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Starbucks lays off 1,100 corporate employees as coffee chain streamlines

Starbucks plans to lay off 1,100 corporate employees globally as new Chairman and CEO Brian Niccol streamlines operations.
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FILE - A costumer exits a Starbucks store in Oakland, Calif., Jan. 16, 2025. (AP Photo/Godofredo A. V谩squez, File)

Starbucks plans to lay off 1,100 corporate employees globally as new streamlines operations.

In a letter to employees released Monday, Niccol said the company will inform employees who are being laid off by midday Tuesday. Niccol said Starbucks is also eliminating several hundred open and unfilled positions.

鈥淥ur intent is to operate more efficiently, increase accountability, reduce complexity and drive better integration,鈥 Niccol wrote in the letter.

Starbucks has 16,000 corporate support employees worldwide, but that includes some employees who aren't impacted, like roasting and warehouse staff. Baristas in the company's stores 鈥 who make up most of the company's 361,000 employees worldwide 鈥 are not included in the layoffs.

Niccol that corporate layoffs would be announced by early March. He said the company needed to reduce complexity and ensure that all work is overseen by someone who can make decisions.

鈥淥ur size and structure can slow us down, with too many layers, managers of small teams and roles focused primarily on coordinating work,鈥 Niccol wrote.

Starbucks' layoffs come as other big companies make similar moves. said last week it was eliminating 1,750 jobs, or 15% of its corporate workforce, in the first major layoffs in the company鈥檚 53-year history. And last month, tire maker closed a plant in LaVergne, Tennessee, and laid off 700 workers there.

Starbucks hired Niccol last fall to turn around sluggish sales. He has said he wants to 鈥 especially during the morning rush 鈥 and reestablish stores as community gathering places.

Niccol is also cutting items from Starbucks' menu and experimenting with its ordering algorithms to better handle its mix of mobile, drive-thru and in-store orders.

Starbucks' global same-store sales, or sales at locations open at least a year, fell 2% in its , which ended Sept. 29. In the U.S., customers tired of price increases and growing wait times. In China, its second-largest market, Starbucks faced growing competition from cheaper rivals.

However, in its most recent quarter, the company after Niccol made changes that were visible to customers, such as the decision to for non-dairy milk.

Starbucks shares rose less than 2% Monday.

Dee-ann Durbin, The Associated Press