This is my tribute to the “Now Playing” digital screens found in some Starbucks stores:
There was a time when Starbucks was actively pursuing expansion into the music and movie industry. As the number of CDs sold at stores swelled, Starbucks began to install LCD screens at hundreds of stores, mostly in California, Washington, New York, and a few in New Jersey also. By 2006, Starbucks launched a tiny number of “flagship” HEAR Music stores, with CD burning stations, an abundance of CDs, and music listening stations too. In addition to “flagship” Hear Music stores, a very large number of stores had LCD screens so that customers could just look up, and easily see what music was playing in the stores. These LCD screens are the “Now Playing” screens which are still found in numerous stores. At one time, about 650 Starbucks stores had a digital flatscreen displaying the music playing in store. And, in addition, a few stores, although not “flagship” Hear Music stores, had CD burning stations too. I remember that a Starbucks in North Seattle along Northgate Way had a CD burning station, and I always thought it looked a little out of place. This was several years before I started blogging, and I never thought to take a picture of the CD burning station. I wish I had! (By the way, that was store #358 which is featured in the photos below, and the CD burning station sat exactly where you see the condiment bar now.)
I really like the LCD screens. No barista would ever have to run to a back office to find a song title. It was never intrusive. You just looked up and saw what was playing. Sometimes, the LCD screens would be playing Starbucks-produced content with the information about the current music playing. Starbucks produced really interesting short video content of everything from coffee farms, to coffee imagery, to you name it. MyStarbucksIdea.com had a short segment/promotional video on the LCD screens too. It was no more than a few seconds, but just enough not to be a distraction, but enough to introduce customers to what MyStarbucksIdea.com is. The “Now Playing” screens often promote the Starbucks Digital Network. When Pike Place Roast was launched, there was a Pike Place Roast video that played on the LCD. Keep in mind, all the while, the normally-programmed music would be playing. Despite that Pike Place Roast is my least favorite Starbucks coffee, the video for it was superb. I loved watching it, with its rustic scenes of 1912 Pike Place, and coffee roasting imagery.
One by one, the LCD screens are disappearing. It will be quite a while before they are all gone, but as each store gets its major remodel, the LCD screen gets pulled out, and it is not replaced. I will miss it. It introduced me to music, enchanted me with coffee scenes, and Starbucks-related information. The LCD screens were enormously useful. Partners who have stores with them, often still tell me how customers love being able to look up and just see what is playing. Brand new stores, such as the 4th and Union Starbucks, or the new Lynnwood store, don’t have the LCD screens at all.
I am a little disappointed that Starbucks is no longer supporting the digital screens in stores.
So this is my tribute to the disappearing “Now Playing” screen at Starbucks. Here are a few more pictures.
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Looking at them in an RSS reader on an iPhone, your nice composition was reduced to a single row of photos. Of TVs on interesting colored walls. Looking at them like that, the screens do end up looking out of place. Except for the brilliant one where someone put a shelf underneath it and picture frames around it. That feels very homey and classy and elegant. But the rest? A TV just hanging in midair, too small on a massive wall, too stark in an otherwise warm environment.
I feel like I will miss the TV, but it’s never moved me to purchase any music. Probably just ends up being another thing to program for and keep up and running.
Melody I have two feelings about the screen. We have one at my local SB and we often spend time listening to the music and looking up the artist on my phone for their background, etc. Some of these artists we have never heard of before. We have also purchased a CD because of hearing them at SB. The other side of the screen is that often the music is way too loud and it overshadows conversation. I have asked partners to turn down the music and most of the time they have done that.
I love these screens, I’ve never seen them at any of our stores here but I really like the look of them, and of course I’d love not having to run through to the back of house to find out what music was playing!
What will happen to the removed screens? My guess is that the removed screens will be taken home by the store manager who will use it to watch Netflix movies or commercial sport contests. Next will be the overstuffed sofas. The next remodel will feature plastic chairs as the comfortable sofas somehow end up in the store managers homes used to watch the screens.
@adel Ive always imagined that somewhere Starbucks has a big warehouse full of stuff taken out of remodeled stores, including these screens. I would love to have a tiny table and 2 chairs. I mean one of the very small tables that you could play checkers on and had a version of the siren in the table top design.
I have to say, I have never seen any LCD screen in any Sbux in 20+yrs….and that’s fine with me. I did buy a few cds at Sbux back quite a few yrs ago……nothing I’ve ever been crazy about tho.
I just don’t see the LCD screens fitting into the whole ‘coffee house’ image. So, I’m sorry for all of you who’ve had them and will now miss them…..but…..not me.
re: the re-models 🙁 I VERY luckily did receive that Yergacheffe gorgeous sign (not like the ones of today) that I’d always wanted and, speaking of table tops…….in the midst of out big re-model failure, they had all the checker-board table tops piled up to be disposed of. I asked and they said sure, take one….which I did….actually one of the more unique ones. Most of them were just checker board tops but I chose the one with all odd siren images. 🙂 (will email you a pic) A friend is making a stand for it for me. So, glad about that, but I can tell you for sure, they TOSS alot of stuff that many of us would LOVE to have.
so much for being so ‘green’.
The only place I ever saw these screens was at the flagship San Francisco store. They were never at any of the small suburban stores I go into. The SF store used screens for the menu too, which I thought was very convenient because if the menu changes, corporate could just update them with out bothering the baristas or managers to do so.
I used to support stores in the Silicon Valley area, and quite a few had the LCD screens. I thought they were a great addition to stores, but I always thought they could be much more.
My thought was that the chalked menu board could be changed to an LCD screen that could alternate between the ‘Now Playing’ information, and rotating some marketing materials. The dynamics of a changing board would catch the customers’ eyes and might be more effective than the static messages we have now.
I wouldn’t change all the boards, that would be expensive, and subject to Murphy’s Law about breaking down. Plus with legal requirements like we have here in CA for caloric counts, we might be subject to penalties if they weren’t up and running with the info.
Just my 2 cents…..
@Blakeco123 – Sounds like you happened upon a Starbucks with test digital menu baords. I’m not totally surprised because I know they have toyed with the idea, and I think they even said there were a couple of them in San Diego.
http://www.starbucksmelody.com/2010/03/14/starbucks-experiments-with-digital-menus/
@ChrisW – I suspect that one reason these LCD screens are coming down is because there is zero return on investment, and it takes real people to keep the content up. I just wish they’d keep them going anyways – I have discovered new music by looking up and see what is now playing. But since Starbucks no longer sells a gazillion CDs in the stores (remember the tall rounders of them!?) they don’t really support much anymore. By the way, your idea of the chalk board as “now playing” is definitely part of the test dynamics – At least I saw the concept as you’re describing it at the store where I took the photo of the digital menu board – However, no music content, just features of new foods, coffee etc …
@Melody @adel I’d love to think there was a warehouse somewhere will all these things in it… I know whenever we’ve had any remodelling the old items have been taken away, and when I’ve asked where they were going, they were usually earmarked for other stores!
I also remember when stores were closing down one of our locations with a large back office space had about 6 pastry cases and 3 condiment bars in there… that was strange!
Melody curious do you know if the LCD screens are being removed from stores even if there is not going to be a remodeling?
So, what happened to the screens? Why did Starbucks remove them when it remodeled?