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Robert Vernick, Peter Yeung
A podcast delivering wine perspectives ex-chateau. Insights, analysis, and perspectives on news and trends in the wine industry beyond winemaking, such as marketing, finance, and consumer trends. From noted wine blogger Robert Vernick (@wineterroir) and leading wine business consultant and author of Luxury Wine Marketing Peter Yeung (@winebizguy), this podcast navigates the business of wine with unique perspectives and insights. Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Creating the Wine Experience w/ NA Wines w/ Duncan Shouler, Giesen 0%
With the health and wellness and moderation trends booming, the non-alcoholic wine market has been growing quickly off a small base. Launched in 2019, the Giesen 0% range has solidified its position as one of the leaders in the NA wine market. Duncan Shouler, Director of Innovation, explains how the 0% range was developed, the critical elements of non-alcoholic wine, the current market conditions, and what it will take for the non-alcoholic wine market to succeed.Detailed Show Notes: Duncan’s background - was in marine biology and shifted to wine ~20 years agoGiesen - family owned, 40 years old, large winery (crushes ~20k tons/year), a broad range of wines from large scale to single vineyardStarted non-alcoholic (“NA”) range 5 years ago (2019)~17% of production today, growingHas a more significant reach and impact on the market vs. regular winesThe creation of the NA range came from a fitness challenge in 2019, when he could not drink alcohol for 1 month and discovered there were no good choices in the NA space. Spinning cone technology (good for quality as it uses lower temps than other processes) also became available in NZ at that timeNA winemaking process - create regular wine, then remove alcohol; for red wine, you need to balance the tannins (need ripe, soft tannins)More expensive to make - costs 15-20% moreNeed to replace ~25% of volumeNeed to go through spinning cone technologyLower cost from no alcohol excise taxesNA taste - loses some of alcohol’s texture, body, heatNA wines age similarly to regular wine (except in cans)NA wine markets - still in growth mode, needs higher quality wines to succeedThe US is ahead of most markets, and the UK is slower with more traditional drinkersMainland Europe is booming, and NZ is behindMost off-premise, some growing pains (e.g., Boisson closed its stores), mostly bought where people buy alcoholOn-premise still embracing category (Giesen launching super premium range to target on-premise)Most large players (e.g., Constellation, Treasury) are looking at NA wineNA wine drinkers - originally abstainers driving growth, now people substituting wine driving growth from moderation trend; broad market from boomers to legal age Gen Z; 35-60 females largest cohortPrice points aligned with regular wine ($9 low end, up to $18/bottle, some products ~$55/bottle)Removed alcohol of high quality can be used for other things (e.g., gin, biofuel)NA wines can have up to 0.5% abv, Giesen wines 0.4-0.5% abvYou need to consume 5 bottles of NA wine to get 1 glass of 13.5% ABV wine.45% abv similar to ripe bananas, some fruit juices, breadNA wine should still be kept away from children as it is still a wine experienceMarketing NA winesLow calorie is significant; Giesen is low in sugar (drives calories), which plays into the health and wellness trendMost effective - social media and influencers - play well with Millennial and older Gen Z’s, essential NA wine growth categoryOlder consumers know Giesen from regular wineNutritional and ingredient labeling - mandatory for regular wine in the EU; NA is a food product and requires itGiesen back labels specific for each wine, the main driver of differences are in sugar contentNutritional data has some positive elements (e.g., potassium)Large serving size (12 ounces, ~½ bottle) driven by US FDA, looking to change back to a 5-ounce glass Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
48:4022/11/2024
Always have distribution w/ Cheryl Durzy, LibDib
Having struggled to manage and maintain distribution for her family winery, Cheryl Durzy, CEO of LibDib, decided to start her own distributor. In comes LibDib, a tech-enabled distributor that lets any alcohol producer have distribution in most of the key US markets. Cheryl provides background on the US 3-tier system, the role of a distributor, and how LibDib is helping producers get distribution, enable wine sales, and become a tech platform for other distributors. Detailed Show Notes: US 3-Tier SystemPut in after prohibition to keep one tier from owning alcohol distributionTiers - producer, distributor, retailerUS distribution heavily consolidated into 3 large ones, lots of smaller specialty distributors vs. many distributors in the 70s/80sDistributor functionHelps consolidate suppliers for trade accounts; accounts don’t have resources to manage each supplier separately (e.g., invoices, checks)Pay taxes, do complianceLogistics (heavy, fragile product)Customer service (mistakes, breakage, returns, samples)Sometimes act as a winery’s salesforceGetting a distributor2024 - distributors are shedding brands vs. taking on new onesTypically - look for fit w/in a distributor’s portfolio, pick someone with a good reputationDistributors will ask - what will be your investment in the market? How often will you be here? Do you have feet on the street?LibDib - enables wineries to sell themselves, a tech-enabled distributorStarted as a wholesaler in 2017 (CA, NY), enables distributor for any producerThe platform enables rich content and e-commerceHas license in 9 states, enabled through RNDC in 6 states (e.g., Texas)~1,500 suppliers w/ active accounts, ~700 wineries w/ ~450 actively sellingOriginally focused on spirits, wineries have increased by ~50% in the last few yearsUses FedEx to send wine, integrated API to track status, negotiated good rates New markets launching late 2024 / early 2025LibDib use casesGet wine to specific accounts in a marketEnable wine brokers in other statesImporters sell directly to accountsShip special projects from large wineries that distributors don’t want to touchPros/cons of LibDibPro - always have distribution, good communications/customer service, good technology experience for producers and trade accountsCons - no salesforce, need to be a little tech-savvyBusiness modelMarkup of 14-18% on sales (vs. 30-35% for most distributors) + producer pays for shippingSubscription service (Gold, Silver, Plus) - get lower markups and services (e.g., portfolio management, VIP chain assistance, advertising on platform)~250 subscriptions (of 1,500), mainly on Gold for chain servicesRNDC partnership - OnDemand divisionOnboard w/ both RNDC and LibDib, no sales support28% markup, inclusive of shipping6 states, ~400 suppliersMost people want to get regular distribution, which can act as a trial for RNDCTrade account benefits~30k accounts (~50% active), not including RNDC statesNo minimum shipmentsEnables direct contact w/ wineriesAccess to smaller items not available elsewhereLibTech (launched Jan 2024 in TN)RNDC invested in the last round, and LibDib built e-RNDCSelling e-commerce platform as SaaS to other distributorsLibDib is developing AI tools for suppliers, early 2025 launch Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
50:0013/11/2024
Building brand ambassadors through hospitality w/ Meaghan Frank, Dr. Konstantin Frank Winery
As the pioneer of Vitis Vinifera in the Eastern US, Dr. Konstantin Frank is one of the key leaders of the Fingers Lakes region in New York. Meaghan Frank, a fourth-generation vintner, has been leading the charge to evolve its hospitality program to create brand ambassadors for the winery and the region. Its 1886 Wine Experience has won Best Wine Tour by USA Today in the last two years. Meaghan breaks down their hospitality program and its impact on their business. Detailed Show Notes: Finger Lakes region, NY - 150 wineries (of 400 in NY), NW NY State - 5 hrs from NYCSkinny, deep lakes that moderate weatherGlaciers left diverse soilsTourism-driven, seasonal visitors (spring to fall) for lakes, hiking, close to Niagara Falls, Corning Museum of GlassDr. Konstantin Frank - PhD in Viticulture from Odesa, Ukraine; a grape scientist; fled to NY during WWII35 years of cold climate grape growing experience when moved to NY1st to plant vinifera in Eastern USPlanted experiment station in the 1950s - 68 varieties, including Furmit, Pedro Ximenez, and Touriga Nacional) to research what would work bestDr. K Frank Winery17 vinifera varieties → 40 wines60% wholesale, 40% DTC40 states, 9 export markets (5%, incl Japan, Aruba (lots of NY visitors), UK)DTC 60% e-commerce (driven by wine club), 40% hospitalityHospitality programThe goal is to create brand ambassadors and loyalty, get the word out about the Finger LakesInspired by Australian hospitality programs - private, educational~40k visitors/year (#1 PA - 1 hour away, NJ, OH, NY core markets) - all seated, paidPre-pandemic - ~80k visitors/year for free bar tastingsMoved to an experience-driven program with wine educators, take advantage of lake viewThree experiences: Eugenia’s Garden - modeled after great grandmother’s garden, most casual, can do a la carte glasses/bottles/flights; enables people to enjoy the day; targets a younger demographicSignature Seated ($15pp) - most popular, educational, 1 hr, 6 wines, 5 different themes that are part of the winery’s story (e.g., traditional sparkling, Riesling pioneer, groundbreaking grapes, red wines)The 1886 Wine Experience ($75pp) - only May-Oct, 2-2.5 hrs, led by wine educator, a tour of the vineyard, sparkling and still wine cellars, seated tasting of 4 wines with bites, followed by additional tastings; won best wine tour by USA Today last 2 years; lots of 1st-time visitors book 1886 due to unique natureLessons learned - used to do 6 wine flight w/ bites, which was too many; did themed months (e.g., sparkling) - did not work with mostly touristsDifferentiators - spend lots of time, has a separate private space for 1886Wine club evolutionUsed to have people pay upfront for the year - bigger barrier to signing up, always feel like “playing catchup” to ensure value delivered, concentrated work during shipment periodsMoved to more subscription model - quarterly, 3 wines w/ default package, fully customizable, no upfront fee, 20% discount on wines, and get free tastings (no limit)8% club conversion - the only way to get free tastings now, used to waive w/ 4 bottle purchaseLocals small portion of the club - pickup option only 10%, PA #1Avg tenure 1.5 years, seeing it extend with the new club modelPopular winesHospitality - Rkatsiteli #1, traditional method sparklingWholesale - #1 & #2 - dry & semi-dry RieslingRiesling 60% of production, traditional method growingIncreasing issues around climate change - 2023 had the largest spring frost in history, increasing water issues Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
46:2618/10/2024
Bringing More People Into Wine w/ Jacki Strum, Wine Enthusiast Media
With ~2M monthly sessions on their newly unified commerce and media website, Wine Enthusiast continues to be a beacon for the wine industry. Jacki Strum, President of Wine Enthusiast Media, details their new wine review platform and global wine travel directory, democratizing access to wine and wine experiences globally. These initiatives help bring more people into the world of wine, including the younger generations, a critical part of building a vibrant wine industry. Detailed Show Notes: Covid altered the business model, led to re-structured organization and unified media and commerce divisions on wineenthusiast.com2022 - WE paused reviews for emerging wine regions to recalibrate systemsExisting tasting process1 of 2 publications that review every wine blind (high cost), taste in flights w/in region and price bracketsNeed to store, archive, organize wines, set up tastings (in paper bags with numbers), and hire reviewers50% of reviews are done at HQ (imported wines), and West Coast wines are done locallyThe manual process of filling out a pdf and putting that into the box with wines, manually inputted into J Guide (legacy system, 20 years old), then stored and organized for tastingNew tasting platform (Sept 2024) - anyone can submit a wine for review and all will be reviewedNew digital platform - bar code scanners, printed tabs, can track shipments and deliveries, a more fluid databaseReduces large volume of questions from people submitting wine (can track digitally)It has the same # of reviewers, but a more flexible infrastructure can allow for more wines to be tasted$65/SKU processing fee - all reviewers charge in some way (e.g., require subscription, membership, or advertisement)6-month processing time (same as before) - hope to reduce this over time, based on the schedule of reviewersPrinted reviews selected by the tasting dept, all scores published online for freeTasting platform benefits for new and small wineries Opens up reviews to all regions across the globeThe US market is still heavily score-driven for distribution (some major retailers, e.g., Costco, Kroger, Albertsons, require scores from major publications)Helps with tasting room and local distribution salesMedia trendsPrint is still doing well (e.g., books outsold movie tickets last year), and magazine subscriptions are increasing (free tote bags help)Advertising up slightly Digital media is growing, with a targeted advertising focusEvents - biggest growth area - launched Sip of South America, Sip of Italy, and biggest event is Wine Star Awards (25th Anniversary in SF this year)TikTok now allows alcohol advertising, getting Gen Z engaged with wine knowledgeNew travel division for WETasting room directory, partnered w/ Tock - 1st agnostic travel global wine travel guideLeverages Tock’s wineries as launching list (~1,200 wineries, CA focused), building out globally with WE relationships (~100 wineries reached out in 1st month to be included)The 2nd most trafficked page on the siteWE revenue mixCovid - led to explosive commerce growthToday - back to 2019 levels, ~80% commerce / ~20% mediaGetting Gen Z engaged with winePrint enables content absorption without ad bombardment (e.g., book reading bars in NYC)Need to change content for each channel to target audience (e.g., Google as people’s “secret diary,” article on how to hold a wine glass became a top 5 article)Influencers, infographics, video - bring in new consumers (e.g., wine & potato chip parking article led to major influencer doing every pairing on TikTok) Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
34:4408/10/2024
Opening Minds with Wine & Yoga, Morgan Perry, Vino Vinyasa
During a career sabbatical from wine PR at a yoga teacher retreat, Morgan Perry tried combining wine education and yoga with great success. Her classmates practically forced her to found Vino Vinyasa, which has blossomed into six cities. With a focus on creating great experiences rather than selling wine, Morgan has created a platform where people learn about wine and end up seeking out the wines featured in classes. Detailed Show Notes: Morgan’s background - wine PR, been in wine for ~15 years, became a yoga teacher in 2017Wine & Yoga synergiesBoth are about mindfulness - yoga and the wine tasting processNot for hard-core wellness or yoga peopleVino Vinyasa For the yoga teacher exam, the teacher encouraged something different, tried yoga & wine, and got a fantastic reception6 cities - NYC (2017), Austin (2018), Nashville, Chicago, LA, HoustonVino Vinyasa programming45 min Vinyasa yoga (all levels), followed by wine tasting of 2 winesTaste wine after yoga - people are relaxed and have “yoga brain” in a quiet, focused environment → people may be better tastersEmbed wine facts during yogaA comparative tasting of 2 wines, usually themed (e.g., Rose, Sauvignon Blanc)All instructors have a wine background (min WSET 1)2-3 classes/month, 20-25 people/class for intimacy (capped at 30)~30 classes/themes developed to dateVery intentional class structure, certain poses not suitable for teachingBusiness modelThe core business is to get people to do more classes and events, not be overly salesy with wineDo private events (90% are bachelorette parties)Sell swag (t-shirts), co-branded bottlesLook to be good value (avg class price $30) vs. regular yoga classes (avg ~$20-25, range from $10-35 for drop in class)Students often seek out wines after classesWine selection for classesVenue dependant, venues carry liquor licensesCity Winery (NYC) - chooses the wines based on their selectionOther venues - can get wines donated for classesPrivate events - Customers can select wines/themesHave worked with PR clients for winesSome wineries sponsored virtual classes during CovidMarketingPR background has helped and got early press (e.g., digital Good Morning America), mostly wine marketEmail newsletterIG is the best channel, does some boosting, and is focused on growth during Covid (~11k followers)Digital marketing has focused on both wellness and wine people~15-20% of people have attended multiple classesPrivate eventsBachelorette parties, birthdays, corporate events (e.g., Binny’s in Chicago)The focus area for growthSame format as classesWellness & wine marketOther wine + yoga classes are not educational; some are tied to multi-level marketing wine programs that have long sales pitchesSees more yoga at wineriesThey have been approached by a couple of spas for partnerships, but the economics were not favorable yet (i.e., yoga teachers often are not paid well, ~$30/class) Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
34:4020/09/2024
Evolution, not Revolution w/ Giampiero Bertolini, Biondi Santi
