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Starbucks delivery to start in Seattle, New York

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Adam Brotman, Starbucks chief digital officer, talks about the company's new mobile ordering app Wednesday, March 18, 2015 at Starbucks Coffee Company's annual shareholders meeting in Seattle.

SEATTLE >> Seattle and New York’s Empire State Building will be the twin proving grounds for Starbucks’ latest bid to break down the barriers between people and their coffee: delivery.

The delivery service, to be tested in the two cities in the second half of 2015, is the next frontier for Starbucks’ rapidly growing mobile ecosystem, which is tightly tied to its loyalty program.

Starbucks says members of the rewards program buy more Starbucks goodies more often than the rest of its customers. People have to join the program in order to use Starbucks’ mobile payment app, which experts say is the most successful of its kind.

As of Tuesday, the app also allows ordering by smartphone or tablet all over the Pacific Northwest, allowing customers to skip the long lines that often form at the Starbucks counter. Wednesday’s delivery announcement coincides with the Starbucks shareholders meeting, an annual extravaganza at which executives reiterated the company’s ambitious target of nearly doubling revenue by 2019.

With Starbucks shares hovering near record highs, Wall Street seems to be buying the promise. But such breackneck growth can be hard for a mature company like Starbucks — hence the importance of new initiatives like mobile delivery.

In Seattle, Starbucks’ beverages and pastries will be delivered by Postmates, a San Francisco startup that specializes in on-demand delivery. Like Uber, Postmates relies on technology and part-time workers with their own bikes and cars to deliver food and merchandise.

Customers using the Starbucks app will be able to see monitor their delivery’s progress. Starbucks chief digital officer Adam Brotman said the service is a logical extension of the mobile ordering and pick-up feature that debuted in Seattle Tuesday.

Postmates CEO Bastian Lehmann said in an interview that there’s going to be a fixed delivery fee, but the details are still being worked out. Right now Postmates delivery fees for other merchants start at $5, but can add up pretty quickly depending on the distance. There’s also an additional 9 percent fee applied to the purchase price.

Lehmann doesn’t foresee Seattle’s semi-permanent traffic gridlock to be a huge issue. With Starbucks locations everywhere, there will be very short distances between pick-up and drop-off, he said. About 1,000 people in Seattle have signed up for Postmates’ delivery army, he said.

In super-dense New York, Starbucks will try a different approach, which it calls “green apron delivery.” That’s employees of a Starbucks inside an office building, delivering just within the building itself. The first test will take place inside the Empire State Building.

The already busy store will have a separate area dedicated to preparing the orders for delivery “so we don’t slow down” the rest of the operation, Brotman said.

Brotman also said Starbucks will launch mobile ordering in Canada and the U.K. before the end of the year.

Starbucks released new numbers that show how its mobile initiative is having a growing impact on its brick-and-mortar empire.

Brotman said Starbucks processes about 8 million weekly mobile payment transactions, representing over 18 percent of the revenue collected at its U.S. stores. The last time the company gave out a number it was 16 percent.

How Starbucks delivery will work in NYC, Seattle

Candice Choi, AP Food Industry Writer

NEW YORK >> Starbucks says it will launch delivery in parts of Seattle and New York City in the second half of this year. Here’s how the company says it will work:

— There will be no minimum purchase required.

— There will be a small flat fee for delivery, but the exact amount hasn’t been determined.

— Delivery workers will accept tips.

— The average delivery time will be about 30 minutes starting with the placement of the order.

— Delivery hours are still to be determined.

— In New York City, the service will be available in office buildings, including the Empire State Building. People will be able to place their orders on websites from existing or newly built shops, the latter of which may have trimmed down menus. Starbucks workers will make the deliveries.

— In Seattle, the service will be available in specific areas, including homes and offices. Starbucks will partner with a company called Postmate to make the deliveries.

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