June 2025 Magazine
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Monthly magazine for June 2025

Intro

2/3 of American adults drank coffee yesterday - coffee plays a daily part in our lives and daily rituals (morning cup of coffee, coffee chats), where we spend our time (the 'third place' of coffee shops as a place to spend time outside of home or work), and the makeup of our cities and streets.

It also has continued playing a bigger role in our economy - more and more chains, with related trends like plant based milks benefiting from that growth.

I took a quick deep dive into coffee shops, here's a few snapshots of the state of coffee shops.

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1) Caffeine: What’s happening in the broader caffeine market, in which coffee largely sits

  • Tea – Globally, tea consumption remains 3 times that of coffee! Regions tend to be coffee or tea heavy (almost no countries have an equal mix) - tea heavy regions:
    • Broader Asia 
    • Middle East 
    • Mixed – Africa and Latin America
  • Coffee – 2/3 of US adults drank coffee yesterday. For most American adults, it is a daily part of our lives. Regions tend to be coffee or tea heavy (almost no countries have an equal mix) – coffee heavy regions:
    • North America
    • Western Europe
    • Australia/New Zealand
    • Brazil
    • Columbia
    • Mixed – Africa and Latin America
  • Soda
    • While a long-term category, in the 1990s Coke and Pepsi made major strides compared to coffee popularity and marketing.
    • Fast food meals normalized soda as the default beverage for millions of people
  • Energy Drinks
    • Millennials like these, and Gen Z likes these even more...
    • This category was fairly nascent until the 1990s, and over the last few decades drinks like Red Bull and Monster Energy have gained more and more consumers.
    • At coffee shops, these have names like Strawberry Yuzu Refresher and Mango Pineapple Flash.
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2) What's happening with coffee drinking today in the US

  • US Coffee History
    • Coffee became more mass market after Civil War when soliders were given it
    • By WWII got up to about 4 cups of coffee per day for US adults, before dropping steadily to about 2 cups a day in 1990.
  • There was a drop in Americans drinking coffee from 1990 – from about 67% to 50% of adults drinking coffee.
    • Coffee was fairly bad – much of what was sold was low quality coffee
    • Younger adults thought of coffee as old fashioned, coffee wasn’t cool anymore.
    • Few consumers saw café-going as an aspirational lifestyle – that shift began in mid 90’s
    • Coffee had bad health image – thought of harmful to health and contributing to anxiety and dehydration
    • Preference for sodas over coffee was rising
  • But then resurgence
    • Starbucks made coffee cool
    • Reversal of health image with coffee shown to have neutral or even good health impact
    • Better quality coffee
    • Consumer demand for affordable luxuries
  • Starbucks impact double click
    • Starbucks repositioned coffee from a commodity product one size fits all
    • Source better quality beans
    • Italian café vocabulary made ordering coffee feel more elevated
    • Rise of not just coffee but lattes and mochas (overcame the ‘coffee is bitter and bad’ image)
    • ‘third place’ in culture – another place outside home and work to hang out
    • Media/pop culture impact made coffee seem ubiquitous and a daily, premium habit
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3) Coffee Houses - recent history in the US

  • 1990: In 1990 it was mainly small chains and independent stores (5,000 total, $3.5 billion in coffeehouse sales), plus Starbucks with about 100 stores (Starbucks only had 15 stores in the mid-1980s).
  • 1990s: Then in 1990s Dunkin Donuts and Peets started growing.
  • 2000s: Chains started expanding, and by 2010 Starbucks had 10,000 stores.
  • 2010s: Then in 2010s another wave of chains came – Blue Bottle, Stumptown, La Colombe, etc.
  • 2020s: Post Covid has been an indie resurgence in cities
  • Steady rise of drive throughs: Throughout this time have had more drive through chains in suburbs and smaller cities.
  • Market Growth 1990 to Now: Now size of market has 10x’d in coffeehouse sales to over $35 billion
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4) US Coffee House Callouts (not quite exhaustive)

  • Titans (2) – 10,000+ stores
    • Starbucks (titan Sr.) 
    • Dunkin (titan Jr.)
  • Very big (6) – 100+ stores
    • Peet’s
    • Dutch Bros
    • Scooters
    • Coffee Bean Tea & Leaf
    • Blue Bottle
  • Relatively Big – several dozen stores
    • La Colombe
    • Gregory’s Coffee
    • Compass Coffee
    • Philz
    • Blank Street Coffee
    • Blue Stone
    • Tatte
  • Fairly New and Growing Fast (a few are starting to be very big with 100+ stores)
    • The Human Bean
    • 7Brew Drive trough
    • Better Buzz
    • Artly
    • Qargo
    • (low barriers to entry, more to come)
  • Small Chains and Independent/Artisanal
    • Many!
  • Other 
    • Also cafe, bakeries, McDonalds, etc…all in the coffee game too, an enormously varied and competitive market 
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5) Coffee House Economics