Taking over an iconic estate can be both exciting and terrifying. When EPI purchased the iconic Brunello di Montalcino producer Biondi Santi in 2017, they asked Giampiero Bertolini to take over as CEO. Giampiero was excited to join the “Champions League” of wine but also had to convince the local community that this outside investment would be good. He delves into how Biondi Santi has been pushing toward creating more value for the brand while maintaining its core essence. Detailed Show Notes: Biondi Santi’s historyFamily invented Brunello di MontalcinoFounded in 1888 - Ferruccio Biondi Santi had a vision of quality wine with longevity during a time when people focused on quantity with wine as part of the dietBottled in Bordeaux-shaped glass (a sign of quality) vs. standard Tuscan fiascoTancredi Biondi Santi - one of the top consulting winemakers of the time, was asked to write appellation rules in 1967Franco Biondi Santi (“the doctor”) - selected the BBS11 clone in the ‘70s and organized a 100-year vertical tasting (1888-1988) in 1994 with important wine writers that boosted the image of Brunello. One writer gave the 1891 vintage 100 pointsLa Storica (wine library) - has all vintages since 1888, releases one old Riserva with a current Riserva each yearPath to Iconic StatusThe vision of the family - be good winemakers, high-qualityIn the global market regularly → elevated the Biondi Santi to a different levelThe wine offered to Queen Elizabeth II in 1967 was a favorite of Frank Sinatra’sEPI acquired Biondi Santi in 2017 and installed Giampiero as CEO; the community was skeptical of French owners for an iconic estate had to convince neighbors by being transparent about what they were doing at the estateBefore the takeover, prior 20 years, the business was not run wellRebuilt global distribution, did not have US distributionRe-connected with trade, critics, and consumers/collectorsWhat they kept the sameReinforced market positionStyle of the winesWhat they changedNew vineyard philosophy (regenerative), replanted vineyards to improve quality, conducted soil studiesIncreased communications and more selective to the right people and thproperht channelsManaged pricing to reposition the brand to increase demandKeeping the brand freshwant s to be closer to the trade and consumer, spend more time in the marketStorytelling of what is happening at the estate, not just the history, but today’s actions that protect the futureLa Voce di Biondi Santi - started 3 years ago, selects one word each year that is part of their philosophy (this year is “respect”); creates novel/audiobook based on a keyword (e.g., Joanne Harris, author of Chocolat) and podcasts with winemaker and Giampiero around the keywordThe most effective initiative so far - repositioning the brand by increasing price → gave higher credibility and put the brand up another step, old vintages increasing in price on the secondary market, high demand on Liv-ex (one of few growing while price increasing), one of the top 35 wines in the world on Liv-exGrowth for Biondi Santi = value growth; volume is complex to growValue-driven by increasing distribution globally to rarify the brand further, not just taking price, but increasing value, which is a consequence of many conditions, and not rushing value creation in the marketBiondi Santi is now in 2.0 after 1st five years, and the next step is to increase the quality of its presence in the world and be closer to partners and consumers Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
29:3009/09/2024
Wine Business, The Italian Way w/ Stevie Kim, Vinitaly
In part 2 with Stevie Kim, Managing Director of Vinitaly, she explains how parent company Veronafiere invested in the various Vinitaly products and allowed her to experiment. Stevie also dives into her prolific content strategy, including the Italian Wine Podcast, which has over 2M downloads to date and where she sees value in marketing. Detailed Show Notes: Italian Wine PodcastInitially created to develop content for VIA candidatesSomething different every day - up to 9 episodes published / weekExample shows: Ambassador’s Corner - Italian Wine Ambassadors go deep with their favorite Italian producer; US Market Focus - different perspectives on the US wine marketNow ~2,000 episodes, they had to switch podcast distributors to Megaphone (Spotify) as most only host up to 500 episodesAudience - early on, was ~80% US & English speaking countries (the podcast is in English), and VIA students~6M total downloads with a broader audience than Vinitaly attendeesFunding the Vinitaly complexSignificant investment by Veronafiere, which is majority-owned by the city of VeronaItalian Trade Agency subsidizes some events - e.g., pays for transport for judges for 5 Star WinesSome ticket sales and sponsorship revenuePodcasts funded by Stevie personallyVeronafiere saw value in investing in Vinitaly productsWanted to become more internationalAllowed Stevie to experiment with new products and invest in themStevie’s team has a large staff of content producers (video, social media)Document everything they doCreate tons of content, of which only ~50% is usedStevie believes in being prolific - promotes discoveryMarketing productsNever advertise on LinkedIn - it is too expensiveInstagram - sometimes does advertising, conversion doesn’t happen on IG, try to drive to the website to convert, more for attention vs. conversionFacebook - most wine producers on FB, more effective and efficient, can get ~$100k subscription revenue from ~$5k ad spendLess concerned with “vanity” metrics like views and engagement, more interested in conversionsLooking forward - wants to bring more people to Italy and Vinitaly - it is the best way to convert people to Italian wine Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
41:4228/08/2024
The Vinitaly Marathon w/ Stevie Kim, Vinitaly
As the world's most prominent Italian wine fair, Vinitaly attracts ~4,000 producers and turns the entire city of Verona into Vinitaly. As Managing Director of Vinitaly, Stevie Kim has built a vast, international community around Vinitaly and its many other products surrounding it, becoming a "Vinitaly Marathon." Stevie goes into depth about why each product was started and how it plugs into the entire Vinitaly ecosystem in part 1 of this 2-part series. Detailed Show Notes: Stevie's background: born in Korea, grew up in New York, married an Italian, and moved to Italy; Veronafiere recruited her to lead VinitalyThe Vinitaly "Marathon" (2025 schedule)Vinitaly Int’l Academy ("VIA") - 5 days 5 Star Wines - 3 days (April 1-3)OperaWine - 1 day (April 5)Vinitaly - 4 days (April 6-9)Also, do events outside of Verona (New York, China, Hong Kong)Vinitaly - established in 1967 in VeronaIt started as ½ pavilion, now 14 pavilionsLargest Italian wine event, primarily B2BThe entire town of Verona becomes VinitalyVinitaly in the city events for consumers~4k wineries (~60% of export market), accessories, winemaking equipmentAbout building long-term relationships - "the Italian way" - not just about doing business vs. Prowein's more business-orientedOperaWinePartnered with Wine Spectator as the most influential entity for Italian wineThe winemaker or principal must pourBy invitation only, each producer chosen (130 producers) gets 10 invitesVIA1,300 candidates so far, 398 certified Italian Wine AmbassadorsUsed to do Vinitaly tours and masterclasses globally, now transformed to VIADeveloped based on Stevie's experience building a medial master's program that created a deep communityFaculty - Sarah Heller MW, Attilio Scienza - vine geneticistDifficult exam, deep and wide syllabus primarily based on grape varieties, uses Italian Wine Unplugged 2.0 as the textbookHas a course that includes 4 days of tasting ~300 wines before the examRequires a group video project to ensure ambassadors can speak about winesCreates a big community around candidates and ambassadors - more important than the material itself5 Star Wines (fka Vinitaly Int’l Competition)Gets international judges & VIA community opportunity to taste and rate Italian winesHelps producers - 90+ scores get a diploma during Vinitaly to display, which helps attendees navigate boothsDid a masterclass for producers w/ top scoring wines on why they scored highly, which helped them understand quality betterEvery tasting panel has an enologist, enabling the international community to connect with Italian winemakersWine2Wine business forum (Nov - after harvest, before Christmas)The goal is to help producers better prepare for VinitalyHistorically, they had 40-70 workshops on business topics2023 - did tastings where wine critics taught how they assess and rate wines2024 - getting an overhaul, no parallel session, 8 plenary sessions, 6 tastings, new structured networking - rooms led by specialists w/ 10-12 attendees Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
45:1219/08/2024
The Market for Brunello w/ Giampiero Bertolini, Biondi-Santi
Written by the Biondi-Santi family in 1967, the appellation rules for Brunello di Montalcino are some of the strictest in Italy. This has led to Brunello vineyard land becoming some of the most expensive in the country and led Brunello on the pathway to becoming one of the world's iconic wine regions. Giampiero Bertolini, CEO of Biondi-Santi, explains the terroir, regulations, and market for Brunello di Montalcino and his belief in pursuing value and quality over quantity. Detailed Show Notes: Giampiero's background - studied economics, worked at Procter & Gamble, entered the wine industry by chanceBrunello di Montalcino - hill in Tuscany, b/w coast and Apennine mountains, protected by mountains and with altitudeThere are lots of different soils, and each location on a hill is differentSangiovese - only appellation in Italy with only one varietal, >150 clones (Biondi Santi uses 46 clones)1967 - 78 producers; today >250Quality has improved over the last 20 years, with more emphasis on viticulture1970s - Franco Biondi Santi trialed 40 clones and chose BBS11 for their soilRegulated production systemCreated by the Biondi-Santi family in 1967Limited yields (Brunello - 8 tons/ha; Rosso - 9 tons/ha)Strict aging requirements - barrel min 12 months (Rosso), 24 months (Brunello, Riserva); bottle min 4 months (Rosso), 24 months (Brunello, Riserva); Brunello min 5 years totalSamples tasted by the Commission panelAppellation expanded ~20 years ago, now frozen at 2,100 ha2023 - Rosso appellation expanded (550 → 900ha)Biondi-Santi has a target style for their wines and matches vineyard lots to create style (~60% Brunello, 25% Rosso, remainder Riserva when made)Some producers make single vineyards now (both Rosso and Brunello), but Biondi-Santi is not focused on thatThe most expensive vineyard land in Italy ~₠1M/ha, a significant rise in 2015 when the 2010 vintage was releasedForeign investors (France, Brazil, Belgium, Swiss) are increasing the value of the landMarket for BrunelloThe biggest is the US, developed by producer BanfiOther vital markets: Switzerland, the UK (higher-end wines), Hong Kong, ItalySales ChannelsRosso - more casual restaurants, wine bars, BTGBrunello - 50/50 on and off-premiseRiserva - mostly high-end retail as it is for collectorsFuture of Brunello - hopes the focus is on value and quality and not higher volume Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
28:0120/07/2024
Do Everything with Passion w/ Arianna Occhipinti
Making natural wines right out of university, Arianna Occhipinti, founder of Azienda Agricola Occhipinti, has quickly built a strong following globally, particularly in the US. Discovered by Louis/Dressner at a natural wine show around Vinitaly, Occhipinti’s focus on expressing terroir through natural farming and winemaking and doing everything with passion has led to continued success. Detailed Show Notes: She finished university in Milan, started making wine in 2004, and is interested in natural wines that speak of terroirBased in Vittoria, Sicily, she makes wines from reds (Frappato, Nero d’Avola), whites (Albanello, Zibbibo, Grillo)Started w/ 1ha farm in Fosso di Lupo (Frappato, Nero d’Avola)Cultivates a pluricultural farm for biodiversity - vineyards, orange, pear, wheat, vegetable garden2006 - built a small winery2013 - moved to another farm in BombolieriTerroir - limestone (lots of fossils), red sand, 250m above sea level, 8 km from the sea, 8 km from mountains, windy and dry -> lead to low pH wines1st meeting with Louis/Dressner in 2006 at a Vinitaly adjacent natural wine fair1st presentation of winesKevin McKenna tried the wines and got Jules Dressner to try them, where they immediately asked if they could import themStill working together, they are “very pure people”One of the 1st Italian producers that Louis/Dressner represented1st trip to US (“Real Wine Tour”) - Louis/Dressner organized a young group of producers, with a lot of energy that toured the USTraction partly from being an early mover in the natural wine movementAt the time, San Francisco (and Paris) were leading the world for natural winesNatural wine bars (e.g. - Terroir Wine Bar)Leading restaurants (A16, Bar Agricole)LA (Domaine LA) and NY followedSommeliers promoted the wine and created strong relationshipsTraction was a combination of wine quality and consistency, restaurant promotion, and good communicationsConvincing people who know a lot about wine (e.g., sommeliers) helpedIn the US market ~1x / yearLouis/Dressner did a great job of selecting wine producers and having good relations with their clientsAdvice for others - do everything with passion, potentially spend more time on trips to spend more time with people Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
34:3308/07/2024
Transmitting Values through Generations w/ Alessia Antinori, Primum Familiae Vini
As the 26th generation family member to run Marchesi Antinori, Alessia Antinori, VP and Winemaker, knows the benefits of being a family-owned business, particularly around transmitting family values from generation to generation. These insights and values are shared as members of an elite group of family-owned wineries, the Primum Familae Vini. Alessia digs into the structure of the PFV, its purpose, and its activities to promote family businesses globally. Detailed Show Notes: Antinori Family - started in wine in 1385 as wine merchants in Florence and became a producer in the Chianti Classico regionAlessia is part of the 26th generation, the 27th generation also in the companyFather was part of the important 25th generation - in the 60s/70s changed towards a quality mindset vs. quantity focus for most of Italy, e.g., launched Tignanello (1st Super Tuscan)“Blending tradition and innovation”Family members are not obliged to join the company but grow up around the wineryPrimum Familiae Vini (“PFV”)Founded in 1993 by Joseph Drouhin and Miguel Torres wineriesCurrent members include Vega Sicilia, Pol Roger, Chateau Mouton12 members, family-owned, old world (the exception was Opus One w/ Mondavis and Mouton Rothschild)When a family sells, a new winery is invited, often from a missing region (e.g., Jaboulet replaced by Beaucastel to keep a Rhone producer), look for high quality, shared values, and families get along (including children)Exchange one case of wine with each other every ChristmasFamily businesses are important to: Transmit values from generation to generation (e.g., for Antinori - passion, integrity, obsession for quality)Can make decisions for future generations (long-term mindset)Two committees in the PFV - marketing & technicalMeet 3-4x / year virtually or in personMeet at least 2x/year (1 annual meeting - 2024 in Oregon hosted by Drouhins)Annual MeetingUp to 100 people, several generations per familyBusiness meetings, lunches, dinnersEach year, a different family hosts an event and then becomes President of PFV for the following yearTopics - technical (Torres often has good topics), issues in family businesses, sales, legal issues, future PFV planningMostly, internal PFV presentersPromotion/marketing events2024 - after Oregon hosted a press tasting in NapaUsually, press, charity, or walk-around tastingsPFV Family Prize - “the most beautiful company of the year”Family-owned businesses, not only wine, must have 3 generations working in the businessReceive financial and market support/cross-promotion1st year was a Belgian violin companyGiven every two yearsDo an event together with the press to present the awardPFV is funded by an annual fee from membersCollector CasesHaute Couture case - 1 back vintage, iconic wine from each winery, only for charity, includes the PFV Passport, which is an invitation to visit each winery with lunch or dinner with a family member (many wineries closed to the public)Limited Edition case - 1 recent vintage wine for each winery can buy for €25kAdvice for other family wine businesses - be very passionate about the work, be curious and passionate Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
34:0623/06/2024
Partnering through Common Values w/ Matteo Lunelli, Ferrari Trento
With 100+ years of history, many accolades, and distinctive mountain-grown sparkling wines, Ferrari Trento is still often confused with the car maker Ferrari. Matteo Lunelli, President and CEO, explains how Ferrari Trento leverages partnerships, including Formula 1, The Emmys, and others, to tell its story and grow its audience globally. Detailed Show Notes: Ferrari Trento overviewFounded in 1902 by Giulio Ferrari1952 - Bruno Lunelli (Matteo’s grandfather) acquired the wineryTrento DOC in NE Italy, in the middle of the Alps, famous for the Dolomite mountainsA leading brand for luxury sparkling wine in ItalyMethodo Classico - 2nd fermentation in the bottleMainly Chardonnay, Pinot NoirMountain sparkling wine - gets sunlight, but big diurnal shift to keep acidityPioneer of Trento DOC, started denomination, now 60 wineriesWon Sparkling Producer of the Year several timesAll estate vineyards are certified organic, winery carbon neutralIl Ferrari (masculine, the wine) vs La Ferrari (feminine, the car); separate companies, no familial relationFormula 1 (“F1”) partnership - “Official Toast of F1”Started as a dream, Matteo passionate about F1A team member who used to work at Heineken, which sponsored F1, started the conversation in 2019Share common values of search for excellence, tradition, and innovationStarted in April 2021Jeroboam used to celebrate wins on the podium, served in Paddock Club (hospitality)F1 exploded with Drive to Survive movie on NetflixNew races started in Miami and Las VegasFormerly used Champagne, 1st Italian wine used to celebrateROI is measured by growth in international sales (US sales 3x, TX 10x, Las Vegas huge growth since 2020), increased attention from key international accountsKey benefits of F1 partnership: Visibility - social media key, particularly pics with drivers showing bottles during the celebration (easier to do for sparkling wine)Paddock Club - >5,000 guests in Las Vegas, serves fine dining during race weekends, high-end clientele experience Ferrari Trento, fine dining, and F1Create customer experiences - invite some customers to F1Race weekend activations - organize and partner with events around the race weekend, replaced prior market workBest article - Financial Times “Why there will always be a Ferrari on the podium of F1”F1 label series - limited, special editionsBig interest in Jeroboams, celebrate like F1 championsF1 Editions - dedicated to some of the iconic Grand Prix, the shape of the racetrack on the label, very successful in race markets (e.g., Suzuka in Japan had a long time to buy wine)Creates a collectible wineEmmy Awards sponsorshipEnded w/ Covid, sponsored for ~5 yearsServed at Governor’s Ball just after the show, ~5k guests, black tie in LAHelped in the CA market and positioned Ferrari as a lifestyle brandTimed well w/the rise of importance of TV (e.g., Netflix/streaming movement)Only 1x/year vs 20 races/year w/ F11st non-Champagne organized blind tastings w/ prior sponsorsCreating value w/ partnerships requires activation and communication; the rule of thumb is to invest at least 1x sponsorship fee in activationsMass market partnerships like F1 benefit Non-Vintage more than vintage/reserve winesVintage/reserve wines sold mostly to collectors, highly limited supply (only 60k bottles of Giulio Ferrari/year), and need different communication channels Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
50:2810/06/2024
Promoting New Zealand through White Wine w/ Charlotte Read, NZ Winegrowers
