Archive for 6 May 2008

From Vancouver

| Randy Westgren |

I have been hunkered down in Vancouver for several days, teaching the final module of an executive education course. One of the amusing elements of the course is that it migrates from Halifax, Nova Scotia, to Vancouver, British Columbia during the year, with intermediate stops in Calgary and Niagara Falls. Execs and instructors get to spend time in some innovative, entrepreneurial firms outside their own regions (and escape the classroom).

From the Listel Hotel on Robson Street, one can reach 29 Starbucks stores within a 2 km by 2.5 km area of downtown. There are seven Starbucks on Robson Street alone, between the 400 and 1700 blocks — a 20 minute walk. Among these are the stores at 1099 Robson and 1100 Robson; they face each other kitty-corner across Thurlow Street. One of the execs stated that this constitutes a unique phenomenon within the Starbucks chain — two stores so closely juxtaposed.

1. Has anyone seen or heard of a similar situation in another city?

2. Has someone written about this (apparent) strategy of location-packing Starbucks stores?

BTW, if you are a Starbucks-hater, there twice as many direct competitors in the same 5 square km area, including 13 Blenz Coffee outlets, which is a local competitor with international ambitions (www.blenz.com). The best thing they do isn’t coffee; they will make you Japanese ceremonial green tea while you wait — bamboo whisk and all.

6 May 2008 at 11:20 am 6 comments

More Free Stuff: Herbert Simon and Edward Banfield

| Peter Klein |

In my list of Cowles monographs I forgot to include several classics by Herbert Simon, including his 1951 paper “A Formal Theory of the Employment Relationship,” issued by Cowles as a discussion paper in 1950. Here’s the full set of Simon materials at Cowles. Also, from a commentator over at orgtheory.net I learn that several of Edward Banfield’s books, including The Moral Basis of a Backward Society (1958) and The Unheavenly City (1970) are available as PDFs at this site.

6 May 2008 at 9:35 am Leave a comment


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