Teavana

Teavana Corporation was an American tea company, which previously had locations throughout the United States, Canada, Mexico, and the Middle East.[1] Starbucks acquired Teavana in 2012, and in 2017, Starbucks announced it would close all Teavana locations by 2018. As of 2022, a very limited variety of Teavana products continue to be sold at Starbucks.[2]

History

Teavana was started in Atlanta, Georgia, in 1997, with the opening of a teahouse at Phipps Plaza.[3] Teavana was founded by Andrew T. Mack, and his wife, who invested their life savings into the business.[4] Their idea was inspired by a road trip, noticing the gravitation of Americans towards fine wines and coffees in the United States.[5]

In late 2012, Starbucks stated that it would pay $620 million in cash to buy the company.[6] Three class-action lawsuits were commenced by shareholders of Teavana concerning the Starbucks buyout; these were settled on December 14, 2012 (subject to court approval).[7] The acquisition of Teavana by Starbucks was formally closed on December 31, 2012.[2][8] Teavana joined the Ethical Tea Partnership (ETP) in 2015.[9] On July 27, 2017, Starbucks announced it would close all 379 Teavana stores by 2018, partly due to underperformance.[10][11]

Simon Property Group, one of the largest U.S. mall operators, demanded Starbucks keep running the Teavana shops located in its malls, arguing in part that their closing would reduce traffic to surrounding stores and in December 2017 a judge ruled in Simon's favor.[12] On September 15, 2017, Cadillac Fairview sued Starbucks over Teavana closures in Canada.[13]

However, on January 18, 2018, Simon and Starbucks reached an agreement that would close the remaining 77 Teavana stores in Simon malls, ending the tea shop's existence as independent storefronts after nearly 21 years in business.[14]

Products

Teavana offered hot tea sachets and premade iced tea which are sold at Starbucks locations, as well as at supermarkets and external retailers where tea is sold.

Prior to the closure of all of their storefront locations, Teavana's retail stores were usually located in upscale shopping malls and designed to be "part tea bar, part tea emporium."[15] Individual cups of tea to go were offered for sale, and the retail locations offered free samples of various tea blends and tea varieties at their front door and within the store. Accessories for tea-drinking, such as cups and pots were also available in the stores.[16]

Teavana previously offered loose-leaf teas and herbal infusions, with tea categories such as: white, black, green, flavored & scented green, "blooming" white, flavored & scented black, oolong, and pu-erh teas, along with rooibos, herbal, organic matcha green tea, blooming tea, and Yerba Maté infusions. Teavana retail stores had previously offered various blends of each type of tea, and frequently promoted cross-blending different types of tea.[17] Teas were offered in several formats, such as loose-leaf tea, pre-filled tea tins, and tea sachets, or brewed as a to-go beverage.

In addition to loose tea, Teavana sold teaware products, including cast iron Tetsubin teapots, Bone China teapots, Japanese porcelain teapots and cups, stove-top kettles, electric kettles, milk frothers and automatic tea makers (produced by Australian company Breville), Japanese hot water dispensers and electric tea makers (produced by Zojirushi), tea measures, tea infusion and steeping wares such as the Teavana 'Perfectea Maker', contour tumblers, and tea infuser mugs. Teavana also sold all-natural rock sugar (non-GMO beet sugar) sourced from Belgium.[18]

See also

  • Tazo, another tea brand, formerly owned by Starbucks

References

  1. Map of retail locations. Teavana, retrieved 2011-05-03^
  2. Melissa Allison. Starbucks closes Teavana deal The Seattle Times, 2012-12-31, retrieved 2013-03-01^
  3. Arricca Elin SanSone. The Iconic Stores You Grew up With That Are No Longer Around Good Housekeeping, 2019-10-04, retrieved 2020-04-06^
  4. Ronald Holden. Starbucks Shutters All 379 Teavana Stores Forbes, retrieved 2020-04-06^
  5. Justin Rubner. Leaves of Green Atlanta Business Chronicle, 2005-02-07, retrieved 2019-01-03^
  6. Candice Choi. Starbucks Buys Teavana Huffington Post, 2012-11-15^
  7. Annie Gasparro. Teavana Reaches Settlement With Shareholders Over Starbucks Deal Deal Journal, Wall Street Journal, 2012-12-14, retrieved 2013-03-01^
  8. Starbucks Closes Teavana Acquisition Starbucks Newsroom, 2012-12-31, retrieved 2013-03-01^
  9. What We Do Ethical Tea Partnership, retrieved 2016-11-08^
  10. Starbucks is shutting all Teavana stores Los Angeles Times, 2017-07-27, retrieved 2019-01-03^
  11. Lauren Hirsch. Starbucks tanks on revenue miss, to sell Tazo tea brand to Unilever CNBC, 2017-11-02, retrieved 2017-11-03^
  12. Hayley Peterson. A tsunami of store closings is about to hit the US — and it's expected to eclipse the retail carnage of 2017 Business Insider, 2018-01-01, retrieved 2019-01-03^
  13. Cadillac Fairview Sues Starbucks Over Teavana Closures Retail Insider, 2017-09-18, retrieved 2018-01-11^
  14. Starbucks and Simon Reach Agreement in Teavana Store Closure Dispute Commercial Observer, 2018-01-18, retrieved 2018-01-21^
  15. About Us Teavana, retrieved 2011-10-13^
  16. Kate Taylor. Starbucks is the latest victim of the retail apocalypse Business Insider, retrieved 2020-04-06^
  17. Teavanna Tea Blends retrieved 23 October 2013^
  18. Teavana® Belgian Rock Sugar 1 Lb Teavana Store, retrieved 2018-01-11^