With 88% of their wine exported, 93% of which is white, white wine is a big deal for New Zealand. Charlotte Read, General Manager of Brand for New Zealand Winegrowers, explains how they have been focused on promoting white wine globally. This includes campaigning for a white wine emoji, focusing on the the month of May with Sauvignon Blanc, Pinot Gris, and Chardonnay days, and focusing on their motto - “NZ wine, all together unique.”Detailed Show Notes: Charlotte’s background - dairy industry, lived in Asia and the UK, in wine for the last 20 yearsNZ WinegrowersEst 2002,1,400 members (50% wineries, 50% growers)Only unified winemaking and grape-growing organizationFunded by compulsory leviesMission: to enhance the reputation of NZ wine5 key workstreams: Brand, Environment, Efficacy, Research, PeopleTagline - “NZ wine, all together unique”Supports the 10 wine regionsNZ exports 88% of their wine to 100 countriesTop markets - US (~40% of exports), UK, AustraliaFocus markets - Canada, ChinaFocused on white wine (93% of exports) for May - 3 events, Sauvignon Blanc Day, Pinot Gris Day, and Chardonnay DayWhite wine emoji - leading a campaign over the last few years to have this implementedKendall Jackson previously campaigned for itChanged the glass shape to focus on white winesGotten great pressReached >20M people in 2022, 79M in 2023NZ has significant wine diversity - >50 grape varieties planted, SB #1, Pinot Gris, Pinot Noir (largest red, 3% of exports)NZ wine style - purity of fruit, backbone of acidityMarketing metrics used - estimated advertising value, reach and engagement, social media engagement, toolkit downloadsLighter Wine Research Project - 7 years, $16M project w/ 18 wineries and government, led to the early launch of no and low alcohol wines (e.g., Giesen 0%, Kim Crawford Illuminate)Overall, wine imports to the US are down, but NZ has outpaced the market; premium price ($15+) grew 15% in 2023Targeting a group of “Generation Treaters” (mostly Millennials) - 1/10 of drinkers, but ⅕ of spendCan cross-promote white wines - 63% of SB drinkers drink Pinot Gris, 67% of SB drinkers drink ChardonnayNZ as innovators - moved to screw caps early (early 2000s), fast adopter of concrete eggs, experimenting with green tea as a preservative, no alcohol wine residual alcohol used for ginHighest impact marketing - influencing the influencer (e.g., a WSET partner, work with Sommelier associations)Major eventsHas a booth at ProWein and Vinexpo Hong KongHosts International Sauvignon Blanc Conference every 4 years (2027)Hosts Pinot Noir Conference in between (Feb 2025)Sommit - summit for sommeliers, a master class settingTrends to watchSustainability (NZ has 96% of vineyards certified sustainable)Packaging innovationGrowing wine tourism Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
37:3529/05/2024
Navigating winery insurance w/ Heidi Moore, Country Financial
With insurance costs skyrocketing, having a good understanding of the types and amount of coverage needed for wineries and vineyards is becoming essential. As a broker for Country Financial, as well as the host of the Wine Crush Podcast, Heidi Moore describes what is necessary vs. optional for winery insurance and the changes happening in the industry. Detailed Show Notes: Insurance trends - very volatile now, Covid supply chain issues, wildfires / other natural disastersRates are soaringFL/CA - natural disasters happening more, impacting insuranceIf >5 mi from a fire station, insurance premiums can be doubleWinery insurance is a niche market, so it is better to have expertiseLeakage & contamination are a big issue - often wineries do not have enough coverageGeneral liability and liquor liability are base levels of coverageRest is optional - a winery should look at what will break the business if it happensPremiums based on gross sales, inventory, and assets (e.g., buildings, barrels)Range of costs - small wineries ($1,500-2,000/year), larger wineries ($50-60k/year)CA - many companies have stopped writing businessSometimes, there is state coverage for catastrophe-only coverageInsurers often value inventory based on “final destination” (e.g., DTC vs. wholesale)A wine library with increasing value should be looked at annually to see if coverage needs to be adjustedVineyard insurance is different from wineryFarm policy for an agricultural commodity (e.g., for runaway tractors)Crop insurance, which is federally subsidized, covers annual crop value and covers against smoke taint, fire, etc…; often can insure at different value levels of the cropCan buy specific coverage for vines and equipment in vineyardsClimate change mostly impacts crop insurance vs farm policyBase level of insurance needed for winery w/ vineyardWinery policy - covers tasting room, production, buildings, the commercial businessFarm policy - covers vineyard, buildings, farming operation, home autosDepending on assets - umbrella policy to cover assets (e.g., drunk driving accidents are expensive)When to stop buying insurance? Need a good agent who is your advocateValue of a broker vs. direct from the insurer - can provide different options of insurance, the downside is they do not know policies as deeplyWine Crush PodcastShare stories of winemakers, encourage people who do not drink wine regularly to try itMostly OR wineries, expanding to WA, IDKey trends for wine insurance - circling in on natural disasters and how they affect policies Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
27:1620/05/2024
Delving into the US wine consumer w/ Liz Thach MW, Wine Market Council
With 27 years of research on the US wine consumer, the non-profit Wine Market Council is a critical industry resource. Liz Thach MW, the new President, dives into their most recent research on which wine consumers are buying, why, and how they buy. Members can get even deeper insight and access to the industry’s most robust database on US wine consumers. Detailed Show Notes: Wine Market Council (“WMC”) - non-profit, formed in 1996Mission - provide cutting-edge research on the US wine consumer purchasing habits, trends, and attitudesMembers use WMC data for marketing and brand strategiesUS wine salesFrom 1934 - today - there have been several declines in consumptionThe last decline - 1990s - showed similar factors, increased anti-alcohol groups, large excise taxes; catalysts to growth (French Paradox, introduction of new products - e.g., White Zinfandel, wine spritzers, Merlot getting popular)Growth for 20+ years from the late 1990s, peaking during Covid2022 - decline in volume sales, 2023 - decline in volume (-9%) and $ salesWMC does a benchmark segmentation study of wine consumers every 2 yearsHas done 19 over 27 years, the largest database of wine consumer trendsBoomers - drinking less (61% cutting alcohol, faster than expected)Millennials - finally coming to wine, took until they were in their 30s (have children, bought homes, settled down, more financially stable); spend more on wine (often $20+)Gen Z (oldest is 26) - had high wine adoption initially, but in the last 3 years, it has declined (“cool to be sober”); 9% of Gen Z drinks wine, though only 33% are of legal drinking age; concerned about transparency of products (saw food scares, recalls), climate, and social equityWine drinkers are 60% married, 71% own homes, 53% live in suburbsEthnicity diversification making progressBy 2050, the majority of the US will be non-whiteToday’s wine drinkers are 66% White (vs. 77-78% in the past), 15% Hispanic, 11% Black, and 5% AsianSignificant progress with Blacks and Asians, but less with Hispanics, which are the fastest growing population in the USCeja an example of a successful Hispanic owned winery, links wine and Hispanic cuisine and been successfulOther ways to enhance diversity - ads that look like “us,” diversity in the workforce, pop up events where the consumer is (e.g., a Mexican wine importer did pop-ups at Hispanic events with taco trucks)Premiumization is still happening, people drinking less, but better$20+/bottle drinkers are now ~7-15% of the total US populationYounger people (21-30) purchasing more high-end wineBoomers dropping buying more expensive winesWhere people buy wineSupermarketsWine shopsOnline now 12% vs. 5% pre-Covid29% buy on their phone93% of wine consumers on social media#1 Facebook (Boomers)YouTube - 61% useInstagram - 55%TikTok - 40% (wineries can’t advertise, but influencers can post)X/Twitter - went from #2 to #6Wine apps - 17%2024 trendsAnti-alcohol movement Talking about the benefits of wine (illegal for alcohol brands to discuss health) - WMC launched a social campaign called “Wine is…” (e.g., wine cocktails, family dinners…)Transparency/ingredient labeling (e.g., 50% of Americans believe wine has added sugar)Low / no alcohol movement - 40% of wine drinkers drinking less (of those, 40% drink non-alc spirits/cocktails, 35% NA beer, 34% NA wine)RTDs / single serving sizes Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
40:0027/04/2024
The Right Place at the Right Time w/ Devon Magee, Offshore Wines
Having gotten bitten by the wine bug young and with deep wine retail experience, Devon Magee, founder of Offshore Wines, decided to start a small wine importer. Inspired by Kermit Lynch, Offshore focuses on small, artisanal brands making high quality, yet affordable wines. Devon shares how he bootstrapped the company and is finding his way as an importer. Detailed Show Notes: Background - mostly wine retail, did harvests in France (Vieux Telegraph, Chandon de Brialles in Burgundy - 2012-2014)Inspired by Kermit Lynch, he was interested in writingOffshore Wines PortfolioChristian Knott of Chandon de Brialles started a new project, Domaine Dandelion, and asked him to import them2017 - 1st shipment - 4 cases of Domaine Dandelion, 20 cases of Champagne Charles Dufour15-20 producers nowGoal: find high-quality wines made in an artisanal way from lesser appellations that are “affordable”“Affordable” = $30-100 in US retailStarting an import businessHe did it on his own, with no lawyers~2 months to get a license, ~$1-2k in feesNeed a licensed warehouse to receive wines (uses CA Wine Transport)Self-financed 1st shipmentCash flow is challenging2-3 months for wines to land in warehouse (from France)Restaurants/retailers get 30 days termsPayment to wineries varies - most ~60-day terms from shipment, while others want payment upon shipment or 50/50 terms (upfront and on delivery)Lifestyle is fun, traveling and visiting rural areasChoosing winery partners - a lot is timing, being at the right place, getting to know communities, and very relationship-based; most wineries are referrals from existing relationshipsOffshore differentiation - speaks the winemaker’s language (French, Spanish), worked production, and is building deep personal relationshipsWineries are exclusive to CA, and only market Offshore works, though they sell to a small distributor in COFocus on small producers precludes needing to be in all 50 statesOptimal portfolio size ~25 wineries to be able to respond and represent wineries wellGets wine out for people to taste them, prefers personal connections over social mediaShares other aspects of what people are doing (e.g., got and gave away bags of coffee from a producer experimenting w/ carbonic coffee bean ferments, giving away sweatshirts from Domaine Hausherr with an artistic word game on the back)Devon is the only salesperson now, and he would ideally like 1-2 salespeopleOther salespeople have opened doors for him to help himBuilding small brandsMany people struggle with name pronunciation He tries to share wines, stories, and pictures of brandsHe doesn’t agree with the need for scores and tasting notes; he uses email to share stories, wants to publish a newsletter eventuallyThe new style of wine writing can help small brands - e.g., Alice Feiring, Ray Isle’s new bookAdvice for others - be able to sell the wines Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
54:0316/04/2024
The Singaporean Experience w/ Yi Xin Ong, KOT Selections
As part of the importer series, Yi Xin Ong, Managing Partner of KOT Selections in Singapore, provides an international perspective. From Singapore’s 2-3,000 active importers for the small island to the impact of international media, Yi Xin describes how KOT navigates the importing, distributing, and retailing of its portfolio of winegrowers. Detailed Show Notes: Background Founded KOT in 2011 - they couldn’t get the wines they were buying in Singapore, three partnersWork w/ 57 winegrowers, mainly in Europe, 6 in the USSingapore wine market (~6M population, ~20% Muslim - don’t drink)No 3-tier system, no gov’t monopolyIt is a pretty open market, like the UKMany players are vertically integrated - import, distribute, retail - with lots of captive distributors and retailersVery low barriers to entry - founded KOT in 2 months for S$200 to get licensing and paperworkHorizontally spread - ~2-3,000 active importers (in 2011, ~700 importers, mainly focused on Australia/NZ with either big brands or high-scoring wines)Two casinos / integrated resorts provided the spark for other wines (e.g., Marina Bay Sands opened in 2011)Generally, 1-1.5 generations behind the UK and US wine marketsTook inspiration from other importers - Kermit Lynch (CA), Louis / Dressner (NY), Yapp Brothers (UK Rhone Specialists) - importing wines others were notYapp - focused on winegrowersDressner - spent a lot of wine visiting growers, good storytellingKermit Lynch - newsletters (1970s) were key to storytelling for the wine growersStorytelling is critical to standing out in a crowded marketSourcing strategy - most wineries they bought from personally (90%) were not represented in SingaporeInformal rule - 5 visits to winegrowers between the three partners before they importBroad portfolios - easier to serve clients and fulfill their needsFocused portfolios - clearer story and differentiationOptimal portfolio size - ~50-70 to give each winegrower ~1 week/year of focusKOT differentiationMarket knowledgeLinks to trade, client baseTrust of the people (have only signed one contract, mainly handshake deals, exclusive relationships) -> been burnt occasionally with generational changeBuild brands in Singapore - a very organic approachGet the right people to taste them - professionals, and influencers / Key Opinion Leaders (“KOL”)Host tastings every year, even for highly allocated wines (e.g., Pierre Gonon)KOLs can drive demandInt’l media have a strong influence - English is the primary languageMore important than local mediaOnly the top few have an impact - The Wine Advocate (Robert Parker), Jancis Robinson (less emphasis on scores, more on editorial content)Robert Parker had a big impact on the local market; a Singaporean bought the company100-point scores can drive sales spikesConsumer data/reviews can start trends, increasingly importantVivino, Wine-Searcher, CellarTracker, Instagram75% wholesale, 25% direct-to-consumer sales (mainly e-commerce)Private clients saw KOT through the pandemicTrade is vital for tourist demandSingaporean wine trendsNew regions increasing, Japanese and Chinese winesValue increasing - ~$20-30 retail, ~$5-10 FOBThe low/no alcohol trend is not a thing yetRose has never been a trend Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
49:2030/03/2024
Taking Great Care of Wines w/ Shannon Coursey, Wilson Daniels
With a portfolio of luxury wineries, including Domaine de la Romanee-Conti and Biondi Santi, Wilson Daniels has developed deep expertise in marketing luxury wines. With allocations, deep tracking of where wines go, and a heavy event schedule, Shannon Coursey, EVP of Sales & Marketing, describes how taking great care of the wines is critical. Detailed Show Notes: Wilson Daniels (“WD”) overviewFounded in 1978, they started as a domestic wine brokerage, In 1979, they were asked to represent Domaine de la Romanee-Conti (DRC) and became an importerRepresents 37 families with ~50 producers, ~⅓ France, ~⅓ Italy, ~⅓ New WorldOwns distribution in 5 states~35 sales managers, sells ~600k cases/yearImporter roleCurate portfolioDistributor management - make sure strategy is executedCreate messaging with the wineriesPricing - for WD, keep consistent around the countryEducationChannel mix - on/off premise, national accounts, chainsWork with pressKeeping wineries top of mind in trade - does a lot of eventsSourcingSources wineries with estate vineyards, some with the ability to scale (~⅓ of the portfolio), look for regions where they will not take away from existing producersAt optimal book size now, additions could be grower Champagne or 1-2 new Burgundy producersGrew portfolio a lot in recent years - ~20/37 families added in last 8 years, ~10 in last 3 years (including Gaja, Faiveley)Distributor managementWith RNDC and Breakthru in ~50% of statesCreate groups within the portfolio to help distributorsManage pricing, inventory, programming (sometimes)Does not allow wine closeouts, prefers to buy backFast Start program - incentives for new placements, not volumeWholesale Manager Bonus - for distribution managers, often trip-basedOther support methods - ask to be on focus, market work, getting the producer in marketMarketing winesCrafting messaging is critical, and some producers already know what they want (e.g., Gaja wants to be known as 4 different wineries)Does a lot of grassroots marketing - events around the country at top restaurants, visibility of on-premise placementsA lot of trips to wineriesIconic brands - taking care of the wine from start to finish, the allocation process is essential (~⅔ of brands are allocated)Lesser known brands - more about visibility, messaging is critical, can target a broader base (e.g., use more social media)Luxury - 3 key segments - sommeliers, collectors, criticsFor larger brands, does some consumer marketing: e.g., Bisol Prosecco - did 15 city tours, wrapped an Alfa Romeo car in Bisol green, did press, consumer, and trade events; went from 7k cases (2015) to 120k cases (2024)Process for building brands in the USCreate messagingEducation - WD wholesale team, WD national team, distributorsPR launch kit and sales kitIdentify channel mix, including target account listEvents (very different for each producer - e.g., vintage tastings for Biondi Santi, Faiveley; Gaja - white launch, Tuscan properties, Sicilian tasting)Re-establishing brands that had poor marketing (e.g., Biondi Santi, Dal Forno)Need to work through inventory in the gray marketDon’t lower prices to match the gray marketMake a splash on new vintage releasesDal Forno - launches in the US 6 months before the rest of the world, helps reduce gray market activityPrivate client group / direct-to-consumer~300 people by invitation onlyExperience-drivenMembers support the entire WD portfolio Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
01:05:4915/03/2024
Building Perennial Brands w/ Nick Ramkowsky, Vine Connections
