Would you like fries with your wine?
Following a bit of a rant in my previous blog about the
Australian wine industry, I was wondering how to start Part 2 (a more
structured look at the industry), when this little gem hit my inbox:
Someone in the Australian wine industry had called New
Zealand Sav Blanc ‘the McDonalds of wine.’
If you are in the business of selling products to consumers,
then comparing a competitor to McDonalds is a compliment, not a sledge. There is none better than McDonalds at understanding
the purchasing behaviour of consumers.
If you feel that your industry competitor is just as good, it
might explain why they are kicking butt in the Australian market with the
following figures:
- - 39% of all white wine now sold in Australia is New Zealand Sauvignon Blanc.
- - Of the top 20 Sauvignon Blanc’s sold in Australia 17 are from New Zealand.
In the same article someone reasoned that New Zealand Sav
Blanc is successful because 95% of Australia drinkers are not discerning. Exactly.
So why try and market your own wines to us, as if we are? That was the point of my previous wine
blog. The average consumer doesn’t
understand what you are saying.
So perhaps the Australian wine industry could use McDonalds
as a case study for learning what drives consumer behaviour.
Social Chatter
Speaking of behaviour; I keep hearing that the Australian
wine industry is an effective user of social media. Something that is very topical amongst
Australian small business at the moment – social media versus ‘real work’.
The wine industry is certainly an active user of social
media; but I wouldn’t say most of it is effective, as far as engaging consumers
are concerned. The industry just seems
to talk (sledge) amongst itself.
I’d like to see smaller wineries extending their reach with
Australian consumers, using social media – at the very least please have a
decent web site. If anyone has any great
social media examples out there, let me know.
No local focus
Clearly, the Australian wine industry doesn’t want to talk
to us anyway. There has been so much
emphasis on exporting, I feel Australian consumers have been neglected by the
wine industry for a long time.
Not long ago, Australian consumers were some of the highest
discretionary spenders in the world. We
were out for a good time and many wineries didn’t even notice.
I know that exporting has been held up for all its glory;
but a bit more local love would be nice.
The rise of cleanskins
The rise and rise of cleanskin sales may be the evidence to
support that Australian consumers are still confused about buying wine. Cleanskins were introduced in the early 00’s
to get rid of the wine glut. The timing
was perfect for consumers that were looking to spend more on wine, but didn’t
know how to decide. The scenario looks
like this - if I don’t understand what the winery is telling me, the only way I
will find out what I like is to buy-n-try.
Will I risk $20 each time – no thanks.
Will I risk $4 on a cleanskin – absolutely.
Cleanskins now represent value-for-money and a fun
experience for many regular wine drinkers.
Consequently, a significant percentage of Australian wine sales each
year are cleanskins.
Australian wine labels have become so confusing, they are
being beaten by products with no label at all.
Go figure. So much wine, sold so
cheaply, because no one wanted to make the labelling simpler for consumers.
Design & Layout
My last observation about the wine industry is bottle shops
and retail outlets. The design-layout of
these stores is a complete dis-service to the wine industry. Consumers are left drifting aimlessly through
rack after rack of wines.
It would be great to see the wine industry encouraging
retailers to stock its wines based on occasion, use, function, food, experience
etc – or something to that effect. It
would take a bit of research and trial-and-error; but some better planning at
the retail end would make buying wine so much easier.
My idea is to have touch screens in each section of bottle
shops and I can tap through a series of questions about why I’m there to buy
wine and it makes some recommendations for me.
Think I’ll leave the wine industry alone now. I haven’t set out to poo-poo the wine
industry; it’s just that when I hear of constant doom and gloom coming from an
industry sector, I like to burrow into what could be done better, from a
strategic and tactical perspective - especially for small and medium enterprises, as is my passion.
What can wineries or retailers do to encourage you to buy
more local wine?