@thedecodesignshop Everyone is right. The absolute best idea is to take down anything that even says Starbucks, Disney, Hocus Pocus, etc. You could purchase the same types of cups (blank) in bulk from a wholesale distributor and put your own phrases, designs, etc. on them. People would also request custom cups with their own phrases and designs. Right now, I bet you could sell some quarantine-type cups with phrases in relation to that. However,, keep in mind you can't mention COVID or any other term used for it (that I know of). You just have to make sure that any phrase you use isn't under copyright. Many phrases are....I didn't realize how many until I saw a thread about it a few weeks ago. There's potential here but you don't want to risk losing a shop you just opened. Yes, there are MANY other shops getting away with it right now. But, believe me....shops are constantly being suspended or closed for good. It just takes a bit of time because so many shops are reported. Again, there's potential. Just use your creativity and create your own designs and phrases for the cups. Be different, be unique, be you! I LOVE Starbucks lol but I'd rather not be that girl carrying around the mermaid cup. I like the personalized cups my friends and family members get me....it's just kind of my thing lol

With partners from Starbucks and WestRock Paper Mill, we shared our proof-of-concept project, and discussed the performance and fiber recovery of single use coffee cups, during a panel at the SPC Advance 2018 Conference: A Fix For Your Daily Coffee Fix. The discussion also included participants from the Sustainable Packaging Coalition (SPC), Closed Loop Fund and Kotkamills Oy.


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In 1997, Starbucks was beginning to expand outside of the U.S. and Canada and introduced the first of its holiday cups to generate interest, swapping the standard design for red cups with festive imagery on them.

I love it when they use names on the cups and actually call them out. The store I go to does not use names on the cups but they always make a point to have conversation with the customers. I always love going.

When I worked at Starbucks, I always wrote names on cups! We were an extremely busy cafe store just 1 mile down the road from the Corp HQ for Walmart (aka Walmart Home Office) in Bentonville, AR. I have to say that by using names and having the small conversations with customers, I felt a connection to our customers and I got to know them quite well. I was there for just over 8 years and now, a year since I left for an opportunity to work in Social Media, I can still remember the names and drinks of a vast majority of the customers and they remember me. In this day and age of all digital interaction, it means a lot to hear people actually address you by your name.

After pausing the use of reusable cups at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, the company reintroduced the practice in summer 2021 with contactless procedures in place. Starbucks is currently testing several options for reusable cups that will enable customers to grab their eco-friendly cup of joe in-store, at the drive-thru or via mobile order.

One of its pilot programs, called "Borrow a Cup," is designed to put a Starbucks-branded reusable cup in customers' hands with the intention that they return it to the store to be professionally cleaned. The cups are then put back into the rotation for other customers. Another initiative completely removes disposable cups and instead relies on personal cups, reusables or a Starbucks cup for in-house use only. The company noted that its test run in South Korea prevented 200,000 cups from hitting landfills in the program's first three months.

Not for me. Never cared much for Starbucks. But that wouldn't really matter anyway. I'm the only coffee drinker in the house, and I always use my insulated travel mug. However, I have two full shelves in the kitchen cabinets full of ceramic coffee cups stacked on top of each other. When you spend a career in the military, you get 'presented' with coffee cups all the time, and both of us had military careers. Beyond that, even though she drinks tea or hot chocolate maybe two or three times a year, the wife still can't resist buying souvenir coffee cups when we go places. So, please, NO MORE coffee cups! ?

Prior to the pandemic, customers in stores across the country participated in bring-your-own-cup programs, but many brands temporarily suspended the initiatives during the COVID-19 pandemic over initial hygiene and safety concerns that were later disproved. Personal cups already are accepted in-store at all U.S. Starbucks locations, and they will be accepted at all drive-thrus starting next year. The company has run smaller reuse pilots in Colorado and Arizona.

Turn aims to have collected cups back in use within three days. However, time can vary if customers choose to keep the cups for a while before returning them. Data on this topic and the cup return rate will be analyzed during and after the testing period, but it is not yet available because the program is only a week old, Everton said.

Right now the program has single-use lids on the reusable cups, but eventually reusable lids have the potential to be incorporated, Everton said. A shorter-term goal is to transition from a pilot project to a fully-scaled, permanent reusable cup program.

ASU, in collaboration with Starbucks, is taking strides to decrease plastic waste by replacing single-use plastic cups with reusable cups at the nine participating Starbucks locations on ASU campuses.

A study conducted by Clean Water Action found that each minute Starbucks consumes over 8,000 cups, which roughly translates to over 4 billion cups in a year. Given that most Starbucks cups are made of plastic, they cannot be effectively recycled and oftentimes end up in the trash.

"Plastic pollution is minimizing the positive things ASU has been working on to be more sustainable," said Nandana Bellamkonda, a sophomore studying sustainability. Even with LEED-certified buildings and renewable energy sources, plastic cups outweigh that progress, Bellamkonda said.

"Starbucks' reusable cup policy encourages students to think more critically about the waste they produce," Claus said. "Through incentives for using reusable cups rather than plastic, Starbucks is both reducing waste and, hopefully, reminding students of the importance of living a sustainable lifestyle."

According to the Starbucks website, the bins are made up of materials that are "equivalent to repurposing 1,350 single-use cups," demonstrating Starbucks' dedication to sustainability and its progress toward fulfilling its goal of cutting their waste footprint in half by 2030.

Starbucks is the biggest coffee company in the world. The impact of its waste on our water, oceans, and health is dramatic. A decade ago the company committed to change. It pledged to introduce a fully recyclable cup by 2015 and to selling at least 25% of its drinks in reusable cups. To date Starbucks has yet to develop that recyclable cup and only 1.6% of drinks it sells are consumed in non-disposable cups or mugs. It is nowhere near the goals it set in 2008 yet it is urging a no vote no on a shareholder-led proposal asking the company to prepare a report on efforts to develop a comprehensive approach to sustainable packaging at the 2018 shareholder meeting in March.

But this is the first time that stores across an entire market are getting rid of their disposable cups, Landers said. Now, customers can purchase their drink at one store and return the cup to any other store in the area.

Starbucks is partnering with Turn Systems, which collects the return bins, washes the cups and then returns them for use. When customers return a cup, they can register with Turn for a chance to win a prize, and customers who use their own personal cup are eligible for extra Starbucks rewards stars.

Starbucks is bringing back its plain red cups for the holiday season starting Nov. 10, the company announced Friday. When the cup debuted last year, some consumers accused Starbucks of waging war on Christianity after Starbucks removed images of snowflakes, trees, and ornaments that covered the cups in years prior.

The 2014 cups were very abstract, hinting at Christmas tree and snowflake shapes with dark red brush strokes. These finished in the middle of the pack because they failed to inspire anyone. For the most part, the experts felt they were fine. Ultimately, the designs felt unfocused and a bit messy, but were mostly just not memorable.

Committed to 100% Ethical Coffee Sourcing in partnership with Conservation International O please visit www.starbucks.com/social-impact

Keurig, K-Cup, and the K logo are trademarks of Keurig Green Mountain, Inc., used with permission. ff782bc1db

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