Starbuck baristas often misspell customers' name. It is not because they are slow; the truth is they are highly educated for service workers. Starbucks baristas are bored, college graduates. Customers' name is never correct for one plain reason, because the baristas may be more menacing than they seem.
Getting your name misspelled, while picking up your coffee is the representation of the first world problem, it seems that names are just difficult to spell, but baristas may just be messing up with customers, if they got a common name misspelled, like "JANE" or "JOY."
Well, of course, it is a usual case of Schadenfreude with some positive impact. They get to drink in your misery and confusion at having a name "JOHN," misspelled, well customers gets a Facebook image out of it. Baristas are putting some thrills into a duller factor of their job, while customers are trending in the social media. It is a well-worth trivial crime.
In 1971, Starbucks was built in Seattle as a coffee bean retailer and roaster, the firm has rapidly expanded. On 1987, the company has launched two new retail stores daily. It had been earning well in 1980s, until it lost a lot of money during its Midwest and B.C. expansion. It bounced back in 1991, when it had become a trend in California. The first store outside Canada and United States was in Tokyo, it was opened in 1996, and other international stores now contributes to the fortune of the largest coffee retail firm in the world. It also expanded in Asia and South East Asia, now it operated 300 stores in the U.S. and 900 more stores globally in 2009. Now, the company has grown in over 60 countries with more than 20,000 stores. Their vision is to unite and take their suppliers, partners, neighbors and customers to a higher level of coffee experience and positive change.