Insider’s Guide to the US Drinks Market
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Transcript of Insider’s Guide to the US Drinks Market
The Insider’s Guide to Penetrating the U.S.
Market London Wine Fair
20 May 2015
Steve Raye John Beaudette Sid Patel
Speakers
Steve Raye, President Bevology Inc. [email protected]
John Beaudette, President MHW Ltd. [email protected]
Sid Patel, President Beverage Trade Network [email protected]
Overview Of The U.S. Beverage Alcohol Market & Brand Entry
Considerations
John Beaudette London Wine Fair
May 20, 2015
Agenda
• Overview Of Beverage Alcohol in the US
• Historical Perspective and the U.S. system works, the three tier system, brand economics
• Thoughts On Where the Industry is Heading, Changes in the Distribution System, and What May Impact the Future.
• Options To Market Entry
4
Total Beverage Alcohol Market • The U.S. market size is 7.7 B gallons and $212 B in retail sales dollars.
• Beer dominates on a volume share basis at 83% of consumption.
• With only 7% of volume, Spirits hold 37% of dollar share.
Spirits 7%
Wine 10%
Beer 83%
0%
2014 Volume of 7.7 Billion Gallons
507 M gal.
6.4 B gal.
779 M gal. Spirits 37%
Wine 15%
Beer 48%
0%
2014 Retail Dollar Sales of $212 Billion
$103 B
$31 B
$78 B
2014 Beverage Category Growth Rates
Beer -0.5%
Wine 0.7%
Spirits 1.6%
Continuing a five year trend, In 2014, Spirits grew by 1.6%, Wine grew by 0.7% and Beer declined by 0.5%.
The Local Artisanal Craft Movement Over the past 10 years, there has been craft distilleries, breweries and wineries all across the U.S. that are helping to drive consumer
interest and excitement with their innovative new brands.
Distilleries Breweries Wineries 2004 50 1463 2400 2014 600 2774 8391
0
1000
2000
3000
4000
5000
6000
7000
8000
9000
Number of U.S. Distilleries, Breweries & Wineries
WINE TRENDS
U.S. Total Wine Sales Volume Trend In 2014, wine sales volume increased by 0.7% to reach a record level of
327.6 million 9-liter cases marking 21 consecutive years of growth.
2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 Series 1 268.1 273.7 283.0 292.1 294.7 297.0 303.1 312.4 318.9 325.8 327.6
0.0
50.0
100.0
150.0
200.0
250.0
300.0
350.0
Wine – Millions of 9- Liter Cases
Top 10 Wine Consumption States The top 10 states account for 60.8% of U.S. wine volume and
they grew slightly faster than the total U.S. in 2014.
Top 10 Wine States (000 9-Liter Cases) State Cases Share Growth
California 60,318 18.3% 3.0%
Florida 26,818 8.3% 1.2%
New York 26,152 8.0% 2.2%
New Jersey 14,848 4.5% 2.3%
Texas 14,730 4.5% 2.3%
Illinois 14,665 4.5% 2.2%
Massachusetts 12,595 3.9% 2.3%
Washington 10,040 3.1% 2.9%
Virginia 9,901 3.0% 3.5%
Ohio 9,254 2.8% 2.9%
Top 10 Total 199,319 60.8% 0.0%
U.S. Total 327,600 100.0% 0.0%
E&J Gallo Winery 30%
The Wine Group 18% Constellation
Brands 15%
Trinchero Family Estates
7%
Bronco Wine Co.
5%
Treasury Wine Estates
4%
Jackson Family Wines
3%
Others 19%
Domestic Table Wine
Leading Wine Suppliers, 2014
Others 51%
Deutsch Family Wine & Spirits
14%
Banfi Vintners 11%
Palm Bay Int. 8%
Treasury Wine Estates
6%
Constellation Brands
6% Shaw-Ross Int. Importers
4%
Imported Table Wine
15
(Market Share by Supplier)
Source: Beverage Information Group 2014 Wine Handbook
History of Beverage Alcohol in the US
17
Three Tier System
18
Producer (Wineries, Brewers,
Distilleries, Importers)
Wholesaler (Distributor) Retailer Consumer
Distributor Markets (Millions) 2014P Mkt Share 2014P
1 Southern Wine & Spirits of America
AL, AK, AZ, CA, CO, DC, DE, FL, HI, ID, IL, IN, IA, KY, MD, ME, MN, MS, MT, NC, NH, NM, NV, NY, OH, OR, PA, SC, UT, VT, VA,