In part 2 of our series with Nick Ramkowsky, Owner of Vine Connections, Nick describes how he builds brands in the US market, striving to turn “annual” brands into “perennial” ones. Partnering with distributors both directly and working independently with consistency helps create a virtuous cycle of long-term relationships. Nick also covers his interest in sake and how it overlaps with sales strategies for wine. Detailed Show Notes: Two types of brandsPerennials - brands where accounts grow in value each vintage; very few become thisAnnuals - need to sell the same case to a new account each year; everything starts hereThe goal is to build brands into perennialsGetting to perennials includes having value in the bottle, packaging (VC has three designers on staff), relationships (finding the right spots/customers for brands and supporting the accounts (staff trainings, consumer events)), identifying champions on the distributor sales team, and pressCreating brand value as an importer - consumers believe in the importer’s book through consistent producers and quality across the portfolioConsistency helps develop brandsMarketing strategies to build distributor demandPress (primarily critics)Effective distributor work withs (distributors need confidence importer will support them)Creating credibility in the marketplace (trade events, work withs, samples, incentive/launch programs)Can’t outspend more prominent importers for incentives, need to create unique ones - e.g., one supplier affiliated w/ custom made shirts, created incentive around the shirtsSetting suggested retail price (“SRP”)Through tasting, looking at the competitive set, and where the winery wants to be$1 in home country becomes ~$3 at retail in USSales strategiesVC has ten salespeople across the USDo work withs with distributors, but also on their own to not overwhelm distributor repsPartner with reps, sending recaps for follow-upSake - started in 2002He went to Japan to work in a brewery to study the processHad to make more accessible - standardized back label, 1st to put English names on front labelsThey use the same distribution network as winePlace importance on education; VP of Sake Monica Samuels is a great educatorNow, 20% of the Japanese imported sake marketRecommends drinking sake from a wine glass, at cellar temp, or warmed to order for hot sakeKome website is more focused on the style of sake (e.g., fruity/floral vs. round/rustic) vs. grade now46 prefectures brew sake - lots of expression of placeGluten and sulfite-freeWine importing trends - people drinking less, but better (Gen Z - less alcohol, and non-alc drinks, believes they will look at wine more as they age; value premium products that are authentic, smaller, good stewards of land) Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
28:2622/02/2024
Exploring Regions w/ History but Little Recognition w/ Nick Ramkowsky, Vine Connections
After falling in love with wine through a year abroad in Burgundy in high school, Nick Ramkowsky, Owner of Vine Connections, has built a premium national importer of South American wines and sake. Nick discusses the types of wine importers in the US, how he thinks about building a brand portfolio, and the keys to success as an importer in part 1 of this 2-part series.Detailed Show Notes: Vine ConnectionsA national import and marketing company based in CA and has a retail licenseFocus on regions with winemaking history but not globally recognizedStarted as a broker and distributor (when Nick was 25)Worked with Billington Imports and met Laura Catena, went to Argentina, and fell in love with winesEstablished 1st premium portfolio of Argentine wines (1999-2000) - least expensive wine was $24 retail2002 - imported sake2013 - 1st premium Chilean wine portfolioHas wholesalers in all 50 states, including RNDC (#2 in the US), Breakthru (#3), and other smaller ones30 people today, from 2 originallySplit company in 2 - Kome Collective (Japanese), GeoVino (wines)Types of wine importersAll importers are also distributors in their stateSales Geography - can be state, regional, or national; Vine Connections is national for control over brands all the way through, exclusive for all 50 states, contracts w/ producers outline the responsibilities of importer and producerPortfolio Focus - world or specialized; Vine Connections is specialized in S America and sakeRole of importerBring wines in, warehouse, sell to distributors, & work with sales teams to sell to various channels (on-premise, off-premise, chains)Work with press, do consumer events, lots of training and educationSourcing winesLooks at people first, then property, and consistency in product and pricingNew wines don’t cannibalize the current portfolioComplementary driven by a sense of place and identity, even if the same region, varietal, price pointLooking at expanding to more regions to take advantage of the distribution networkOriginally specialized to have more of an identity as an importerOptimal book size - has ~120 SKUs in portfolio vs. ~900 at some importers and ~10,000 for RNDC as a distributor; optimal size varies by business model (e.g., focused on chains vs. independent stores/restaurants)More in not better - high cost to inventory and more challenging to prioritizePricing winesIn general, SRP is fixed, but each state is different (based on freight & tax differences, distributor margins (larger tend to work on lower margins), and retailer margins (some take less margin)Selling winesUsed to self-distribute in CA, now uses wholesalers (couldn’t service all the accounts, wanted to focus on national sales)Distributor salespeople don’t have time to focus on everythingImporter needs to generate interest in brandsKey elements for successFind good partners - share the same philosophy (quality, value, consistency), support each otherVine Connections doesn’t add new wineries often (only one new Chilean winery); only one winery left in 20+ years$1M revenue/employee benchmark for successVine Connections differentiation - good communications, both in transfer and transparency (e.g., sales by state), consider Vine Connections an extension of the winery Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
33:4430/01/2024
Expanding the Vine & Cellar w/ Curtis Mann, MW, Albertsons
To give their customers the ability to trade up and a broader selection than what’s inside their 1,900+ grocery stores, Albertsons Companies have launched Vine & Cellar. Curtis Mann, MW, Group VP of Alcohol, discusses the greater selection, wine description and storytelling, and flexibility Albertsons has with Vine & Cellar to complement their in-store offerings. Detailed Show Notes: Curtis’ backgroundWorked at IRI / Circana (database of retail scan data)Worked in retail wine stores and restaurantsWas head of beverages at Raley’s (grocery) before AlbertsonsAlbertsons Companies1,900 stores that sell wineA lot of value wine, some specialty stores (e.g., Pavilions, Hagens) sell fine wineWest Coast - more domestic (~40% import, 60% domestic), East Coast - more importsVine & Cellar (“V&C”) online wine storeWine only now, no beer & spirits yetCA only now will expand to others (e.g., WA, IL)Extension on top of the grocery store websiteHas a larger selection of wines (2,300 items vs. average 800-1,000 at typical stores, up to 1,500 at some stores) - e.g., Super 2nd Bordeaux, allocated CA Pinot NoirWines are only available to ship via UPS (vs. in-store pickup or delivery)Can use the same checkout process for groceries and V&CBenefits for consumers of V&CCurated wine selections that are representative of their regionsBuy groceries and V&C wines and checkout togetherMore flexibility - can do wine dinners, in-store tastings, wine clubsGoals of V&CLet customers continue to explore and trade up on wines and not trade out of AlbertsonsDon’t cannibalize in-store, but more add-on, incremental purchasesCapture a portion of the wine DTC marketOnline vs. in-store buyingMore imported wines onlineBroader selections vs more volume of the same wines in-storeAvg bottle price is $10 higher on V&C than highest in-store~½ V&C customers buying iconic wines (e.g., Silver Oak), ~½ exploring (e.g., Burgundies in the $50-100 range)V&C customer is both existing Albertsons and some new customersYou can put a lot more details/descriptors of wines onlineOnline buys in 6 or 12 packs to economize on shippingMarketing V&CQR codes inside storesVinecellar.comSome ads on the website, V&C wines come up during a search for wines if they are not offered in-storeEvents / PRNapa Safeway has V&C featured wines in-storeSome paid search, Wine-SearcherLoyalty programs - now Albertsons customers get promo codes for V&CWine trends - less high-end wines, people focused on value / high QPR Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
35:1615/01/2024
2023 Year-End Wrap Up in Wine
2023 wrap-up for the wine businessTopics we covered in 2023Sustainability (8-part series that had Drew Bledsoe to CEO of Silver Oak David Duncan and across the world from the US to Spain to Bordeaux)State of the Wine Collector (LA, Dallas)Leveraging non-gov’t organizations (VDP, Grand Pagos) to promote wineRevenge travel Post-Covid move back to in-person / offices -> delivery of wine -> reduced visitors to wine country and people buying wine to stock and drink at homeAmericans Took Record-Setting Vacations In Summer Of ‘Revenge Travel’ - 32.8% of households went on vacation (a record since data kept in 2015)Online retailer issues - Underground Cellar (April 2023), SommSelect (July 2022), Winc (Nov 2022, 1 year after going public) all went bankrupt, others struggling back to 2019 or even lower levelsMore missing bottles w/ Sherry Lehman (~Mar - Aug 2023), Chelsea wine storageInflation / economic slowdown globally and impact on wine marketBleak outlook for 2024 as fine wine buyers narrow their focus - Liv-Ex indexes down double digits year to date; “flight to quality” - Bordeaux benefiting, Burgundy, Champagne downInflation is used as the “reason” many wineries increase wine pricesBBC article on wine pricing increasing - glass, labor, fruit - all getting more expensive and wineries increasing price; and burgundy/napa/champagne got very expensive, consumers starting to pull backMany napa wines taking prices up to $300+ (Memento Mori - $225 -> $300)Chinese consumption is as low as 1996 levels, - the peak of 19.6M HL in 2017 to 8.8M HL in 2022 (#8 globally) vs. US in the top slot at 34M HLGlobal health/wellness; Millenial/Gen Z slowing down alcohol consumptionWHO says no alcohol is good for you (released a statement Jan 2023)Gen Z drink 20% less than Mill, who drink less than prior generations - college-age abstainers went from 20% -> 28% in the last 20 years (to 2020) Better non-alc and low-alc alternatives (kombucha, pot, mushrooms, better no/lo options for alcohol)Is wine part of the good life? Wine, particularly fine wine, is used differently than beer & spirits; it is also better from a health perspective The Wine Access interview re-emphasized - the experiences with wineThe Italian lifestyle / holy trinity of the good life - cheese, wine, & bread Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
33:3231/12/2023
Making Wine Accessible w/ Podcasts, Amanda McCrossin & AJ Resnik, Wine Access
As the podcast space matures, it becomes a more meaningful channel to market wines to consumers and create new experiences. 3rd time guest Amanda McCrossin, Host of the Wine Access Unfiltered Podcast, and AJ Resnick, CMO of Wine Access, explain their rationale and experiences in launching and building the podcast and associated wine club. From celebrities crying on the show to creating a 360 experience with their wine club and podcast audio and video, the Unfiltered Podcast continues to build traction, make wine more accessible, and build Wine Access into a loved wine brand. Detailed Show Notes: Wine Access backgroundLaunched in the late ’90s, it hosted wine retail websites and described wines2004 - offered wines on their platformCurate wines (team includes an MS), tell the story behind every wine, excellent customer service, and technology (powers wine clubs like Michelin Guide, Sunset, Decanter, and Williams Sonoma)Goal - to be a loved wine brandWine Access Unfiltered podcastLaunched in 2020A wine podcast w/ conversations around wine w/ wine, but not about wineReleased every other week, 45 min - 1 hour show lengthThey have done podcast ad buys and have seen successFormat - Season 1 - talk about wine stories, mostly with celebritiesSeason 2 - off more value add, more thematic (e.g., wine regions), added a wine club to drink the wines w/ the show (full 360 experience)Has IG (>10,000 followers) and YouTube (>300 subscribers) channelsListener baseThey assumed it would be the same as Wine Access customersThey found it to skew younger and less wine-savvy, but very curiousAnother way to connect with membersTraction>100,000 cumulative downloadsPast episode performance increases with new listenersHolds people’s attention for an extended period of timeMost podcasts fizzle out after five episodesGetting celebrities on the show“Do you want to drink wine with us?” worked during the pandemicThey did a lot of cold calling, worked with a few producersMore prominent celebrities didn’t always have the best performanceBert Kreischer’s episode was very successful; he cried on the show and then mentioned it and FaceTimed Amanda while on 2 Bears, 1 Cave podcastWine ClubFour wines for four episodes, sent every other month, curated by Amanda10% off all Wine Access purchasesIncludes shipping, can add wines w/ free shipping to shipmentSome wines exclusive to the wine clubQ3 2023 - Unfiltered Wine Club had more new members than any other club that Wine Access runsROIThe wine club helps cover the costThe goal is more brand awarenessRetention through connecting w/ members in a different wayContent creation (audio, video) that can be reusedPodcastingSpotify is bringing new energy to the space with a better listening experience (went from 15% -> 30% of Unfiltered listeners)YouTube has a podcast sectionRepurpose clips for social media is a best practice Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
55:0915/12/2023
Library Release - Telling Stories w/ Jason Wise, SOMM TV
From an outsider's perspective, Jason Wise, director of the SOMM movies and founder of SOMM TV, has been able to find stories in the world of wine that interest a broad audience. To control more of the content pipeline and how the shows are distributed, Jason founded SOMM TV. Using "Somm" as more of a curator, SOMM TV has wine at its core and covers food, travel, and other alcohol, making it appealing to a broad (and younger) audience. Learn more about the business of wine films in this episode of XChateau! Detailed Show Notes: SOMM movie (2012) - Genesis of the movieMade when he was fresh out of film school (where he didn't focus on documentaries)Met Brian McClintic, who asked him to watch their tasting practiceJason found the practice similar to a sporting eventMet Ian Cauble and found his determination to become a Master SommelierThe success of the filmThe obsessive personalities made the filmBuilds to an actual event (the MS exam)The wine industry was ready for something like the movieNot a "wine film," a different way of looking at wineIntroduced a new group of people who can tell you what to drink (vs magazines)Documentaries became popular with NetflixNot made by wine people, the outsider perspective made it enjoyable for outsidersMedia business modelMovies usually have a distributorTheaters are a big marketing arena for wineiTunes - make a % of revenueNetflix - pays the distributor a fixed fee; if put on the 1st page, it can reach millions of people. It often pays based on what it costs to make. They can own rights outright or rent the filmAmazon - get paid 6+ months after it's up, get a tiny cut of incremental revenueYouTube - don't make any money onCreated SommTV to control more steps in the business model - more control of content pipeline, partnerships, and a place to premiere new films (e.g., SOMM 4)Before Covid - events were a big part of the businessMedia platformsHulu - Jason's favorite, takes the biggest swings in contentStars - has the best moviesNetflix - very careful; content is very similar to each other; often licenses something then makes their version if it works (e.g., Uncorked is a similar series to Somm)Cost of making filmsBig range - SOMM 2 ~$100k vs ~$850k for another wine film made by someone elseDocumentaries - can be millions, when there's real music, at least $500kDo not pay people to be in the filmSommTV business modelEmployees on salary, which is unusual in film90% original contentIt started with originals and, now, trying to license other contentFocused on wine, food, and alcohol; food is going to be a big partIt started the streaming service because it's an underserved audience, and wanted to super-serve themContent pipeline - they would ideally love to have new content every dayHundreds of thousands of subscribers (as of Jan 2022) - believes the potential audience is in the millions"Somm" is defined by Jason as someone who curates - wine at the center, but food, travel, etc…surrounding itPricing - $6/month, $50/yearLower cost doesn't necessarily mean more subscribersTechnology - a mix of own-developed and 3rd party apps; the goal is to bring the technology in-houseSommTV subscribersYounger, usually 24-37 years old (~70%), middle classScreenings/events - more varied audience52% male, 48% female - women growing fastKey markets - US largest by far, UK, Brazil, Nordic countries (not allowed in Iran or China) Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
56:2629/11/2023
Mapping Flavor Profiles for Wine w/ Katerina Axelsson, Tastry
Frustrated by a lack of understanding of consumer taste preferences and a lack of data-driven decision-making about winemaking, Katerina Axelsson, CEO and Co-Founder of Tastry, built an AI and chemical analysis system to solve this. With custom-built algorithms that take chemical analysis and develop flavor profiles and a database of consumer taste preferences that map to the US’s 248M adults, Tastry is paving a new, innovative way to use data to make and market wine.Detailed Show Notes: Tastry was founded around 6 years ago, but 1st 4 were more of an R&D project, officially launched Dec 2021The wine industry is trying to anticipate what consumers wantNew wines have an 85% failure rate in the 1st yearPeople describing flavors in wine doesn’t correlate with if they like itTastry uses AI and Machine Learning with chemical analysis to break down a wine’s flavor2 databases - wine’s flavor profile and consumer taste preferences that are matched togetherWine databaseAnalyze 10,000’s of wines/yearChemical analysis is done in-house on standardized equipment but with proprietary softwareThe Top 2,000 wines based on IRI annually are analyzed to build a baseline data set as wineries’ samples are proprietaryConsumer taste databaseDid double-blind tasting panels, asking consumers if they both liked or did not like wines; the negative preference is important for the flavor profile buildingConsumers also asked analog questions that became the Recommended by Tastry quizUse algorithms to relate data and predict preferences for the rest of the population (248M taste profiles)Can now predict individual consumer taste profiles if they take the Tasty quiz with 93% accuracy in how they would rate the winePalates are very unique; the largest cohort is only 13 peopleDemographics don’t show a lot of differences in taste preferencesCustomers - work with >100 wineries, 22 of 25 largest wineriesWinemaker use casesComputational Blending - uses simulation to match profiles from different blends and adjustments; winemakers set parameters on what they are trying to achieveWinery had to switch from barrels to adjustments to 5x production and used blending to get a similar profileNavigating smoke taint (3k tons, $10M worth of fruit) - came back with a recipe that solved the issueMaintaining year-over-year consistencyWinery marketing use casesRecommended by Tastry plug-in for wine clubsLook more at finished wines and at competitive sets and overlap of consumer preferencesRetailer use casesRecommender helps get more niche brands discoveredThere is more traction for e-retailers now; pilots with big box retailersDec 2023 - Tastrt will announce a scalable way to access a broad # of winesStrong ROI - 44-215x, benefits mainly cost savings, increased revenueBusiness model - Vertical SaaS with consumption-based modelSubscription to dashboardLab analysis of samples provides ~$3,000 worth of analysis for a $370 list priceCompublend - per simulation chargeAccess to competitive data sets from the Top 2,000 winesPricing is the same for winemakers, marketing, and retailersRaised ~$10M in funding from individuals, early stage VC’s, and strategic investors (wine, AI, retail) Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
