Starbucks Launches “Tweet a Coffee” in Canada

Give the gift of 140 grams of caffeine or less.

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By Cameron Conway

In the ever-brewing Canadian coffee wars, Starbucks (NASDAQ:SBUX) last week launched its new “Tweet-a-Coffee” gifting program.

Through its partnership with Twitter (NYSE: TWTR), the coffee giant has brought to Canada the ability to give a $5 gift card to someone through a Tweet. The e-card can then be brought up on your smartphone and scanned by your local barista.

To participate in the program, you must register here to create a Starbucks account and then link it to a credit card and Twitter account. After that, you simply Tweet @tweetacoffee to anyone you like — friends, family, or even your favorite Internet financial writer. Just like that, a $5 gift card is transported to the recipient’s smartphone.

This innovation is an important step for Starbucks as it attempts to enter the digital landscape to draw in both more sales and advertising.

“Advergifting”
By offering this service, the people using it become walking, tweeting advertisers; every time someone sends a tweet to @tweetacoffee, all of their followers see it.

This gives Starbucks unprecedented advertising range and access to market information through everyday generosity. The company no doubt hopes that by offering a small amount ($5), consumers won’t overthink the purchase. It’s a low enough number to buy something (usually) and not enough to consult your budget.

The U.S. launch
Starbucks launched this service in the U.S. back in October 2013 and has seen a rather impressive response from customers.

Over the first five weeks of the program, $183,555 had been spent by 27,000 unique users, of which 34% bought more than one card (according to Keyhole). Also, current Twitter data shows a total of 58,271 tweets have been sent out.

The extra hot, low fat, soy conclusion
With this foray into the digital landscape, Starbucks has taken a rather different step ahead of Tim Hortons for the dominance of Canadian coffee addicts.

Through “Advergifting,” Starbucks seeks to take advantage of the increasingly tech-savvy Canadian market space. It’s able to both fuel people’s unashamed coffee thirst and access their precious market data at the same time.

This article represents the opinion of the writer, who may disagree with the “official” recommendation position of a Motley Fool premium service or advisor. We’re Motley! Questioning an investing thesis — even one of our own — helps us all think critically about investing and make decisions that help us become smarter, happier, and richer, so we sometimes publish articles that may not be in line with recommendations, rankings or other content.

Cameron Conway does not own any shares in the companies mentioned. Fool co-founders David and Tom Gardner both own shares of Starbucks, as does The Motley Fool.

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