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Entering the us wine market for export wine brands as posted in slide share may 2015

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Entering the U.S. Wine Market for Export Brands
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Entering the U.S. Wine Market for Export Brands

Navigating Entry Into the U.S. Wine MarketPresented by Steve Raye

President

Bevology, Inc.

[email protected]

+1-860-833-6272

What is Bevology?

Marketing consulting company with

specialization in wine marketing in the U.S.

Three areas of concentration:

• Trade Marketing

• Working with country and region trade

promotion

associations

• Brand development and launch

Why this information is important.Hope is Nota Strategy

Agenda

• History of Beverage Alcohol in the

U.S.:

3-Tier System

• What it means to you today: brand

entry process, implications, price

structure

• Importer and distributor landscape

• A snapshot of the American market

• Resources

History of Beverage Alcohol in U.S.

Temperance Movement Prohibition

Prohibition Repeal in 1933: New Laws

Federal Regulations Enacted

• Protect Federal Tax Revenues

• Federal Regulations (BATF-Now TTB)

– Licensing qualified importers, manufacturers,

wholesalers, warehouses)

– Bans “tied-house”

– Ensures quality with standards of identity, labels

and formula approval

– Bans false advertising and consumer deception

– Bans unfair inducements to retailers

Tier 1: Producer(Wineries, Brewers, Distilleries, Importers)

Tier 2: Wholesaler (Distributor)

Tier 3: Retailer

Consumer

U.S. Three Tier System Created

Michigan

Virginia

No. Carolina

Alabama

Arkansas

Iowa

Colorado

Wyoming

MontanaVermont and New

HampshireMaine

OhioPennsylvania

W. Va.

IdahoOregon

18 (now 17) “Control” States, 33 “Open” States

Washington

Agenda

• History of Beverage Alcohol in the

U.S.:

3-Tier System

• What it means to you today: brand

entry process, implications, price

structure

• Importer and distributor landscape

• A snapshot of the American market

• Resources

What theThree-Tier System Means to You Today

Michigan

Virginia

No. Carolina

Alabama

Arkansas

Iowa

Colorado

Wyoming

MontanaVermont and New

HampshireMaine

OhioPennsylvania

W. Va.

IdahoOregon

17 “Control” States, 33 “Open” StatesPlus DC and Montgomery County makes 52 Different Markets

Washington

Montgomery County, MD

52 Different Markets: Implications

Where wine, spirits and beer can be sold

• California:

– Wine, beer and spirits in supermarkets

– Chain and independent stores

• New York:

– Wine, spirits in “package” stores only beer in

supermarkets/bodegas

– Single store ownership, no chains

• Texas:

– Four tiers…HoReCa must buy from Class B

licensed retail store

52 Different Markets: Implications

How it Can Be Promoted

• Tastings

– Off-premise tastings:

– Allowed in New York, but not in New Jersey

– On-premise “wet” tastings:

– Allowed in FL, but not in Wisconsin

• Coupons

– Instant Redeemed Coupons only (IRC) in Ohio

– Mail-in rebates only in New Hampshire

52 Different Markets: ImplicationsTaxes vary by State

• Alaska: $5.94/9L cs., Louisiana:

$0.26

• Wholesale tax in Kentucky and South

Dakota Franchise Laws

Protect Distributors

• Massachusetts,

Connecticut,

New Jersey, Georgia,

Nevada, Arkansas,

New Mexico,

Tennessee, Missouri

18

Imported Wine Brand Price Structure750ML / 12 Bottle Case Imported - $9.99 Retail Bottle Price

Element Per 750ml Bottle

Supplier FOB $2.41

Ocean Freight, Fed Tax, Insurance, other +$0.76

Importer's Margin (40% mark-up/28% margin) +$1.01

Price to Distributor $4.18

State Tax, Inland Freight +$0.26

Distributor Margin ( 50% mark-up/33% margin)