58:5211/11/2023
One Unique History, One Terroir, One Wine w/ Enrique Tirado, Don Melchor
As the first iconic wine of Chile, Don Melchor has paved a path for many others to follow. Enrique Tirado, CEO and Technical Director, explains the vision behind Don Melchor, how it became an instant icon of Chile, and how it stays on top of its game. Detailed Show Notes: Enrique’s background - studied agronomy and enology, joined Don Melchor in 1993, became winemaker in 1997, in 2011, Don Melchor Winery was created and became CEODon Melchor overview:One specific vineyard in Puente Alto on the north bank of the Maipo River at the foot of the Andes Mountains1st vintage - 1987127ha, 151 parcelsMainly Cabernet SauvignonUses ~60-70% of the vineyard for Don Melchor wine~12-15k cases of 1 wine produced each year“One unique history, one terroir, one wine” is the ethos behind Don MelchorThe remainder of the fruit goes to other wines in the Concho y Toro portfolio (e.g., Marquis de Casa Concha)Becoming an iconic Chilean wineIt was 1st to create an “icon” wine in ChileIt was the most expensive Chilean wine on initial release1988, 2nd vintage, was in the Top 100 of Wine Spectator - the only Chilean wine and a big deal at the time which established Don Melchor’s statusA string of critical praise - WS Top 100 9x, 3x in the Top 10, 100 points from James Suckling, Best of the Best from Robb ReportExport 90% of the wine to 70 countries; main markets include the US, Brazil, ChinaBecoming iconic todayIt is easier for other Chilean wines as Chile’s reputation is more establishedThe country’s image is critical and requires collaboration with other producersConsistency of quality is critical for both winemaking and the commercial sideAdd value to the wine world - e.g., come from a unique place, have a unique expression and personalityMay create a 2nd wine in the futureStaying on topRequires a singular focus on quality and consistencyNeed to focus on communication and optimizing the best routes to marketWine critics are still important, and they make consumer communication fasterCustomized routes to market by country (e.g., US, Brazil) and have offices in different countriesSold by the Concha y Toro sales forceHave a specific team for premium winesNot on La Place de Bordeaux Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
29:0629/10/2023
Making New Friends Every Day w/ Fabyola Soares, Pernod Ricard
As the #2 global wines & spirits company, Pernod Ricard seriously emphasizes promoting its brands globally. One method of doing this is its global network of Brand Ambassadors (“BA”). Fabyola Soares, Global Senior Wine Education Manager at Martell Mumm Perrier-Jouët, describes her team of 30 Brand Ambassadors, their mission, their role, and what traits make them great. Detailed Show Notes: Fabyola's background - studied to be a sommelier in Brazil, joined Pernod Ricard in 2013 as 1st Champagne Ambassador in Brazil, now oversees global education program and Champagne & Provence Brand Ambassadors (“BA”)Pernod Ricard (“PR”) is #2 worldwide in wines & spirits, >200 premium brands (e.g., Absolut Vodka, GH Mumm, Perrier-Jouët)Pernod Ricard has a range of Brand Ambassador programsPrograms overseen by brand ownerThe oldest program is for Jameson Irish Whisky, founded in 1991 with 80 BAs in 15 markets worldwideBA programs don’t span multiple categories but could represent similar ones, e.g., 2 Champagne housesThe scope varies by market - e.g., Hong Kong BA represents Champagnes and Provence, France - different BAs for each house, US - 1 Sr BA for ChampagneChampagne & Provence Brand Ambassador program30 BAs, 15 international marketsBrand Ambassador rolesTargets trade and passionate consumersMission - “to win hearts and minds”Engage in brand education, trade activation, business development, interact with media/journalists, organize cellar master visits, and teach wine certification programsCollaborates with marketing and commercial teamsDon’t sell wine - commercial teams (Private Client Directors, Prestige Sales Teams) responsible for sales across the portfolioCareer paths - can be promoted to senior BA or join global market and strategy team (7 former BAs work there)Rare wine offers - mostly sold via auctions (e.g., 1874 Perrier-Jouët sold at Christie’s in 2021 for a record £42,875) or private client directorsKey Brand Ambassador traitsNeed to be credible and respected by experts - focus on formal wine training, launched WSET in-house and developed Champagne Specialist Course with the Wine Scholar GuildMust embody house essence and be an effective spokesperson4 key characteristics PR recruits for - passion for wine, strong communications skills, adaptability/resilience, and spontaneous charismaMust be able to personalize interactions and customize messaging to meet customers’ interestsPrior relationships are a plus, depending on the level being recruited forBuilding relationshipsPR founder often said, “Make a new friend every day” - key for BAsCommercial teams will make introductions to local customersConnect with as many people as possible, often surprised by who brings in new business opportunitiesBenefits of relationships with BAs - e.g., invitations to curated events and experiences such as the Belle Époque Society by Perrier-JouëtSocial media is more important in some markets (e.g., Brazil) than othersPR also has Lifestyle Ambassadors (part of the Marketing team) who have social media as a KPI Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
36:3018/10/2023
Promoting Diversity & Personality w/ María del Yerro and Enrique Valero, Grandes Pagos de España
With the aim of safeguarding the wines of personality from special vineyards (or “pagos”) from across Spain, the Grandes Pagos de España is a private group of wineries on the forefront of Spanish wine. President María del Yerro, of Alonso del Yerro, and VP Enrique Valero, CEO of Abadía Retuerta, discuss the history, objectives, how to join, and their new Terroir Workshop Series. Detailed Show Notes: María’s background - was a translator, husband took over family winery in Rioja, 2002 - bought a 56ha vineyard and started Alonso del YerroEnrique’s background - worked at Diageo and Gonzales Byass, became CEO of Abadía RetuertaGrandes Pagos de España (“GPE”) history2000 - 5 wineries established Grand Pagos de Castilla2003 - included other wineries from Spain and renamed to GPE35 wineries, all single vineyardsPago is defined like “terroir”, a vineyard with different characteristicsCommon Goal: produce exceptional wines that reflect unique terroirInspired by VDP and French concept of Grand Cru, but adapted to Spanish contextGoals & Objectives of GPEPromote and safeguard “diversity and personality” of winesFoster research and innovationConduct educational and promotional activitiesCriteria for joiningMost wineries apply to be a memberCriteria - single vineyard, 100% estate fruit, min 5 years of internationally recognized quality, must pass internal tasting committee that assesses the personality of the vineyardMost vineyards ~50-75haSome wineries may produce wines that are not Grand PagosMember benefits and requirementsFees based on quota system by # of bottles produced (3 levels - 150k bottles), no winery is >500k bottlesNetworking w/ other wineries; e.g. - winemakers meet 2x / year to share learningsPromotion of wines domestically & internationally (e.g. - wine fairs, education)No logo on labelPriority marketsSpain is the primary market4 international focuses - USA (include for broader influence of press and blogs), Mexico, UK, SwitzerlandGPE wines at least 4-5x more expensive than avg price of Spanish wine (~$40-300/bottle in the US)Wine tourism program - many GPE wineries will showcase other GPE wineries in their tastingsKPIs for GPE include # of people at events, PR/comms results, results of last 10 years of new applicant tastingsMarketing GPEBuilding CRM of trade / sommeliers from tastings to keep in touchPartner w/ wine influencers, somms, other associationsHighest impact initiatives: US - big tastings; Spain - tastings w/ sommsLaunching a new Terroir Workshop SeriesMain push for the next 3-5 yearsGlobal education program for concept of pagos and 35 GPE wineriesStarting in US, Mexico3 brand ambassadors chosen and trained - help bring a 3rd party voice and local perspective on GPEPartnered w/ Gregory + Vine - helped clarify messaging and identified brand ambassadorsDesigned primarily for wine tradeNext priorities for GPEClimate changeGlobal competition - need to maintain a high reputationSustainability and social responsibility Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
43:3130/09/2023
Classifying and Clarifying German Wine w/ Theresa Olkus & Steffen Christmann, VDP
Having existed through the glory and the doldrums of German wine, the VDP, the association of top wine growers in Germany, has set out to re-establish German wine as one of the finest in the world. With 20 years under its belt, the Grosses Gewachs (“GG”) system has elevated the status of dry German wines in a short time. Theresa Olkus, Managing Director, and Steffen Christmann, President, discuss the history, goals, and role of the VDP and how the GG classification is bringing quality back to dry German wine. Detailed Show Notes: Verband Deutscher Prädikats- und Qualitätsweingüter (“VDP”)“P” standards for quality, those looking to produce top wines from top vineyardsThe goal is to bring the global recognition of German wines back to when the wines were considered some of the best in the world201 members (2023), up from 160 members (1990)10 regional associationsVDP historyStarted end of 19th centuryA movement to counter the industrial winemaking trendCreated quality requirements (e.g. - estate bottling, wine was sold in auction by the barrel and bottled elsewhere; no additions except sulfur, sugar was added before)Post WWI/WWII - cheap, sweet wines became popularGerman Wine Law of 1971 - created quality classification based on must weights, varietal agnostic, leading to consumer confusionThe late 70s/early 80s - German wine quality sank (yields too high), and the law created consumer label confusion, leading to VDP revamp, focus on vineyard sitesJoining the VDP1990-2023 - 130 new members, 1-2 new members/yearMust fulfill criteria, blind tasting, vineyard, and cellar inspectionYou can’t apply or buy a membership; a region must invite a wineryBenefits for VDP membersKnowledge sharing Leveraging the VDP brand (eagle logo) - an international sign of qualityVDP events and marketingExporting expertise - 27% of VDP wines exportedLeaving the VDP1-2 members/year leaveMost coached to leaveMostly leave post generational change - don’t want to follow VDP rules, quality not at the top levelDry German winesTraditional style before 1900Germans drink as much dry as anywhere else in the world, and the reputation for sweet wines is an international perspectiveHistorically - 2-3% potential abv difference between entry-level and best wines. Today, due to climate change, the sugar levels are the same; only the yields and quality of site create differences~60-70% of VDP members don’t make sweet wines, Mosel/Nahe most make sweet, Rheinghau ~20-30% do sweetGrosses Gewächs (“GG”)2002 - implemented in all regions, started w/ Rheingau 1994/5, Pfalz 1996Created positive brand for dry German wines - increase in the average price of GG wines - 2002 - €16, 2023 - €40 (range from €25-150+)German market response was positive, creating pride in German winesUK pushback - writers thought dry German wines were too sour and lacked quality; last to adopt the new style, only in the last 5 yearsScandinavia - a hot spot for German wineElements for GG success - wineries can only make 1 GG wine from 1 Grosses Lage site; wines have gotten betterSignificant markets for GG - used to be Northern Europe, Asia (China, S Korea, Thailand, Singapore)Africa/India/S America - not strong for German winesMore than Riesling - Pinot Noir, Pinot Blanc, SilvanerThe next priorities for VDPRenewing German Wine Law, potentially moving VDP classification into lawSustainability/climate change Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
58:2720/09/2023
Restaurants, Wine, and Hospitalians w/ Richard Hanauer, Lettuce Entertain You
As the wine director and partner of the Lettuce Entertain You restaurant group, Richard Hanauer oversees ~100 restaurants' wine programs. Seeing beverage sales grow from single digits to ~20% of sales, Richard discusses the role beverage plays in restaurants, sommeliers, the elements of good wine programs, and his newest wine country themed concept, Oakville Grill & Cellar. Detailed Show Notes: Lettuce Entertain You ("LEY")~100 restaurants in Chicago/IL, CA, NV, FL, TX, VA, DCPartitions of different culinary groupsBeverage impact on sales - can be 0% - 50% of salesFine dining and wine sales used to have a positive correlationMore casual concepts w/high-end beverage programs (e.g., luxury whiskey w/ casual BBQ)LEY - Wine was single digit of sales, now high teens-20% over the last 20 yearsThe volume of sales driven through by the glass ("BTG") programs (e.g., RPM Seafood sells 4-5x Pinot Grigio vs. Sancerre, which is 2x the price)Wine program drives return visits vs. initial visits - people come back for the person who recommended the bottleDefinition of a good wine programUsed to be verticals of great traditional producersNow, more about how the wine program fits into the restaurant (e.g., Piedmont wines w/ Piedmont food)Need good stemware; not great stemwareWines at the right temperature and match the menuRole of the SommelierOperations - wine binning/storage, ordering, tasting, building wine menusWhen not involved in wine, they should be "hospitalians," helping with everything elseBest somms build relationships with wineries (get access to unique wines) and guests (getting them into the right bottle, not the most expensive -> brings customers back)Average fine dining ratios - 24 tables, 1 somm per 12 tablesSomm turnoverPre-Covid - average tenure 18 monthsRe-training takes 6-12 monthsLEY - tries to retain employees, treats them well w/ 401k, benefits, opportunities to grow career w/in LEYRestaurant pricingRent is the most significant expense -> increases COGS for everything, including wineFood/cocktail ingredients are blended together, but wine is not, making pricing a more significant issueGoal - keep COGS down while holding price (sometimes achieved through relationship w/ wineries)Try to get less available wines - have less price transparencyMarkups lower on higher-end wines - standard markups would make the wines unsellableOakville Grill & Cellar - opened April 2023CA wine area themed restaurantNapa inspiration - "Never pretentious, never formal…very comfortable, pleasurable, elevated service & quality of food, rarely decor"The entire wine program is from CACellar Door - tasting studio w/in Oakville Grill6 person suitePartners w/ different winery every monthRe-creates the winery tasting list down to vintage and wine pricingGets training from the wineryGuests can sign up for winery, take home wine~500 guests/month capacity (4 seatings/night, 5 days/week)Winery requirements: right pricing (not low or high), interesting tasting list, pedigree, make sense w/Chicago's seasonality, open to all of CAAlso, BTG in Oakville Grill and usually on the wine list before and afterTrends for RestaurantsAuthenticity - e.g., Aglianico w/ Neapolitan pizzaWine getting more expensive -> The cost of building a cellar is higher, which leads to more focused wine lists Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
55:5001/09/2023
Going Against the Grain w/ Malek Amrani, The Vice
In a valley of ever-increasing prices, Malek Amrani of The Vice, is trying to bring value and discovery to Napa. Producing 18 varietals from 16 sub-regions, The Vice showcases the full spectrum of Napa Valley at $29 a bottle. Malek is “going against the grain” in many ways - focusing on value, discovery, and underserved markets to build The Vice brand for the long run. Detailed Show Notes: “The Vice” named after Malek’s main vice of wineFocused on value and discovery of Napa ValleyProduction27k cases total~65% house tier, ~30% single vineyard tier (~20 wines/year), ~5% ultra-premium#1 SKU is House Napa Cab - ~11k casesThey make 18 varietals, from 14-16 sub-regions w/in Napa, a little bit of Russian River Pinot and ChardonnaySources both fruit and bulk wineCost mitigation measuresSecure better pricing through pre-paying for grapesBeing proactive - purchasing fruit from southern Napa vineyards in 2020 that weren’t impacted by fires, talked to 12-15 glass distributors to mitigate the 200-300% price increasesFocused on the wholesale channel (~80% of sales)Spends ~75% of the time outside Napa working marketsIn 2020, traveled every month except April working w/ retailers -> 100% success rate, added 400 retailers in NYCFL/TX buy more single vineyard wines; NY/NE - very House tier driven, CA/CO - good mixFL - a red wine state (driven by Boomers), NY - big in orange wine, nearly outsold House Cab in spring 2023Customer demographicsEqual split - Baby Boomers, Gen X, Millennials / GenZOrange wine (~3,500 cases) - 75% Millennials / GenZ, ~25% Gen XSingle vineyard Cabs - ~85% Baby Boomers & Gen X, Millennials focused on lower price pointsAppellations important primarily to Boomers who grew up with Napa becoming famous, Gen X sees Napa as a symbol of status, Millennials/GenZ appellation less critical, more price-drivenBelieves Napa will remain important, driven by tourism - 4M visitors/yearOrange vs. RoséSwapped production of rosé wine for orange wineBelieves rosé hit the ceiling in 2019 - rose a more social drink, also very vintage driven with closeouts on prior vintages damaging brandsSpirits vs. wine marketingSpirits has lots of product innovation, e.g., many flavors of vodka -> led to The Vice producing many different varietals and Napa sub-regionsSpirits spend millions on advertising -> likely would not work for wine; better for the brand to be built account by account w/ gatekeepersConsumer awareness of The Vice2020/2021 - spent heavily on Google, FB/IG ads, had to shift when Sept 2021 privacy laws changedAwareness from a lot of referrals and through retail placementsSome social media, in-person visits, and press/media - ratings are still importantPair wine w/ other vices - e.g., cannabis, candy, ice creamThinks about pairing w/ the senses - e.g., vision (most important), hearing, smell (linked to memory and emotion) - instrumental hip hop, sex toys for a bachelorette partyWorks under targeted regions - e.g., Staten Island and the Bronx retailersLikes to go against the grain - be more value-oriented vs. higher end Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
