said. Brotman said efficiency and shorter lines can help sell more coffee, and it opens up opportunities for customers that didn't exist before.

For example, busy, harried parents of young children can get in and out of the store more easily, and "speech and hearing-impaired customers are calling it a game-changer," Brotman said.

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