Sunday, January 27, 2013

Cigarettes, Lot18, Fred Franzia and Wine Inventory

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Have you ever found yourself disbelieving your own eyes or being flabbergasted at a decision that defies logic? For instance, what would happen if you sold all of your wine for less than it cost to produce? Or how about making legislation that made the possession of cigarettes illegal? What would you say if someone told you they wanted to try and change WallMart into Nordstrom? Those are all placeholders for a discussion on business strategies and odd news from last week.

Crazy Government 

 

Up in Oregon last week, Representative Mitch Greenlick decided to introduce a bill that would make possession of cigarette's illegal. How stupid is that? Yes I know smoking is stupid too, but if Prohibition proved anything, its that kind of law aimed at limiting consumption of perceived nefarious substances only encourages underground distribution of said substances, which in the end leads to new laws protecting the formerly felonious distributors.

Crazy Business 

 

Business is replete with countless examples of crazy strategy, such as the $300 million venture capital start-up Pets.com. The founders started the company under the premise they would build market share by discounting their goods, and once their base was established, cut back on the discounting. There was never any validation of the market done and the company was unable to survive because they were selling their goods for much less than it cost to buy them. What happened to buy low and sell high? Asked how they would dig their way out of the problem, their answer was they need to increase sales. Hmmmmm. How crazy is that?

Crazy Discounters



Flash site Lot18 last week announced that it was going to be the marketing agents for TastingRoom.com which closed its own doors on its retail business. Lot18 is another venture backed start up, but in this case a wine retailer that focused on selling discounted wines. I covered the Lot18 UK closure in a prior SVB on Wine post and have for several years questioned the viability of wine flash sites in speeches and the SVB Annual State of the Wine Industry Report.

To be successful wine flash sites have to get producers to sell wine at a significant discount and that would only happen in a market that was oversupplied on wine. I am disbelieving of the long term survival of any business built on a strategy founded on temporary market conditions. Sure a sales strategy can evolve but its really hard to evolve a business that sells only on price, into a real moderated retail experience where the consumer is shopping for the product attributes beyond price. Think about WalMarts departure from their strategy of being the price leader a couple years back. Did they ever have a chance to become something more than a price leader? Lot18 has now moved away from the discounting strategy and is trying to incorporate retail strategies other than price discounts, which is why I was so intrigued by the acquisition of TastingRoom.com.

The TastingRoom.com business itself was founded by a serial entrepreneur with the strategy of creating small samples from full bottles which could then be used for numerous purposes. Personally, I loved that idea because it created a solution for on-line consumers to try an expensive wine without needing to buy an entire bottle. It was a way to bring the tasting room to the customer, hence the name. According to Lew Purdue on Wine Industry Insight, the downfall of the business might have been leaving the initial business model and getting into selling standard format wines. If so that would have been a disappointing path for them to take as they left the clean air of their unique product, and delved into a part of the business that has plenty of competitors and compressed margins.

I'm hoping the combination of Lot18 and and TastingRoom.com turns out well because I had high hopes for both of these companies when they started. They are needed parts of the 5th Column of wine sales, but I can't help but wonder if its not a case of two non-swimmers meeting in the middle of a lake. Hopefully this acquisition/marketing agreement turns out to be brilliant!

Crazy Fred 

 

Another business that has received its share of questions regarding it's business model is Charles Shaw aka Two Buck Chuck. In a stroke of marketing genius, Charles legally changed his nick name into Two Forty-Nine Chuck, honoring the San Francisco Forty Niners; the winners of SuperBowl XLVII. But I still wonder if there is more to that story.......

The price increase of Two Buck Chuck to $2.49 was the first broad price increase since inception. You have to ask why? Is it because Chuck Shaw has been blinded by his celebrity and is going upscale on us? I don't think so.

When the brand was founded by Fred Franzia in 2002, he was quoted saying, "Only suckers pay more than $10.00 for a good bottle of wine," and he convinced Trader Joe's to sell the Charles Shaw label for $1.99 thus garnering the brand the nick name Two Buck Chuck and creating the Super Value Segment. Many at the time opined that it wasn't a segment at all, but more reflective of the bulge in bulk wine created from the Tech Bubble and the tragedy of 9-11. Certainly once the bulge was gone, the label would disappear like so many negociant brands before. But it didn't. Today calling the brand a success after 600 million bottles sold would be a massive exercise in understatement.

Back in 2002 I remember hearing about a sizable quantity of Napa Cabernet that was sold to Franzia, and that Fred was starting a new label for $2.00. That seemed crazy to me. Shortly thereafter I was invited to a neighbors home where they poured me a glass of wine and once consumed, I accepted a second pour and then saw the Charles Shaw label for the first time. I chuckled to myself because the wine was good. How could he sell that kind of wine for $1.99. A few months later I tried the wine again and for me, it was not drinkable at all.