40:5521/08/2023
The Smart Farm w/ Kia Behnia, Neotempo Wines
Coming from a long career in technology, Kia Behnia, Founder of Neotempo Wines, was galvanized by the 2017 Napa fires to create a more sustainable path. This started in the vineyard, where he’s utilizing technology and leveraging real-time data to improve quality and decrease cost. Kia maps opportunities he sees in weeding, irrigation, mildew prevention, & automated crop evaluation as part of the foundation of a new “Smart Farm.” Beyond the vineyard, Kia has redesigned what sustainable packaging means for wine for Neotempo to address the most significant shortfalls of the industry today. Detailed Show Notes: Neotempo overviewReplanted vineyard (Kiatra), sold fruit, and now starting a winery2017 Napa fires - nearly lost property, vineyards acted as a fire break, became the catalyst to focus on sustainability leveraging tech and innovationCreating a brand for modern times, responsible and sustainableLaunching Fall 2023 w/ Kiatra Cab Sauv, ~$250/btlWe will roll out less expensive wines in the futureTech in the vineyardCan help solve the labor shortage (cost of labor in Napa up 38% in last two years)Large opportunities - weeding, irrigation, mildew prevention, automated crop evaluationThe use of data in the vineyard is low; data is available but not integratedVineyard Tech examples: 1) VineView - scans the vineyard to monitor vigor2) Phytech - monitors soil temps for irrigation; installed 30 sensors across 4 acres / 4,000 vines; measure the stress level of vines to inform watering vs. scheduled wateringUsed 25% less waterAble to do pre-watering for upcoming heat stress events (in a morning of high heat, 3-hour events) -> only lost 5% of the crop in 2022 vs. much more at other vineyardsGets real-time data at 3ft and 1ft under the soil and at canopy levelExtending to misters in 2023 to control temp and hydration more3) Crop Evaluations - establish the health of the vineyard at individual vine levelMapped and graded each vine 0-6 (0=blank, 1=rootstock only, 2=dead vine…6=healthy vine)Graded during the 7 stages of the growing cycle, including 1 week before harvest -> helps determine the replanting scheduleIt also uses grape samples and lab analysis (phenolics) as inputsExported all data into the analytics platform to do more reporting and analysisNo vineyard farming platform yet, mainly just products and featuresROI of vineyard tech - only invests in positive NPV projectsThe cost of farming went slightly upBelieves innovation will reduce labor requirementsWill create new capabilities - e.g., disease preventionChallenges to moving forwardLack of entrepreneurship culture in farmingLack of fundingLack of openness of farmers to adopt new technologiesNeotempo packaging - building architecture for sustainable 750ml wine bottleDesigned own lightweight, high-end bottle (550g, 40% lighter than alternatives, 100% recycled glass)Temp-controlled styrofoam alternative, no plastic - every component recyclable or compostable Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
49:4505/08/2023
The Business of Bordeaux w/ William Kelley, The Wine Advocate
Continuing our two-part episode, William Kelley, Deputy Editor of The Wine Advocate, expounds on the evolution of the business elements of Bordeaux. From La Place de Bordeaux to wine critics' score compression, Williams shares his view on how these institutions are changing and evolving their place in Bordeaux and how that impacts big and small chateaux. Detailed Show Notes: La Place de BordeauxLatour's leaving the en primeur system, but not La Place, did not have a meaningful impact, outside of when the wine is delivered, and did not tempt anyone else to leave en primeur or La PlaceFocused on the Top ~50-150 Bordeaux winesNow represents several non-Bordeaux wines, giving a bit more glamor for negociants to sellMore consolidation is happening in the negociant spaceNegociants now do not have the time nor capital to care about "petite" chateauxSeveral business models emerging, including high margin or high turnover with less inventory keptNot a great way to build durable customers (e.g., may sell in Korea one year and Costco in Wisconsin the next)Petite chateaux - need to differentiate and find direct distribution to be successfulImplications of health trends, consumers drinking lessWine with great personality continues to benefitBulk wines, lower-end wines struggling (e.g., lower-end Bordeaux wines, petite chateaux)Wine CriticsScores are getting inflated and compressed - lots of new critics are coming around and pushing scores upWilliam believes a more credible review is more worthwhile than high scores on their ownE.g., Burgundy doesn't get high scores, yet sells very wellWilliam publishes en primeur scores before the 1st release, therefore can't tell if they have any impact on pricingNext for BordeauxThe 2019 vintage had lots of good deals with Covid impacts and price increases of Burgundy, making people interested in Bordeaux againThe region needs to get people back to Bordeaux who have given up on it Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
24:0722/07/2023
The Rise & Fall of Bordeaux w/ William Kelley, The Wine Advocate
Deputy Editor of The Wine Advocate, William Kelley, who recently took over reviewing Bordeaux, as well as Burgundy and Champagne, amongst others, and former guest on E62 (Evolution of the Wine Critic) and E68 (Burgundy), takes a deep dive into the current state of Bordeaux in this two-part episode. First, William tackles the history of Bordeaux and how it achieved greatness as one of the top wine regions globally to its recent decline relative to Burgundy. Detailed Show Notes: Bordeaux was William’s 1st love of wine, part of its charm being its everywhere and always accessible relative to Burgundy’s scarcityThe Rise of BordeauxFrance’s most successful “commercial” wine - Bordeaux is a trading port city on the Atlantic, commerce is key to its identityWine was mostly an export product vs Burgundy was drank mostly by nobility, was also harder to travelRobert Parker was a big supporter of Bordeaux vs. Burgundy, which was less of a focusBordeaux’s downfallLost commercial influence over the past 20 yearsConversation of wine has been around “terroir” and the Burgundian modelAggressive pricing (particularly of 2010 en primeur campaign) also drove away many traditional customers - many wines still not worth what they were sold for en primeur from the 2009 and 2010 vintage campaignsWorries that 2022 may have a similar fateBordeaux strategiesSome are trying to replicate Bordeaux scarcity (produce less Grand Vin, more 2nd / 3rd wines) - the region/producer may be too big for this strategy to workTrying to copy other successful wine region styles (e.g., Napa, Super Tuscans; Int’l Sauvignon Blancs for whites)William believes the best path is to keep what’s unique about the region but improve quality to make wines more approachable (e.g., more precise block harvesting, canopy management, etc.)There’s an overreliance on vintage for Bordeaux; many great wines are made in lesser vintagesWinemaking trendsSince the 1982 vintage, new prosperity led chateaux to invest in new wineries, the focus was in the cellarRecently, the push has been for vineyard improvements, promoting soil health and rooting systems, canopy management, and rootstocks and clones, though these take generations to implementSales focusSalespeople in Bordeaux are not winemakers vs. Burgundy, where they are vigneronsCritics often taste at negociants, not at wineriesWilliam was one of the 1st critics to walk the 1st growth vineyards in decadesLa Place de BordeauxSuitable for big chateaux w/ pre-existing reputations, not small onesPetite chateaux - struggling and hard to surviveM&A - can increase top chateaux production, especially of 2nd wines, where they can often get 2-3x the price of former wines Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
27:1709/07/2023
Library Release - Getting Inside Bordeaux w/ Jane Anson, janeanson.com
Accidentally filling the big shoes of Michael Broadbent and Steven Spurrier, Jane Anson, wine critic, author of Inside Bordeaux, founder of janeanson.com, and former Bordeaux correspondent for Decanter for nearly 20 years, is one of the world's foremost experts on the wines, history, and region of Bordeaux. Having lived in Bordeaux since 2003, Jane shares her deep insights into how Bordeaux became as famous as it is, how the systems of La Place de Bordeaux and En Primeur work, and the complex terroir of the region. She gives us insight into the content of janeanson.com and how it will be a unique look into Bordeaux, focusing on the drinkability of the wines and many of the unique features to be released. Detailed Show Notes: Bordeaux OverviewA port city far enough inland to be a safe port12th century - duchy of the English crown, wines were sold in the London marketThe system of chateaux, merchants, and negociants was built for exportTerroir is very complex (which may be why it's not talked about much), e.g., of the 61 wines in the 1855 Medoc classification, all of them are on 2 specific gravel terraces (#3 & 4) of the 6 terraces of the MedocMostly clay underneath with gravel on topLots of micro terroirsSt Emilion - has pure limestone, clay, and gravelIssues that have hurt BordeauxEvery vintage is not great, though Bordelais often say thatFrustrate people based on the prices they ask (e.g., 2009/2010 vintages - many people who bought lost money)Advantages of La Place de BordeauxBusiness to business, sell to merchants that sell to consumersVirtual marketplace - enables access to 10,000 clients globallyIncludes chateaux, brokers, and negociantsSells wine into every level of the food chain - has specialists for on-trade, off-trade, hotels, corner shops, supermarkets, etc.It doesn't build your brand but makes sure it gets everywhereGood at giving the illusion of scarcityCan use La Place for specific markets - La Place has expertise in the Asian markets (e.g., China, Vietnam, Japan)Disadvantages of La Place de BordeauxCreates a very competitive environment - low-end wines compete with each otherIt protects Bordeaux well, and merchants need to buy in bad years to get allocations in good yearsNo direct contact with consumers for wineriesLess effective for small guys that aren't established brandsNon-Bordeaux wines selling on La PlaceGone from nothing to 60 wines 5 years ago to 90 wines in 2021Provides access to global markets - shows wines next to the great wines of BordeauxOpus One - the 2nd non-Bordeaux wine on La Place (after Almaviva), has sold wines since 2004 and opened an office in Bordeaux. Barriers to joining La Place - need enough volume to get everywhere, need to do your own brand-building work, and meet customersThe increase in overseas wines has hurt smaller Bordeaux estates -> negociants have limited budgets and drop themEn PrimeurFrom the early 1980s, Parker injected excitement into the En Primeur systemPeople used to make money, but now they are often better off waiting until wines are in bottle with certain exceptions (e.g., tiny production Pomerols)No longer has the same sense of urgencyTranche system - release a small amount of wine at one price, then release more later at higher pricesnon-Bordeaux wines price more consistently than Bordeaux winesLatour dropping out of en primeur, they wanted to store wines and release them when best for consumersChateau Palmer - sells 50% en primeur, 50% 10 years later Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
57:2123/06/2023
State of the Wine Collector w/ John Jackson, Dallas
Checking in on how collectors are weathering current economic conditions, John Jackson (IG: attorneysomm; YouTube: attorneysomm) provides insight into the Dallas, Texas wine market. From their wine clubs to how collectors learn about new wines and buy them, John delivers deep insight into the Dallas market as of May 2023. John also details some of his journey on social media with Instagram and YouTube.Detailed Show Notes: John’s backgroundAttorneysomm on Instagram (27k followers) and YouTube (7,000+ subscribers)Dallas based collector, lawyer, WSET DiplomaCellar is ~2,000 bottlesDallas Wine ClubsLike a country club for wine loversEach club has ~100-125 membersAnnual dues (~$1,500-2,500/year) and must meet a minimum wine spend through the club’s retailIncludes a wine locker (48 bottles), hosts winemaker and distributor tastings, sells wines through distributors and brokers wine collectionsDriven by TX wine laws - restaurants w/ full bars are not allowed to do corkageGraileys - more focused on celebrities and athletes nowRoots and Water - John is a member, currently 2 locations55 Seventy - opened 1-2 years agoCollector demographics are becoming more female over time from heavily maleDry January is relevant, but interest in wine is increasingRegional buying focusTop 4 regions - Bordeaux, Champagne, Napa, BurgundyIn John’s collection - he buys the most Champagne, but California is #1 in the cellar (due to large prior buying), with Bordeaux and Rhone nextSpain and Italy are relevant but smallerPichon Lalande is popular in Dallas - more expensive in Dallas than in other marketsIntroductions to new wineriesPrimarily through club distributor tastings & winemaker visitsVisits to wine regions (collectors go ~2-3x/year)Social mediaWine pricingIncreases have made people more selective w/ purchasing; some have paused and drinking down cellar, waiting for pricing to come downSome prices are double what they were before, especially BurgundyAuction house reached out soliciting wine to sell, claiming the market is at all-time highsPrice increases in bad vintages (e.g., 2017 & 2020 Napa) are negative buying signalsWine buyingFrom club - ~33%, mostly at distributor tastingsOnline sources - ~33%, for older bottles, back vintages (e.g., Benchmark wine); collectors drinking mostly ‘90s Bordeaux and earlierWinery direct - ~33%, for domestic wines, mostly mailing list/allocation systems, don’t like clubs b/c no control over what they receive; John was in ~15-16 mailing lists, now ~4-5); people culling their lists“Cellar Defenders” - wines to drink that protect wines in the cellar; e.g., Willamette Valley, Rioja (Lopez de Heredia), Châteauneuf du Pape (Pegau)Harder to get older wines than before (e.g., Champagne, Napa)Social mediaInstagram - spends less time engaging and more preparing content; posts more high-end winesYouTube - active wine community, tends to be more value-focused, took a long time to reach critical mass (1st 3 months - 100 subscribers; +6 months to 1,000; 15 more months to 7,000); people want to know what wines to buy (e.g., Top 10 wines under $50)Influencers now need to be more proactive in finding opportunities vs. being actively approached during the pandemic Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
36:3710/06/2023
Expanding your Impressions and Senses w/ Hoby Wedler, Tasting in the Dark
Trained in chemistry and born blind, Hoby Wedler, an entrepreneur and sensory expert, has trained his palate to pick up aromas and nuances in wine more acutely than most. Hoby describes how he does "Tasting in the Dark," which helps wineries connect with buyers and his thoughts on accessibility in the wine industry. Detailed Show Notes: Hoby's backgroundBorn blind, studied history and chemistry (Ph.D.)Francis Ford Coppola asked him to design a blindfolded wine experience, which became "Tasting in the Dark"Went into food & beverage, consulting on product development, comparative set tastings, and aligning wines with wine critics' palatesTasting in the Dark structureTry to make people feel comfortable under blindfoldUse eye masks to change attention away from sightPrime the aromatic vocabulary w/ samples of aromas found in winesCreate memories through a truly blind tastingMost impactful for trade teams, distributors, buyers, and for higher-end wines w/ 3-tier distributionE.g., Coppola did tasting for Safeway Group (grocery w/ wine stewards) and saw a significant increase in sales at Safeways for 5+ years afterwardReasons people buy wineLike the labelRead about the wineLike the story, particularly for premium wines ($20+)Most consumers don't know what they're looking forBlind tasting helps imprint a story with the wine in people2018 - Thomas Keller used Tasting in the Dark to train front-of-house staff to enable them to describe food and drinks betterAligning w/critics' palatesMostly aligned on aromatics and mouthfeel, abv levelsWineries can adjust when to send certain wines to criticsSometimes helps wineries w/ blendingWine & accessibilityChapoutier is classic example w/ braille labelsAccessible websites importantQR Codes put in the same place can help bring people to accessible websitesThis can lead to unexpected benefits; e.g., wheelchair ramps were found to be useful to many more than those in wheelchairs Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
38:2326/05/2023
Digital Transformation of Online Grocery & Wine w/ Jessica Kogan, Vintage Wine Estates
Fueled by the pandemic, grocery stores have made significant investments in selling digitally, with wine being an essential growth category for online sales. With estimates of ~$6B in wine sold through online grocery by 2025, Jessica Kogan, Chief Growth & Experience Officer of Vintage Wine Estates, gets into the trends, key success factors, and the opportunity that online grocery represents. Detailed Show Note: Vintage Wine Estates (Ticker: VWE)11th largest wine holding company in the US12 wineries, a couple of digitally native businesses, 12-15 lifestyle brandsHeavy focus on DTCOnline grocery trendsBy 2025 - 22% of Americans will buy groceries online (i.e., anything not in-store and digitally enabled)Alcohol is the fastest growing segment for online grocery - by 2025 - $5.97B in wine online from Target saw 4x amount of alcohol when bought online vs. in-store purchases in 2021, most of which was wineDigital grocery brings up basket size and provides more flexibility for consumers (e.g., curbside pickup; Target provides lots of flexibility)~50% digital is pickup, ~50% delivery todayPost-pandemic trendsWine DTC is seeing slower growth, but online grocery is continuing to growCovid led to increased investment by grocery in onlineGrocery has goals of going beyond grocery into becoming a “lifestyle” store, e.g., leaning into wellnessWhy consumers enjoy buying wine onlineFeel overwhelmed by the selection of in-storeLike learning about the background and story of brandsOften use phones in-store to learn more about brandsGen Z - born digitally, love stories & authenticity, committed to wellness - makes wine compete w/ RTD cocktails and hard seltzersConsumers are more open to taking risks on new brands onlineSelling into grocery storesBelieves in-store demo events are powerfulMaking the story accessible and easy (e.g., QR codes on labels) keySelling in online groceryUses Salsify (a “PIM” - product information manager) to publish info to grocery stores, allows producers to control data shown to consumers94-95% of searches for wine are by varietal (or basic descriptors like red/white), not by brandDigital algorithms - can’t buy ads due to Tied House Laws, but can influence algorithms w/ customer reviews or customers saving productsUsing metadata to show up as recommended product vs. search displays helpfulBeing in the “above the fold” carousel of products where consumers don’t need to scroll down is vital for sales, as big as being on the end-cap in-storeTips for brands for online groceryHave a website w/ e-commerce - helps understand the whole processGo w/ distributors to stores w/ digital info for productsFuture trends for online groceryVirtual tastings will continueMore information on wellness and wineWomen to play an essential role in connecting w/ customers since most grocery buyers are women Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