+$2.19

Distributor price to retail $6.63

Retailer Margin (50% mark-up/33% margin) +$3.33

Retail Bottle Price $9.99

• Federal certificate of label approval (COLA)

• State registration and approval

- Most states require the out-of-state entity (shipper) to maintain state licenses and/or permits in order to sell products to wholesalers

– Most states require the Federal COLA as a requirement for brand approval

– Many states require paperwork submissions with fees and return a formal approval prior to shipping

– Some states require you to have a signed contract with a distributor in that state to get registration

Navigating Brand Entry & Distribution:Brand Entry – The Approval Process

Agenda

• History of Beverage Alcohol in the

U.S.:

3-Tier System

• What it means to you today: brand

entry process, implications, price

structure

• Importer and distributor landscape

• A snapshot of the American market

• Resources

Importers

• Importer– Licensed to import a wine brand from a

supplier outside the U.S. into the U.S.

– May or may not have distributor licenses or

operations in individual states

• Distributor/Wholesaler

(synonyms)– Licensed to buy wine from an importer and

sell to an on- or off-premise retailer

Definitions: Importer vs. Distributor (Wholesaler)

Suppliers

Importers

Distributors

Consumers

From To

The Model Has Changed

Large National Importer (Diageo)

You Have Options!

Specialist National Importer

(Winebow)

RegionalMulti-State Importer

(TGIC)

Specialist, that also

distributes (Slocum)

Set Up Your Own

Import Company

National Licensing

Import and Services (MHW)

Large Distributor that also Imports

(Glazer’s)

ChainRetailer

Exclusive Brand

(Total Wine)

DirectImport

through Control State

E-Comm/Wine Club/ Flash Site

Importers: What They Want

• Fills an identified void in portfolio

• Brands with existing U.S. volume they can grow

• New brands they feel their expertise can develop and grow

• Brands that have a unique positioning

• The right “CHEMISTRY”

• Enhances image, value and profitability (synergy with

importer’s mission)

• Strengthens importer’s position within the trade

• Supplier understands the U.S. Three-Tier system

• Financially sound, budget to invest and support the brand

Presenting Your Brand to Importers• Brand point of difference/value proposition for consumer;

why THIS importer should be interested in you

• Company description/history

• Product description: varietals, style, ranges, proposed U.S. retail price by line/SKU

• Marketing materials as background

• A defined target audience

• Production info

• Past history of importers, distribution agreements, list of distributors/brokers of products and volumes by state

• Price structure for U.S.

• Marketing support budget

• Sample budget

Distributors

Distributors: Who Are They?

Source: Impact 4/1&15/14

Top U.S. Wine/Spirits Wholesalers

Distributor MarketsSales Revenue (000's

USD) % Chg.Market Share

2013E 2014P 2014E 2013P

Southern Wine & Spirits of America

AL, AL, AZ, CA, CO, DE, FL, HI, ID, IL, IN, IA, KY, ME, MD, MI, MN, MI, MT, NV, NH, NM, NY, NC, OH, OR, PA, SC, UT, VT, VA, WA, DC, WV, WY

$ 11,390 $ 11,750 3.2% 22.1% 22.3%

Republic National Distributing Co.

AL, AZ, CO, FL, GA, IN, KY, LA, MD, MI, MI, NE, NM, NC, ND, OH, OK, SC, SD, TX, VA, DC, WV

$ 6,095 $ 6,480 6.3% 11.8% 12.3%

Charmer Sunbelt GroupAL, AZ, CO, CT, DE, FL, MD, MI, NJ, NY, PA, SC, VA, DC

$ 5,380 $ 5,575 3.6% 10.4% 10.6%

Glazer´s Family of CompaniesAL, AZ, AR, IN, IL, IA, KS, LA, MS, MO, OH, OK, TN, TX

$ 3,475 $ 3,655 5.2% 6.7% 6.9%

Young´s Market Co. AK, AZ, CA, HI, ID, MT, OR, UT, WA, WY $ 2,820 $ 2,925 3.7% 5.5% 5.6%