WA, WV, WY $ 11,750 22.1%
2 Republic National Distributing Co.
AL, CO, DC, FL, IN, KY, LA, MD, MI, MS, NE, NC, ND, OH, OK, SC, SD, TX, VA, WV $ 6,480 11.8%
3 Charmer Sunbelt Group
AL, AZ, CO, CT, DC, DE, FL, MD, MS, NJ, NY, PA, SC, VA $ 5,575 10.4%
4 Glazer´s Family of Companies
AL, AK, AZ, IL, IN, IA, KS, LA, MS, MI, OH, OK, TN, TX $ 3,655 6.7%
5 Young´s Market Co AL, AZ, CA, HA, ID, MT, OR, UT, WA,, WY $ 2,925 5.5%
6 Wirtz Beverage Group IL, IA, MN, MI, NV, WI $1,860 3.4%
7 Johnson Brothers AL, AZ, CA, CT, FL, HI, IL, IN, IA, KY, MA, MN, NE, NV, NM, NY, NC, ND, RI, SD, WA, WI $1,735 3.2%
8 Martignetti Companies MA, ME, NH, RI, VT $ 1,200 2.3%
9 Allied Beverage Group NJ $ 775 1.5%
10 Fedway Associates NJ
$ 760 1.4%
Total Top 10 $36,715 68.4%
Other Wholesalers $ 15,975 31.6%
Total U.S. Market $ 52,690 100 %
Top 10 US Wine/Spirit Wholesalers
Source: Impact 4/1&15/15 19
Brand Approval / Launch Timeline
20
Federal Label (COLA) Approval
4 to 8 weeks depending on product and complexity
State Registration & Approval
1 to 8 weeks including price posting where
required
Product Ships To Wholesaler
750ML / 12 Bottle Case Imported $ 9.99 Retail Bottle Price
Supplier FOB (Varies-Packaging etc.) $ 29.00
Ocean Freight 4.50
Fed Tax/Duty 3.30
PPU/BF/INS 1.40
Importers Margin (24% Margin) $ 12.14
Price to Distributor $50.34
State Tax .71
Freight 2.50
Distributor Margin (50% Mark Up/33% Margin) 26.37
Distrib. Price To Retail $79.92
Retailer Margin (50% Mark Up/33%Margin) 39.96
Retail Case Price $119.88
Bottle Price $9.99
Wine Brands Economics Example
Suppliers (Wineries, Distilleries, Importers)
Wholesalers (Distributors)
Retailers (Stores,
restaurants, bars, hotels)
Consumers (Legal drinking
age) 221 Million+
Retail Outlets up 90k to 640k in 10 years
22
Proliferation of Suppliers/Wholesalers to Meet Consumption Growth and Demand for New Brands
Brand Sales & Valuation Trends
• Beverage Alcohol Brands Commanding Strong Prices • Valuation Ranges/Methods:
– Annual Case Multiples (ACM) $300 to $1,500 (spirits) – Revenue Multiples (1 to 5+Times) – EBITDA Multiple (6 to 14+ Times)
23
Potential Approaches to the U.S. Market
• Major National Importers/Suppliers (examples)
• Midsize / Small Importers and Distributors (many and growing). • Local / Regional Distributors (with importing capabilities). • Licensed Service Importers & National Distribution Companies. • Local Craft Brewers, Craft Distilleries, Wine Contract Production • Establish US Import & Distribution Company. • Other (Internet for wine), “Reverse Tier Marketing”/Private Labels.
24
Building Your Sales Process For the US Market.
By Sid Patel, CEO and Founder,
Beverage Trade Network.com
Fact. You are in the sales business.
Do you have a Sales Process?
• Preparation • Prospecting • Approach • Negotiation • Launch • Support
Wine like any other business needs to be sold.
A sales process should include
Preparation
Case Cards, Shelf Talkers, Brochures, Branded Cartons, Latest Vintage for Samples, Target Lists, Support Plan, Contract, Credit Application, Launch Plan, Sell Sheets.
Importers like to deal with prepared suppliers.
Are you ready with your Toolkit?
Prospecting
SET A TARGET For example: Send 200 Emails / Phone Calls Per Month
Email Trade Shows
Phone
Referrals Inbound Prospects
The Approach
• Template for your first email. • Template for your follow up
email. • ‘Spiel’ to follow up with phone
calls. • Samples – what’s included in
your box.
This is where the rubber meets the road in the sales process.
Negotiation.
Includes discussing • Good margins • Motivations of your
importer • Programming • Protect yourself
Plan beyond 1000 cases.
Coming to an agreement
Launch.
• Sales kick-off meeting • Market work in multiple
states with your importer’s distributors.
• In-store tastings and building key retail relations.
The goal is to deplete 50% of your brand’s stock at your importer before you return.
The most important time for your brand in the target market.
Support
• Market work • In-store tastings • Sales incentives • Retailers QD discounts
Invest ALL marketing dollars in trade only
Plan beyond 1,000 cases
Winning Sales Process
• Preparation • Prospecting • Negotiation • Launch • Support and second PO • Sell new SKUs to your current accounts with
same process.
Focus on depletion. Everyone wins.
Contact Info Sid Patel (CEO and Founder, Beverage Trade Network) E-mail [email protected] Phone +1 901 BTN LIVE
/BeverageTrade @BeverageTrade
U.S. WINE MARKET: DISRUPTING THE SYSTEM Non-traditional marketing strategies to gain a competitive edge.