How does all this tie together? Wine availability. Lot18 has changed their model because they had to. They can't get the same quality bottled wine as 2 years ago and be successful in a discounting model. To think wine flash sites can have a long term strategy selling only on price to me is crazy. Fred Franzia's people are the best in the business locating and manipulating wine. If they can't find wine at a price that can retail profitably for $2.00 a bottle, then the wine doesn't exist.

While Fred has his detractors and he's had a string of litigation surrounding his business practices over the years, there is nobody I know who calls him crazy. What it says to me is as the wine business evolves into shortages, there is still opportunity to find successful strategies. It also reinforces that a long view of business strategy is critical for success. Some can see that and some can't.

11 comments:

  1. I had the same feeling you did about the Lot 18 Tasting Room marketing/combination/merger when it was announced. Lot 18 has been floundering since its inception and changes its focus almost monthly. Tasting Room was being shopped for a few weeks prior to the Lot 18 announcement but there was nothing to seel. Their "new" web site (November 2012 I am told) lost their entire focus as to the sampling and the monthly wine club style shipments of 6 sampler bottles that allowed you to select which wines you wanted to purchase. It was a site full of 750 ml bottles with no organization and almost no explanation of what they were selling. The original concept of a wine club that allowed you to sample the wines for a small charge and then get full bottles made a lot of sense and could have been marketed into a base of members that provided a base of sales that funded the business on a continuing basis. Now we have two losers combining into...? Good luck and long live the VC community

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    1. Its a sad one for me. I liked both founders and thought there was a good chance on TastingRoom, and with adjustments to strategy, an equally good chance on Lot18. They are adjusting finally and I hope its not too late. They can use this technology and do exactly what you are talking about in your reply. I'm wishing them success.

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  2. I have to disagree that the model is non-sustainable. I will agree that discounting as a platform is dead while inventory levels a at all-time lows, but outfits who focus on Quality (like The Wine Spies and to a lesser extent, Woot) will continue to flourish. Particularly because they provide wineries with the sort of broad reach that they could never have on their own. These marketers expose wine brands to a wide array of wine-drinkers, earning new winery-direct (DTV) customers at a fantastic rate. After a customer buys a wine through one of these venues, they must return to the winery (or a bottle shop) to buy more. My winery always sees an influx of Club sign-ups after a sale. Beware, though, of flash sites that deep-discount, control your pricing or portray your brand in a negative light. Good Flash sites are here to stay. The rest, like Lot18, seem to be a 'Flash in the pan'!

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    1. Correction: Inventory levels are at all time HIGHs, which is why deep discounting Flash sites are doomed; less available inventory and less desperate wineries = less wine for flash sites to sell.

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    2. Anon #1 ... Flash sites are those who sell using price (and maybe a little pressure to act under a 1 day offer but people see through that. Its not about selling quality. Quality wine can be sold on price too. Whats needed is sites who understand wine retailing that is a lot more than price.

      Anon #2 .., Must have been the wine, The OIV announced that world wine inventories are at a decades low point.... might have been 27 year low point IIRC. Less inventory = less wine to move in an erstwhile oversupplied market.

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  3. It is precisely because The Wine Spies place an emphasis on quality that I will sell my brands through them at all. The fact that their members often end up signing up for Club is the icing on the cake. And, what online wine retailer does NOT offer some sort of discount?

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    1. The point isn't to suggest on-line retailers are all going away. Discount sites, however will have a much higher degree of difficulty. In order to survive, Wine Retailers will have to use all the other P's of marketing, not just price. Selling a product attribute like quality is a good start, but its insufficient. Wine e-tailers also have to be great at CRM and getting the second sale, understanding and selling to client tastes, become expert moderators and advisors just like the fine wine shops. There are many technology tools out there to automate some of that, and some that have to be developed. W

      ine Spies might be a good site. Its great that they sell on quality. I don't know either way if they are expert moderators, have a robust CRM system, and focus on client desires.

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  4. We bought a 6-month Tasting Room club membership in December for over $400 (prepaid) and were informed in January that our membership was being cancelled and would be issued a credit to Lot18. The credit was for $10 for me and $20 for my spouse. For our $400, we received two bottles of wine, six small sample bottles, and $30 in credits to Lot18.

    Our call to Lot18 has gone unreturned. Poor customer service, poor value for the money.

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  5. Ouch! That sucks. I'll ping someone there for you and see if they will respond to your Blogger address directly. (One of the benefits for readers to log in with an identifier or .... maybe join as a member?)

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  6. Hi Dolph,

    Our Member Services team has encountered a few problems similar to yours, and they're working through them as quickly as they can. They'll be caught up and in touch with you shortly.

    Thanks for your continued patience, and please rest assured that your situation will be resolved to your satisfaction.

    Eric

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    1. I feel like a Consumer Activist Reporter or something. This is Rob ....... signing off from Napa.

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