Starbucks to close all stores in South Korea early for mandatory history training

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The coffee chain faced widespread criticism and reduced sales after a marketing campaign evoked a brutal 1980 military crackdown on pro-democracy protesters.
Delivery Platform Union To Boycott Starbucks In South Korea.
A Starbucks in Seoul, South Korea, on May 21.Kichul Shin / NurPhoto via Getty Images file

SEOUL, South Korea — Starbucks Korea will shut all stores in the country at 3 p.m. on June 22 for staff training on historical awareness and social sensitivity, the operator Shinsegae Group said on Monday, following public backlash over a marketing campaign.

The coffee chain faced widespread criticism and suffered a “very significant” drop in sales after last month’s campaign that evoked a brutal 1980 military crackdown on pro-democracy protesters.

Shinsegae’s affiliate E-Mart owns Starbucks Korea, which launched its “Tank Day” tumbler promotion on the anniversary of ​the May 18 Gwangju Uprising, when the military government deployed troops and tanks to suppress pro-democracy demonstrations.

Starbucks Korea headquarters staff and executives from Shinsegae’s E-Mart division will undergo the same training on June 17 at the group’s in-house training center, while Shinsegae Chairman Chung Yong-jin and affiliate CEOs will attend a separate session on June 24, the group said.

Shinsegae said the move reflected how seriously it viewed the recent marketing controversy and its commitment to preventing a recurrence. Chung previously apologized publicly over the controversy.

Gwangju Uprising, South Korea
Troops round up pro-democracy protesters in Gwangju, South Korea, in 1980.Bettmann / Getty Images

The history awareness lecture, led by a history professor from Sungkyunkwan University, will review the major events in South Korea’s modern and contemporary history since the 1950s and discuss how they should be understood, it said.

A separate social sensitivity training, conducted by a sociology professor at the same university, will look at how companies should consider social issues such as history, labor, gender and human rights in marketing and other corporate activities, the company said.

The company said it would be the first nationwide early closure of Starbucks Korea stores since the chain opened in the country in 1999.

Starbucks Korea also plans to overhaul marketing approval procedures, including introducing a social-sensitivity checklist covering history, commemorative dates, politics, disasters, military issues, gender, violence and hate expressions, Shinsegae said.

Starbucks Korea had more than 2,000 stores in the country as of end-2024, according to its annual impact report. It is the country’s No. 1 coffee chain in terms of customer payments, according to data firm Wiseapp.

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