50:2211/05/2023
Library Release - Selection and Differentiation in Grocery Wine w/ Curtis Mann MW, Albertson’s
Grocery stores are one of the biggest sales channels for wine. Curtis Mann, Group Vice President of Alcohol of the Albertson’s Companies, gives us the inside scoop on buying trends, how to sell into Albertson’s, and the rise of the use of digital. Learn about the dynamics of the grocery wine market and what makes Albertson’s “locally great, nationally strong.”Detailed Show Notes: Grocery as part of the wine marketMulti-outlet wine market ~$12-13B / yearTotal wine market ~$60-70B / year (multi-outlet ~20% of the total market)Albertson's Companies' wine overview~25 different grocery brands, ~2,000 storesWine is a key element of business - it drives sales and customer loyalty, some customers come to stores because of the wine selectionSome stores have up to 3,000 wine SKUsStores with more premium selections are correlated with location (high socio-economic demographics) vs. grocery store brandThe focus is more on the “premium” price segment ($9+ based on IRI)Top brands - Barefoot, Kendall Jackson, up-and-coming brands - Butterl Josh, but wine is very diversified, big brands are still a small part of the marketPremiumization helping imports, including New Zealand Sauvignon BlancWine buying trendsConsumers are called to authenticity - they want to know what’s in their wine, the appellation, sustainability, and organicConvenience - cans, seltzer, ready to drink Premiumization - $10-20/bottle, $30-50/bottle, up to $100/bottle (e.g., high-end Bordeaux, Napa Cabernet) ranges all doing well, some categories accelerating with potential out-of-stocksWine customer demographicsGen X & Baby Boomers - still buying a lot (more in bulk and volume), but less than beforeMillennials are the new customers - buying more, less loyal to wine vs. other drinks, and have less expendable income; their preferences are different from Gen X and Baby BoomersTo meet the changing demographics, Curtis looks forward 3-5 years to develop his shelf set/selections of winePromotions/discountingLimited brand loyalty in wine, customers often default to pricePromotions are very importantNeed to work between price and product to optimize sales and not over-rely on priceWine selectionWhat does it mean to customers? Each wine must have a purpose vs. the other ~1,500 SKUs on the shelfTagline - ‘locally great, nationally strong’; try to give local stores more voice (e.g., Portland stores have more Willamette Valley Pinot Noirs)Flagship Stores (e.g., Andronico’s, Pavilions) - higher-end, eclectic offeringsSteps to sell into Alberston’s - have the 4 P’s put together - distribution network, pricing, product, and where you fit on the shelfGenerally need to place wine 4-6 months in advanceNeeds a UPC code on the bottlePrivate Label/“Own Brand” winesThe goal is to provide the best price to value for customersThe intent is to drive loyaltyNot a dominant part of the businessTrying to create wines that are a draw and get good scoresSelection is built around education, the desire to learn about the wine category through own brandsSuppliers have connections to maintain supply, which can help Own Brands overcome supply challenges (e.g., 2020 Napa, 2021 New Zealand)Core elements of success for the grocery channelThe selection keeps people in the storeRelating the wine to the food in the store (food-wine pairing)E-commerceConvenience (e.g., ready to drinks) Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
34:4428/04/2023
Playful Concept, Serious Wines w/ Kyle MacLachlan, Pursued by Bear
Being a celebrity helps and hinders the launch and selling elements of a wine venture. Kyle MacLachlan, an actor with a broad base of work from Twin Peaks to Sex & the City to The Flintstones, details his journey of starting Pursued by Bear (“PBB”) in Walla Walla, Washington and how he thinks about imbuing his personal brand with the wine brand. From getting approval for the brand name from Steve Martin to designing his newly launched tasting room, Kyle weaves his stories around how branding has worked for PBB. Detailed Show Notes: Kyle’s background - an actor, including Cooper from Twin Peaks, Sex & the City, Desperate Housewives, How I Met Your Mother, and one of his favorites is The FlintstonesHe just wrapped filming of Fallout for Amazon, based on the video gameHe grew up in Eastern Washington, always been a wine drinker over beer & spiritsMet Ann Colgin & Doug Shafer in Napa and wanted to start a Napa brand in the late 1990s, but it was too expensiveHis wife pointed him to WA wine, met Eric Dunham looking for a WA Syrah for his wedding, and partnered in 2005 to launch Pursued by BearPBB~3,000 cases, 5 winesPBB Cab Sauv (launched ‘05; ~500 cases) - was Cab, Syrah, Merlot blend, now Bordeaux blendBaby Bear Syrah (launched ‘08, ~300 cases)Rose (launched ‘15)Bear Cub (launched ‘16, ~1,000 cases) - an entry-level red blendTwin Bear - “prestige wine,” 100% CabernetWinery nameHe wanted it to speak to his ‘day job’ of acting and bring it back to the theater, a Shakespeare referenceRefers to a stage direction in Winter’s Tale - “Exit, pursued by a bear”Steve Martin approved of the name, which solidified itKyle’s role at PBBTook over 100% ownership of the brand in 2016Very involved in the business, hands-on with operations (e.g., copywriting for labels) and parts of winemaking (e.g., blending trials)Dan Wampfler winemaker since 2008Leveraging celebrityHas helped bring attention to wine (e.g., using personal social media), but most fans aren’t wine peopleGotten more press than otherwiseSome product placement (has been in the background of Desperate Housewives and How I Met Your Mother - like an “easter egg”)Tries to be an ambassador for WA State winesMade short videos during the pandemic - “Beary Tales”It is a hindrance at times as people think wines aren’t goodHollywood connections have not helped much - many aren’t big wine drinkers or collectorsCustomer acquisitionMost effective has been 1:1 hand sellingOpening a tasting room in Walla Walla - April 2023Zoom tastings were effective at selling wine during the pandemicHe wants people to feel they are on a journey w/ Kyle around PBBTasting roomDesigned to be comfortable - cork floors, oak tables, big bronze bearLocated in Walla Walla downtown - a wine-tasting destination, mostly from WA, ID, OR, and CanadaVery little acting memorabilia - a Twin Peaks bobblehead & mugSpring Release 2023 - will have 3 musicians playing music, walking around townLikes surprise and delight elements, has had discussions w/ an AR company about embedding elements, but hasn’t figured it out yet Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
39:2121/04/2023
Library Release - The Benefits of a WSET Wine Education w/ Peter Marks, MW of the Napa Valley Wine Academy
Educating students about wine is more about the “psychic paycheck” than the monetary one for Peter Marks, MW, partner and Vice President of the Napa Valley Wine Academy (“NVWA”), the leading provider of Wine & Spirit Education Trust (“WSET”) courses globally. Peter tells us about the different levels of the WSET (from Level 1 to Diploma), the full costs of wine education, and the benefits. He also discusses the innovations happening with online learning, including sending wine kits out with their courses and best practices for virtual seminars. Detailed Show Notes: Being in wine education is more about the “psychic paycheck” - getting feedback from your customers and studentsNapa Valley Wine AcademyFounded in 2011, offering WSETbprogramsNow the largest WSET provider in the worldAn Approved Program Provider (“APP”) for WSET - it’s like a franchise; NVWA buys materials, study packs, and exams from WSET; grading is done by WSET in London65% of business in WSET, 35% in other wine programsDevelop proprietary courses - e.g., Wine 101, Wine 201, Napa Valley Wine Expert, Oregon Wine Expert, and the Business of Wine (with Tim Hanni, MW)WSET4 levels, 1 through 4 (4 is called the Diploma)Levels 3 & 4 provide more understanding of the subjectsThe diploma includes the business of wine and is a precursor for the Master of Wine programGeared towards all aspects of the wine industry, very broad view vs. other programs (e.g., Court of Master Sommeliers is focused on restaurants/service, and Society of Wine Educators is focused on education)Wine industry (or “trade”) participation in coursesLevel 1 - ~90% consumer, 10% tradeLevel 2 - ~75% consumer, 25% tradeLevel 3 - ~40% consumer, 60% tradeLevel 4 - ~10% consumer, 90% tradeMore consumers are coming into the programThe benefits of a wine education, the 3 C’s of the WSETCredential - showing your accomplishmentConfidence - knowing the facts about wine, speaking with confidenceCulture - participating in the culture of wine...the pay may be low, but being a part of the friendship and social aspects of the wine industry~100,000 WSET students/year - now the “go to” wine education organization - it covers the entire industry and is globalRecent changes to the program - giving students what they wantLaunched a Sake programSplit spirits from Wine for the DiplomaIntroducing Beer soonVirtual classesHas always been an option - was called “self-study” and had to go in person to take examsExams for L1 and L2 are now offered online; L3 and Diploma cannot be because they include tastingsNVWA launched wine kits (wine samples re-bottled into small vials) for virtual classes - do virtual tastings with them; the wines are disguised to be blindHad to learn how to better engage students online - using breakout rooms, polls/quizzes, reducing seminar times to 1-2 hours, best practice is to engage with students every 3-5 minutesDo live webinars that are recordedPricing is the same as in-person, but no travel costsThe cost of wine educationCourse fees, wine (for Diploma ~200-220 wines are recommended to know; wine can cost $500-2,000 for samples), travelWine kits are included in course costsScholarships - NVWA has several partners for scholarshipsWine Unify for L1-3Wine AccessThe Roots FundJohn Hart (former NBA star) - for the BIPOC communityThe return on wine educationConstellation Brands paid bonuses for employees who passed WSET qualifications and also offered tuition reimbursement Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
35:4513/04/2023
Library Release - The Hardest Wine Exam in the World w/ Mark de Vere, MW
The hardest wine exam in the world, an elite community of >400 wine professionals, and learning how to engage with wine more. All those elements describe the Institute of Masters of Wine and the Master of Wine (“MW”) exam. MW Mark DeVere tells us how becoming an MW landed him a full-time job in Napa to all the rigors required to pass the MW exam. This a must-listen episode for those considering applying for the MW program or those who love learning about challenging wine exams. Detailed Show Notes: Institute of Masters of Wine (“IMW”) backgroundCurrently, 418 Masters of Wine, >490 have passed the exam over timeIt started in 1953 in London as London was the most globally focused wine trading hub in the world~20 people sat the exam in 1953, with 6 passing; it was only open in the UK at that timeThe purpose was to measure who was a master of the overall wine trade1st non-UK residents were Australians and Americans who went to the UK to work and sit the examsNow a global institution - MWs in 30 countries, exams offered around the world (London, California, Australia), head office is still in LondonThe mission of the IMW - is to promote excellence, interaction, and learning in the global wine tradeInteraction through tastings and the MW symposium (held every 4 years)Excellence and learning through setting the MW examNot an educational organization like the WSETIMW vs. Court of Master Sommeliers (“CMS”)MS has a more laddered program (i.e., more levels before the master level)MW has no practical service elementMS exam is oral, MW is all writtenThe MW Study ProgramGoal: to help orient people to understand what the end goal is - to gain the depth and breadth of the challenge of the MW examNeed to know every step of the wine business, from the vineyard to wine landing on the tableThere are time limits for getting through the program now, ~5 years, with the goal of not getting people stuck in it3 StagesStage 1 - 1st orientation to the program, has the Stage 1 assessment - proving you can understand the issues, 12 wines blind, 1 set of theory essaysStage 2 - preparation for the MW exam, which is 3 x 2.25-hour blind tasting exams with 12 wines each, 5 x timed theory examsStage 3 - research paper, developing something new for the world of winePass Rate of the MW examUsed to say ~10% of people that sat the examHard to calculate a rate due to people who sit multiple times and can pass certain portions of the examIMW is actively trying to increase the pass rate by making it more challenging to get in and sit the exam~15-20% of people who enter the program actually complete it; ~75-100 are admitted to the program each year, and ~10-20 people become MWs each yearThe value of the program, if you don’t complete is learning how to understand the issues around wine better, engaging with wine differently, and building communication skillsMore people are applying for the MW program, and it’s becoming a more global programThe IMW and diversityThe exam is entirely blind, making it unable to discriminate via gradingConduct outreach to all parts of the world to generate a diverse pool of candidates~150 female MWs todayBeing an MWThe title does carry some weight within the wine worldIt got Mark a permanent job at Mondavi after being hired for only a seasonal positionJoin a community of MWs, where giving back to the wine world is one of the core tenets Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
43:2106/04/2023
What Price Communicates for Fine Wine
There’s a lot of data hidden in a price…and a lot to consider by wineries when they set the price. During the Nov 2022 wine2wine conference in Verona, Italy, host Peter Yeung presented the five factors that price communicates for fine wine. Building off his research for Luxury Wine Marketing, Peter dives into the various messages embedded in a winery’s decision to set price. Detailed Show Notes: Wine2Wine presentation linkDefining fine and luxury wineVs. commercial or mass market wines which are more substitutableFor fine wine, the brand value is more than just the wineIt has different consumers than commercial winesDifferent sales channels (e.g., specialty wine stores, higher-end restaurants, direct-to-consumer)The fine wine consumerFor mass-market wines - more women, lower price pointsFor fine wine - older and male; however, more women buying fine winesFine wine pricing driversCosts more to produce (land, labor, packaging)Higher willingness to pay from consumersHigher brand value makes the wines less substitutable - e.g., entry-level Champagne is ~$50/btl high-quality traditional method sparkling from the US can be ~$25/btlWhat price communicates (for fine wine) - i.e., what a winery is communicating to consumers / the market with their priceValue proposition to consumers - the offering a winery is giving their customersExpected quality - higher prices tend to be correlated with higher scores, including in the Luxury Wine Database of prices vs. Wine Spectator scoresBrand reputation - getting a 100-point score can often make a wine trade for $300/btl; however, the many wines priced above that do so based on their brand valueRelative quality - showing how a wine stacks w/in a winery’s portfolio or against other peer wines; the most expensive wine implies its the bestConsumer willingness to pay - e.g., Liber Pater made an “original Bordeaux” wine from own-rooted vines, 500 bottles w/ the 2015 vintage, and ran a Dutch auction to set the price, a record 30,000 euros/btlPrice is more than one number; there are:Suggested Retail Price (set by winery)Average selling price (retail, restaurants)Secondary marketSecondary market price from trading through merchants (e.g., on Liv-Ex) or via auctionsIt gives wineries a sense of consumers’ willingness to payOften small volume - not enough trading for true price discovery Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
31:2523/03/2023
Library Release - Dissecting the Price of Luxury Wines
This Library Release was selected in conjunction with the next episode discussing pricing and was initially released on December 2nd, 2020. Robert and Peter discuss how luxury wines are priced, delving into the core insights from the Pricing Chapter of Peter’s book, Luxury Wine Marketing. They discuss the luxury wine price segments, the types of luxury wine buyers, and how you need everything to be working right to build a luxury wine brand. “You can’t just stick a label on two-buck-chuck and price it at $1,000.” Detailed Show Notes: Luxury Wine Marketing (“LWM”) was published in late 2019It contains industry best practices for how to sell luxury wines vs. more “commercial” winesIncludes new research on the market size, customer segmentation, and frameworks for marketing luxury winesWine pricing segmentsThe overall wine market has an average price of $7-8/bottleThat makes $20+ sometimes classified as “luxury”In LWM, luxury wine is more of a luxury good - where the product is used to differentiate$50-99 - affordable luxury$100-199 - everyday wine for the luxury buyer$200-499 - special occasion luxury$500-999 - icon wines$1,000+ - dream winesLuxury wine consumer segmentsThe Wine CollectorThe Wine Geek - seeks knowledgeTrue Luxury Buyer - buys top brandsAspirational Buyer - looks up to the True Luxury BuyerBrand impact on priceDom Perignon is a special occasion wine at $170/bottle vs. if it was $40/bottlePrice signals an element of qualityPrice makes some people think it’s better qualityStrategies to launch luxury winesBuild Up - start lower priced and build upBuild down - start higher and build downNeed a good story and quality to back up pricingE.g., Penfolds - from Grange to $10-15/bottle wines, Grange provides the halo effect for the cheaper wines as people associate themselves with the brandLuxury branding - using price over value as the luxury driver, e.g., Harlan EstateLuxury wine demandSometimes when you increase the price, you increase the demandTwo types of demand - consumption and investment demandWineries want people to drink, not sell the wines, to keep the secondary market highStill need to have value - quality and reputation of the winesBurgundy - driven by wine collectors who want the scarce and rareTricks and tips for buying luxury winesKnow what you like and target those types of winesIf you want something special - brand strength is essential, a la the gifting culture in ChinaFollow critics whose palates are similar to yours and track their scores to find valuesCheck out the best wines from less well-known parts of the worldWinery pricing strategy has four major determinantsQualityBrand strengthCompetitionExternal factorsHow do some Napa wines come out of the gate pricing $250+? Sometimes they leverage the brand strength of the winemakerPrimarily selling to friends and familySometimes they need to play the long game and sit on wines for a while Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