Wirtz Beverage Group IL, IA, MN, MO, NV, WI $ 1,775 $ 1,860 4.8% 3.4% 3.5%

Johnson Brothers Liquor Co.AL, AZ, CA, CT, FL, HI, IL, IN, IA, KY, MA, MN, NE, NV, NM, NY, NC, ND, RI, SD, WA, WI

$ 1,660 $ 1,735 4.5% 3.2% 3.3%

Martignetti Companies MA, ME, NH, RI, VT $ 1,200 $ 1,200 0.0% 2.3% 2.3%Allied Beverage Group NJ $ 750 $ 775 3.3% 1.5% 1.5%

Fedway Associates NJ $ 735 $ 760 3.4% 1.4% 1.4%

  $35,280 $36,715 4.1% 68.4% 69.7%

  $16,300 $15,975 -2.0% 31.6% 30.3%  $51,580 $52,690 2.2% 100.0% 100%

Distributors: What Distributors Want

• Money

• Margin

• Manpower

• Marketing

• Media

• Commitment

The chicken is involved, but the pig is committed.

Involved vs. Committed

• Focus, focus, focus…like a laser

- Getting it in is the easy part, getting it out is hard

- The only metric that matters: repeat orders at retail

• Be so successful in a limited number of accounts that

you can support, that you create trade word-of-mouth

buzz as a hot brand

Distributors:Strategy to Get a Distributor

Distributors:Okay, I’ve Got One. Now What?

• Recognize you’re not a priority…you and your importer will

need do the heavy lifting yourself

• Recruit/focus on a limited set of salespeople dedicated to

your brand

– Product training programs for accounts

– Sampling on- and off-premise

– Leverage Brand Ambassadors, winemaker/winery

owner visits vs. work-with’s

Snapshot of the American Market

Agenda

• History of Beverage Alcohol in the

U.S.:

3-Tier System

• What it means to you today: brand

entry process, implications, price

structure

• Importer and distributor landscape

• A snapshot of the American market

• Resources

Total Table Wine Consumption(Millions of Cases)

Top 10 Wine Consumption States

Source: Beverage Information Group Handbook Advance 2014

Imported Wine Purchases in Past 3 Months

Resources

Agenda

• History of Beverage Alcohol in the

U.S.:

3-Tier System

• What it means to you today: brand

entry process, implications, price

structure

• Importer and distributor landscape

• A snapshot of the American market

• Resources

Resources• Key trade publications:

– Beverage Media: w

ww.Bevmedia.com

– Tasting Panel:

www.tastingpanelmag.com

– Santé: www.isantemagazine.com

– Impact (print only)

– Somm Journal:

www.sommelierjournal.com

– Market Watch (print only)

• Key industry newsletters:

Industry News Update

Wine and Spirits Daily: www.winespiritsdaily.com

Shanken News Daily: www.shankennewsdaily.com

Wine Industry Insight: wineindustryinsight.com

WineBusiness.com: www.winebusiness.com

Wines and Vines: www.winesandvines.com

Resources• Organizations

– WSWA: www.wswa.org

– Natl. Assn. of Beverage Importers: www.nabi.org

• Competitions/Awards/Events that will allow entry by currently-non-imported

wines

– BTI/Beverage Testing Institute: www.tastings.com

– San Francisco International Wine Competition: www.sfwinecomp.com

– Ultimate Wine Challenge: www.ultimate-beverage.com

– New York International Wine Comp.: http://www.nyiwinecompetition.com/

• Trade Shows

– WSWA (www.WSWA.org)

– Wholesaler/holiday shows

– Importer portfolio shows

Resources

• Alcohol Tax and Trade Bureau: www.ttb.gov/wine/wine-labeling.shtml

• “How to Import Wine”, Deborah Gray

Thank You!Steve RayePresidentBevology Inc.401 Park Ave. So, 9th FloorNew York, NY [email protected]


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