© 2015 Steve Raye
Marketing Manifesto
• Measure what matters • DEP, Distribution, Reorder rates, wine or cocktail lists and BTG programs
• Don’t Market to Empty Shelves • Getting it in is just the first part, How are you
going to get it out? • Help the importer and distributor do their jobs
Clearly Identify your target audience: behavior vs. demographics
• Have a POD that MAD (Point of Difference that Makes a Difference
© 2015 Steve Raye
You Can Change the Equation!
1 + 1 = 11
© 2015 Steve Raye
You Can Change the Equation!
1 + 1 = 11
© 2015 Steve Raye
How? Think and Act Differently
Zig
5
© 2015 Steve Raye
How? Think and Act Differently
Zig Zag
© 2015 Steve Raye
Guiding Principle
Align programs with account needs…help them build their business: WIIFM
“What’s in it for ME?”
•Increase sales (volume and profitability) •Increase customer frequency •Increase new traffic
© 2015 Steve Raye
U.S. Market Trends: Millennials Reshaping the Market
Millennials represent the largest wine consuming age-cohort—77 million.
All will reach LDA in 2015 They like to explore new and different things and are a
primary force driving wine growth – particularly imports. Peer vs. pundit recommendations, and research closer to
the actual point of purchase or consumption (label ID apps)
More likely to purchase imported wine
Red Blends continue to be hot Confusion in definition will result in shakeout in
reference to sweet vs. dry red blends Fragmentation in varietal preference is
changing the business Where once Cabs and Chards ruled, Red Blends,
Moscato, Prosecco, Pinot Noir, Pinot Grigio now compete. What’s next?
46
U.S. Market Trends: Varietals
U.S. Market Trends: Distribution Innovation
E-commerce and new/non-traditional distribution channels are rapidly growing, represent opportunity
Explosion in delivery-within-an-hour services: Drizly, Minibar Delivery, et al.
Delivery-Within-An-Hour
Drizly, Minibar Delivery Laser-Targeted to Millennials: immediate, no
shipping upcharge Geographically targetable down to metro
market Tool to drive retail distribution, support
wholesaler/importer E-commerce solution
© 2015 Steve Raye
• Apps: Delectable, Vivino, Wine4me, Wine-Searcher, Hello Vino et al.
• Reach and Targeting:
• Wine-Searcher gets 3 million unique visitors per month, predominantly millennials.
• Snooth reaches 2 million people per month (>35 skew)
• By comparison print circulations stand at: Wine Spectator – 400,000; Wine Enthusiast – 170,000; Wine Advocate – 48,000
Sources: Wine Opinions, Gomberg-Fredrickson, Wine Intelligence, B.I.G. Handbook, Nielsen et al.
U.S. Market Trends: Apps
So What?
“I know half my advertising doesn’t work…I just don’t know which half”
Pure E-marketing/
Ecommerce
ROI
E-Commerce
Allows you to sell in multiple states, nearly nationally, when you may only have distribution in one.
Strong penetration with Baby Boomers, average purchase is 3X typical physical store purchase
Has established awareness that it represents a better selection of hard-to-find wines
Tools like Wine-Searcher drive intent to purchase
E-Commerce Optimization
Bottle photo Tasting notes Technical notes Food pairing
After
Before
© 2015 Steve Raye
Analysis and Performance Metrics: Free Market Research
Based on behavior…what they actually do vs. what they say they are going to do. Google Analytics Facebook Insights
Social Media Activation: Platform Recommendations
Facebook: Engage with your broadest audience of wine consumers.
Instagram: Every picture tells a story
Twitter: Trade focus
© 2015 Steve Raye
U.S. competitions accepting non-imported wines Ultimate Wine Challenge Accepts brands not currently imported to the US http://www.ultimate-beverage.com/ultimate-wine-challenge-UWC/2015-wine-entry-forms/
BTI (Beverage Testing Institute) Accepts brands not currently registered in the U.S. Check site for deadlines http://us6.campaign-archive2.com/?u=da8603c0af6040dcc7e4d9ed2&id=8fdf91dae4&e=
San Francisco Wine Competition Deadline May 22, 2015 http://www.sfwinecomp.com/
New York International Wine Competition May 17-18, 2015 (Deadline for entries May 12) https://www.nyiwinecompetition.com/
© 2015 Steve Raye
Strategies
Focus, focus focus… and triage your initiatives into “must”, “should”, “could”. Make sure you do the “musts” before you do “should do” or “could do.”
Must Do Should Do
Could Do Target audience:
Be specific…demographics are important, but behavior is critical. Only spend money that gets your content in front of prospects:
Who are most likely to be interested
Can act: buy your product, tell others
Takeaways
You can compete with the existing, major players by doing a few things really, really well Wine Apps: Delectable, Vivino, Hello Vino, Wine
Searcher, wine4.me E-commerce Delivery-within-an-hour Metrics matter: Behavior tracking, performance against
goals
© 2015 Steve Raye
Contact
Steve Raye, President Bevology Inc. [email protected] +1 860-833-6272
John Beaudette, President MHW Ltd. [email protected] +1 51-869-5970
Sid Patel, President Beverage Trade Network [email protected] +1 410-300-6597