34:4111/03/2023
State of the Wine Collector w/ Charlie Fu, Los Angeles
With a lot of economic uncertainty in early 2023, the fine and luxury wine space has remained relatively robust. Charlie Fu, an LA-based lawyer, wine collector, Wine Berserkers moderator, and caviar purveyor, gives us his thoughts on the state of the wine-collecting market. From Dry January, how they find new wines, navigating price increases, and Berserker Day, Charlie provides a good overview of wine collecting from his group's point of view. Detailed Show Notes: Charlie's background - LA-based collector, lawyer, caviar purveyor, and @clayfu.wine on InstagramHe has a few thousand bottles of wine in his collectionWine collecting group~5-6 people meet for dinners in downtown LATotal group ~20-25 collectorsMostly early 30s-mid-40s, mostly maleFocused on Burgundy, Rhone, & ChampagneDry January has become more commonFinding new winesRecommendations from people in the industry, friends (including from IG), other collectorsSomeone they know personally and trustMore guarded response when it's retailers recommendingWine pricingSeeing secondary marketing pricing dip at the top endRetail release pricing keeps going upSecondary premium key to keeping collectors buying a "relatively good deal"He believes incremental price changes are less shocking than large shiftsPeople want to know why the price is escalating; communications are critical to significant price changesThere are thresholds when people stop buying - relative value, secondary pricing, and personal decisions on value"Everyone's always looking for alternatives to Burgundy" e.g., Willamette Valley Pinot and Chard are seen as "Burgundian"e.g., Walter Scott as a white Burgundy substituteWhere people buy wineRetailers w/ an existing relationship where they offer reasonable pricingBrokers & auctions for the secondary marketDomestic wineries mainly bought direct, "as long as it makes sense"Wine.com gets a reasonable allocation of high-end wine, but not flash sale or other sale sitesMailing list/allocation systemsPeople don't like forced purchase quarterly - e.g., the wine club modelThey prefer the optionality of offering systemsToo much choice in an offer gets challenging - w/ no US vineyard hierarchy (vs. Burgundy), it's hard to distinguish between the winesCollecting groups has not shown interest in wine investmentWine BerserkersSite upgrade in Aug 2022 took some time to get used toBerserker Day - 2023 was the biggest everNow two days, Preview day for "Grand Cru" subscribersTips for wineries: Be active before Berserkers Day (e.g., Goodfellow Winery from Willamette Valley was very active and did well on Berserker Day)150+ listings need to have a good offer and stand out with a good description and potentially catchy oneCollecting trendsNatural wines have had their phaseMore small production wineries, often connected to more famous ones, e.g., sons/daughters of prominent winemaking families Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
31:4402/03/2023
Waste Prevention through Competitions and Chocolate w/ Katie Jackson, Jackson Family Wines
Jackson Family Wines is at the forefront of many sustainability efforts as one of the world’s largest wine companies, with >40 wineries. Though they have made significant efforts in renewable energy, climate change, and social impact; they have also done a lot with waste prevention and green purchasing. Katie Jackson, a 2nd generation family member, leads these efforts to become more sustainable and describes some of the major programs they’ve undertaken. Detailed Show Notes: Intro from Anna Brittain of Napa Green Only 30% of glass is recycled, and 30-50% of emissions are from packaging and distributionKatie’s background - 2nd generation, worked in multiple departments but joined the sustainability team in 2011 after it was founded in 2008JFW backgroundFounded in 1982 as Kendall JacksonInvested in high-quality vineyards across the stateFounded Cambria (1986) and Stonestreet (1989), now >40 wineries (mostly CA, 3 Oregon, Chile, South Africa, France, Italy, & 2 in Australia)Broad sustainability programs with four current focus areas: Social impact, including DEI - has an internal team called “idea alliance” to develop new ways to improve diversityCarbon/climate change - most difficult goals - 50% reduction by 2030, climate positive by 2050Farming/regenerative farmingWater management2015 - publicly released a comprehensive plan w/ 11 different focus areas, including Zero Waste and getting more growers to be sustainableSustainability investments and ROIInvested $18.5M since 2015Biggest spend in renewable energy (primarily solar - powers ~30% of winemaking needs, installing a new wind turbine which will generate ~5% of needs)Generated $19.5M in savings and gov’t grantsLightweighting of glass has saved $1M/year in glass and ~$500k/year in transportationSolar initially had a 6-year paybackNo set corporate threshold for sustainability investment ROISustainability teamTwo full-time staff~80 people in 9 working groups volunteer ~3-4 hrs/month to work on sustainability initiativesGreen purchasing - developed preferred purchasing plan, looking at more environmentally friendly materialsE.g., the sales team is looking at biodegradable POS neckers made w/ seedsWaste prevention - critical for climate change goals, focused more on wineries currentlyAchieved Mostly organic materials (e.g., composting)Sister company - Whole Vine - turns waste into nutrient-dense Chardonnay marc that is used for chocolate barsHave not yet gotten certified Zero Waste due to cost, instead investing in other areasWater conservation - since 2008, reduced water intensity/bottle by 43%Created the “Water Wise Winery Award” competition to conserve water (2016)Recycled water in cooling towersInstalled rainwater capture systems, 1st at Carneros Winery - 60% of water usage from systemSpreading sustainability practicesThe sustainability team helps spread the wordAnnual Winegrowing Summit also shares best practices in productionConsumers showing interest and support for sustainable certificationsLuxury brands benefit from higher margins for investmentMass market brands have the scale to innovate Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
37:4023/02/2023
Becoming a Sustainability Brand w/ Joseph Brinkley, Bonterra Organic Estates
Now known as Bonterra Organic Estates, Bonterra has long been associated with organics. But, they have pushed well beyond that with sustainability processes and certifications such as Climate Neutral, True Zero Waste, and now focusing on Regenerative Organics. Joseph Brinkley, Director of Regenerative Farming, describes the history and communication processes that have led Bonterra to become a leader in the sustainability space in consumers' minds. Detailed Show Notes: Joseph's background - started in biodynamic farms, became a vineyard manager, joined Bonterra in 2013, a role now as a spokesperson for education and advocacy of farming and sustainable practicesBonterra OverviewFounded in 1968 as Fetzer Vineyards in Mendocino CountyEmphasis on farming practices & sustainabilityThe late '80s - moved to organics1991 - 1st vintage of Bonterra OrganicProduct lines:Fetzer - $5-6/btlBonterra - $10-12/btl; ~500k casesBonterra Estate (regenerative organic, "Reg Org") - ~$20-25/btlSingle Vineyard (biodynamic) - ~40-60/bltEstate & SVDs ~10k casesAn early adopter of solar, recycling, and tracking & reporting of GHG emissionsChanged company name to Bonterra Organic Estates from Fetzer Vineyards in 2022Affirmation of commitment to Reg Org farmingBonterra is already synonymous w/ organicSF Chronicle and Forbes published articles about itCertificationsB Corp, Reg Org, Climate Neutral, True Zero WasteBacks up claims w/ verified certification, provides accountability w/ consumersB Corp - looks at the approach to business, all-encompassing, incl land, people, and community (~600 companies at Champions event)Farming certs: Organics now federally regulatedBiodynamics the "gold standard"Reg Org - "next level gold standard" - intersects w/ environment and social pillars (e.g., living wages) (now up to ~500k acres)Younger generations are more aware and interested in certificationsKnowledge of certifications differs dramatically by geographic marketsSome certs are brand specific and intersect w/ brand price points: True Zero Waste - Reg Org - believes ~$20-25/btl is the suitable range, but just launchingBiodynamics - $50-80/btlCost of certification in the thousands, some based on royalties ($/btl)Bonterra does not charge a premium for organic certificationWhen a winery does a non-organic spray, they get de-certified for at least three yearsCertification benefits include increased consumer loyalty and brand value, witnessed by Bonterra growing from 200k -> 500k in the last decadeCampaign: "Delicious Taste of Saving the Planet"Did a 360-degree activation - commercials, social media, PRThey poked fun at themselves and the industryMedia consumption now focuses on short snippets and getting people to like and share themVideo ads were the most effective; they got people to share themReturned measured by brand growth and some media metrics (e.g., # of shares)New Campaign: "Cultivate the Future" - focused on Reg Org winesGoal to educate consumers on the purpose of Reg Org farmingHelp model sustainable comms for others and bring other producers in to collaborateWill focus on social media, events (wine dinners, press), and media coverage Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
42:0316/02/2023
The Payback of Energy Efficiency w/ David Duncan, Silver Oak
As a lifelong hunter, David Duncan, CEO & Proprietor of Silver Oak in Napa Valley, has a keen appreciation for nature. This has driven David and Silver Oak to pursue many sustainability investments, including being the 1st existing winery and new build winery to be LEED Platinum certified and be at the forefront of energy efficiency for the last 20 years. From solar panels to using waste heat to get water up to sanitization temperatures, David dives into the details of Silver Oak’s sustainability efforts and how they think about them in terms of long-term return on investment. Detailed Show Notes: Silver Oak’s background - founded in 1972Two wineries - Oakville (Napa) and Alexander Valley (Sonoma)~100k cases/year~700 acres of vineyards, ~75% estate owned fruitFour wine brands total, and Oak Cooperage in MissouriSustainability efforts began in the vineyards in the late 90s, and early 2000sOakville winery2006 dumpster fire burnt the winery downWanted to do the right thing in re-building (2008)Installed solar panels and became 1st LEED Platinum winery (existing building)They looked at LED lighting, but it was 3x as expensive at the timeAlexander Valley wineryBuilt in 2014, 1st LEED Platinum winery (new build)A “living building,” which is mostly energy and water useUses ~1 gallon of water per gallon of wine vs. ~7 gallons of water as the industry averageGenerates 105% of annual electric usageAll LED lighting, which is now more cost-effectiveAmmonia chiller for glycol cooling to keep tanks cool - was old-school technology in the 30s and 40s; new technology is very efficientSanitation water uses solar power to heat to 105F, then waste heat from the cooling system adds 10-15F; the rest of the heating uses electricityIt has a 3-4 month peak season (harvest) where electric usage is higher and sometimes pulls from the electric grid; it has a small battery system but not a large oneUsed recycled materials, which reduced painting needsWorking towards LEED certification for other wineriesVineyards - moving towards electric tractors, but haven’t bought one yetCooperage - burns scrap wood to bend barrels instead of natural gasROI for sustainability2.5-year payback for Alexander Valley solar system - highest of all investmentsIt looks at the “life cost of building” to calculate ROI, a long-term evaluation - the long-term view matches the long-term production cycle (5 years to produce Silver Oak)No set target IRR cutoff, but ~5-year payback is the approximate cutoffLooks at the impact on employees, which they call “The Whole Bunch” like a bunch of grapes, and assesses the safety of workersHighest payback investments - solar panels and water use to treat barrels using recycled waterSustainability also improves quality - e.g., minimizing water use in vineyardsBarriers to making sustainability investments are often due to 1 chance a year to make changes; Silver Oak does small trials on 1-2 acres to evaluateShares learnings w/ the industry - gives many tours of winery and vineyards, interviews, seminars and conferences, works w/ UC DavisAlso improving packagingMoving towards a lighter glassThey used to send empty bottles to Canada to decorate and then ship them back to CA to fill. For the 1st time in 25 years, Silver Oak Napa Valley will have a paper label to avoid this environmental impact Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
29:5110/02/2023
Accessing the Creativity of Diversity w/ Maryam Ahmed, Maryam + Company
Sustainability is as much about people as it is about the land. That’s how Maryam Ahmed, founder of Maryam + Company and the Diversity in Wine Leadership Forum, connects Diversity, Equity, & Inclusion (“DEI”) to sustainability. Maryam shares how DEI creates access and relevance to new customers and markets for wine and how “doing the work” creates significant ROI for businesses. Detailed Show Notes: Maryam’s background - worked in Finger Lakes, distribution in NYC, moved to Walla Walla, then Napa, was on Somm TV show SparklersMaryam + Company - educational program & strategic initiatives for food & wine companies, further sustainability and diversityWorks w/ associations, portfolios, or specific wine businesses & non-profitsAll clients have a demonstrated commitment to DEIHelp broaden their network and provides accountability consultingHelps with conference and panel development, changing from panels on diversity to core topics with diversity integrated into itField Blends - wine travel program to regions that don’t always get the spotlight (e.g. - 2022 in Walla Walla, WA); for both professionals and consumers; scholarships for diverse candidates; brings regional orgs to support programs; provides regions with diverse travelers and new customers to regionWine Writers Symposium - helped make the event virtual during Covid, broaden the audience from 30 to 300 people, and more diverse writers received jobs from itWorking w/ diverse influencers w/ trend towards micro-influencers (Clif Family - advised to let micro-influencers tell them what they wanted to do vs. the brand directingDEI benefitsCreativity from multiple perspectives in the organizationProblem-solving with new ideasEnables access and relevance to a broader customer base and new marketsDiversity in Wine Leadership Forum (“DIWLF”)Created in 2020, cofounded w/ Elaine Chukan BrownGetting the many initiatives for diversity in wine to collaborate instead of compete~20 organizations participatingOrgs primarily focused on creating access, elevation, education, & inclusion; all ties back to sustainabilityDo the Work Series - educated >150 professionalsWine Unify - creates access and elevation through education (WSET scholarships)Lift Collective - has an entrepreneurship program280 Project & Industry Sessions - creates immersive education from a black and brown lensSustainability needs to be not just for the land, but also the people, making DEI criticalDEI “B” - belonging also important, working in supportive spacesDoing the work is both personal and professional; common barriers for people: People don’t want to be wrong / embarrassed -> advise them to “fail forward”Don’t want to make other people feel uncomfortable -> discomfort is part of doing the work Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
49:2903/02/2023
Blocking & Tackling of Biodiversity w/ Drew Bledsoe & Josh McDaniels, Bledsoe Wine Estates
Sustainability is just good business practice, according to Drew Bledsoe, former New England Patriots Quarterback and now founder and proprietor of Bledsoe Wine Estates, comprising three wineries in Washington and Oregon. Josh McDaniels, CEO, and Drew discuss their biodiversity initiatives in detail, as well as their people and packaging efforts, as part of their sustainability ethos. From improving quality to increasing customer loyalty, they believe taking a long-term view on sustainability proves it is a good investment. Detailed Show Notes: Drew’s background - grew up in Walla Walla, WA; NFL quarterback for 14 years; started Doubleback winery and now has 3Josh’s background - also grew up in Walla Walla, worked at Leonetti for 10+ years, and worked with Paul Hobbs in ArgentinaSustainability is critical for wine because of the long-term, generational nature of the wine businessBiodiversity initiativesBuilt wildflower perimeter around vineyards - harbors beneficial insects, reducing mite infestations that happened when spring vetch growth diesWorking w/ The Bee Girl Organization in OR to study amount and species of bees for regeneration farmingDesigned specific cover crop seed mix to attract more bees, improve Nitrogen in soil, have longer taproots to improve soil oxygen, and maintain water in the soilMoving to dry farming through the cover crop, no-till, and drought-resistant rootstocksEasier to make investments in estate vineyards vs. contracted onesBenefitsThe main goal is to increase wine qualityBuilds emotional connection with consumers - more about customer loyalty/retention vs. new customer acquisitionReduced spray expensesReduced water costsConsumers expect luxury wine to be environmentally responsibleAn early leader of people sustainability - focused on vineyard crew five years ago w/ higher pay, year-round employment, and full benefits, leading to benefits of not having to rehire and retrain crewOther sustainability initiativesConsolidating shipping across the countryInstalling solar panels at the wineryConscious of Doubleback bottle weightReducing packagingFamily Wine - currently bottled in 1L bottles that were meant for reuse, but issues around sanitization for reuse; now considered bag-in-a-box a la Tablas CreekLooking at sources products, including glass, closer to home vs. glass was from China previouslySustainability for the wine industry - with a long-term view, sustainability is a good investment and good business practice Get access to library episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
42:1926/01/2023