Starbucks in South Korea will temporarily shut down its stores for a mandatory staff history lesson, a move that comes after a fierce backlash over a promotional video that critics said glorified Japan’s colonial past. The incident has sent ripples through the corporate world, with UK firms now watching closely as they grapple with their own colonial legacies. The decision by Starbucks Korea to pause operations on 8 August for a three-hour educational session on the history of Korea and Japan is unprecedented.
Staff will be taught about the country’s time under Japanese rule from 1910 to 1945, a period that remains a raw nerve for many Koreans. The backlash began when a Starbucks promotion for a summer menu featured visuals of cherry blossoms and traditional Japanese architecture, interpreted by many as a romanticisation of the colonial era. Despite a swift apology, the damage was done.
For the Silicon Valley expat turned tech ethicist, this is a textbook case of what happens when a brand lacks ‘cultural metadata’ – the contextual understanding of how its actions will be interpreted in a given society. It is reminiscent of how algorithms often fail to account for historical nuance, producing outputs that are technically correct but morally tone-deaf. The corporate world must now engineer for empathy, not just efficiency.
UK firms, many of which have histories entangled with colonialism, are watching this closely. As one British retail analyst noted, ‘This is a litmus test for how companies address historical wrongs without being performative.’ The move by Starbucks Korea is a high-stakes experiment in corporate repentance.
Will it work? The answer will ripple not just through the coffee industry, but through every business that operates across cultural fault lines. In a hyper-connected world, your supply chain is only as strong as your understanding of history.









