Going Against the Grain w/ Malek Amrani, The Vice
Listen now
Description
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 wine Focused on value and discovery of Napa ValleyProduction 27k 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 measures Secure 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 demographics Equal 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. Rosé Swapped 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 marketing Spirits 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 Vice 2020/2021 - 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.
More Episodes
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...
Published 11/13/24
Published 11/13/24
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...
Published 10/18/24