Going Against the Grain w/ Malek Amrani, The Vice
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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.
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