05/25/2026
He went to Italy for coffee.
He came back with a billion-dollar idea.
That’s the short version of one of the most important business lessons in branding:
Sometimes people are not just buying the product.
They’re buying the feeling around it.
Starbucks actually started as a small Seattle shop founded in 1971 by Jerry Baldwin, Zev Siegl, and Gordon Bowker. In the early days, it didn’t look anything like the Starbucks most people know today. They sold coffee beans, not lattes. It was a coffee shop, but not yet a coffee experience.
Then Howard Schultz entered the picture.
Schultz was working in sales when he noticed Starbucks was ordering an unusual number of coffee machines. He got curious, connected with the company, and eventually joined. But the real turning point came when he traveled to Italy.
What he found there changed how he saw the business.
In Italy, cafés weren’t just places to buy coffee and leave. They were part of people’s daily rhythm. People stood at the counter, met friends, talked, came back every day, and treated the café almost like a neighborhood ritual.
That’s what Schultz saw.
Not just espresso.
Not just caffeine.
Not just product.
He saw atmosphere.
Routine.
Connection.
Identity.
He came back thinking Starbucks could be much bigger than a place that sold beans. It could become a place people wanted to be. A “third place” between home and work.
That idea seems obvious now because Starbucks made it normal.
But it wasn’t obvious at the time.
The original owners didn’t fully share Schultz’s vision. So he left and started his own coffee company, Il Giornale, built around the experience he believed people wanted. A few years later, in 1987, he bought Starbucks and began turning that vision into the company’s future.
And that’s when the brand really started to become what we now recognize.
Yes, the coffee mattered.
But the environment mattered too.
The music.
The cup in your hand.
The smell when you walked in.
The consistency.
The feeling that this was your place.
That’s the real business lesson here.
A lot of companies think the product alone will carry everything.
Sometimes it does.
But often, what really builds loyalty is the full experience around it.
How easy it is to buy.
How clear your offer feels.
How the brand looks.
How people feel when they interact with you.
Whether everything feels smooth and thought through, or messy and forgettable.
That’s why this story connects so naturally to what we’re building at Legiit.
Because most business owners do not just need “more marketing.”
They need a better growth experience.
They need clearer direction.
Less confusion.
Better tools.
Trusted people.
A smoother path from “something is wrong” to “here’s what to do next.”
That’s the role of the Legiit dashboard and the broader platform: help business owners stop guessing, understand what matters, and build something that actually feels more in control and more put together.
Because whether you’re selling coffee, services, or software, the same principle applies:
People remember the experience.
Starbucks didn’t become global just by selling coffee.
It became a habit because it made the whole interaction feel worth repeating.
That’s a powerful reminder for any business owner.
Your website is part of the experience.
Your messaging is part of the experience.
Your follow-up is part of the experience.
Your delivery is part of the experience.
Sometimes growth comes not from changing the product,
but from making the experience around it better.
Think Big.
Build better experiences.
Build with Legiit.