  • Costs (monthly for independent decent but somewhat struggling coffee house)
    • Rent: $11,000
    • Labor: $22,000
    • Costs of Goods Sold (cups, milk, etc.): $12,000
    • Other: $16,000
    • Tax: $2,500
    • Profit: $7,000 ($84,000 annually – this is decent but can be much more)
  • Sales pace (very general, varies significantly depending on location, rent, etc.)
    • Decent: 300-400 tickets per day (one person buying a coffee and a muffin would count as 1 ticket)
    • Healthy: 500-625
    • Note Starbucks is nearly 1,000 per day
  • Pace
    • Morning (7-11am): About 1 ticket a minute during rush hour
    • Midday (11am-2pm): About 1 ticket every 2 minutes
    • Afternoon (post 2pm): About 1 ticket every 3 minutes
  • Tech
    • Automate
    • Mobile ordering can take 20-30% of orders and make a huge impact on throughput/reducing congestion
  • Labor
    • Shops tend to reduce number of staff working over the course of the day (say from 4 first half of the day to 2-3 in the afternoon)
  • Non-coffee and tea beverage and food sales help increase margins
    • Food – see next post
    • Non-caffeine beverages: including bottled water, soft drinks, fruit juices, smoothies
  • Non-food and beverage sales
    • Merchandise (shirt, hat, mug, etc.)
    • Coffee beans
    • Selling cans (La Colombe to Whole Foods for example)
    • Wholesale selling
    • Corporate Catering
  • Other
    • Charging an extra 75 cents for oat milk or almond milk can lead to $32,000 extra revenue per year, per above cost breakdown can make it enormous difference on profit
    • Drive through is generally more profitable (such as for Dunkin)
    • Bigger stores have almost all started regionally for a period of time before expanding
    • Subscriptions have been helping with customer loyalty
  • Valuations
    • Aside from titans, the larger chains (100+ chains) have tended to be valued at $500 million to $1 billion
  • All time great investments in the world of caffeine
    • Starbucks
    • Monster Energy Drink and Red Bull
    • Coke and Pepsi
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6) Food's impact on margins

  • High margin food can be a significant margin boost (especially as many costs like rent are fixed and labor is roughly equal whether selling food or not)
  • Common foods sold at coffee houses
    • Pastries and baked goods (works great in the morning but people also buy all day, impulse add on)
    • Breakfast sandwiches & breakfast burritos
    • Grab and go salads, sandwiches/wraps, avocado toasts, and grain bowls for lunch crowd
    • High end packaged snacks like nuts or chocolate – near register, easy upsell
    • Chia pudding, overnight oats, yoghurt
    • [non-caffeine beverages, including bottled water, soft drinks, fruit juices, smoothies]
  • Ready to go – either immediately ready or can be warmed within a minute or so
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7) Plant based milks

  • Alternative milk (oat, almond, etc.) has taken over from soy milk and skim milk, with soy milk in particular fading in popularity
  • Oat and almond milk are the two main alt milks, all others remain niche
  • Oat milk has been eclipsing almond milk – preferred for flavor and sustainability messaging. Oat milk was introduced at Starbucks in 2021, has exploded in popularity, is now required in modern coffee shops as a must have. Jury is still out if it will be a commodity or brand-driven (will consumers ask for ‘oat milk’ or ‘oatly’?)
  • Plant based creamers are growing faster than plant based milks
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8) Few trend callouts

  • Importance of Drink Visuals – drinks that look good on Instagram can help coffee shop popularity considerably, see a few examples here
  • Coffee houses have become a core part of city fabric and culture – they make cities more beautiful and nicer to live in, give a third place to spend time outside your home.
  • ‘Not your basic muffin’ – homemade or premium baked goods, unique takes, seasonal specials (e.g. pumpkin break in the fall)
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9) Favorite coffee shops and drinks? – comment here!

Some of my favorites

  • Oat draft latte – La Colombe (chain)
  • Nola shakerato – blue bottle (chain)
  • Ice blended toffee lattee – the tea and coffee conservatory (LA)
  • Matchaful – iced Oishi berry matcha (NY)
  • Peanut Butter & Rasberry Jam Oat Lattee – Buddy Buddy (Brussels)
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