Monthly Archives: August 2009

Moet & Chandon Launches “Buckets of Bubbles”

Moet & Chandon Launches Buckets of Bubbles

Famed French champagne house Moët & Chandon has come out with a cool new travelling set called Buckets of Bubbles. The set includes four mini champagne flutes accompanied by four mini bottles of refreshing Moët & Chandon Nectar Impérial bubbly in a chic carrying case that doubles as an ice bucket.

Unlike some special champagne sets which charge a premium for the privilege, Buckets of Bubbles is actually something of a bargain. It retails for approximately $34.99 but offers the equivalent amount of champagne as a 750 ml bottle of Nectar Imperial, which retails for $49.99 and doesn’t include the trimmings. Moët & Chandon, founded in 1743, is one of the cornerstones of LVMH’s luxury empire.

By Jared Paul Stern | Source :: www.luxist.com

Blasted Church Vineyards

Blasted Church Vineyards 1

Blasted Church Vineyards 2

"In 2002, the new owners of Prpich Hills Winery had a problem. Their name. Brandever advised that the winery needed a beacon of a name. Something that would break away from traditional wine naming protocol. A name that would resonate throughout the entire Okanagan Valley, and beyond.

We recommended “Blasted Church”. And created a series of unique labels that told the true story of a mining era church that had been dismantled with the help of four dynamite sticks, and then moved to Okanagan Falls in the 1930’s. Once launched, Wine Cognoscenti, Jurgen Gothe wrote:

"And when you do see your first bottle, you’ll probably gasp like everybody else does. This is a BC wine label? But it’s so … outrageous, colourful, cartoony, off-the-wall, and – this is the clincher – nothing at all like a BC wine label.”

Today, Blasted Church has grown over tenfold in sales, has become one of the most recognized, and admired wineries in Canada, and is proudly served by the best restaurants and wine merchants across the country. Amen."

By Andrew Gibbs | Source :: www.thedieline.com

Wilson Daniels Starts Second Season Of Wine Films

Wilson Daniels Starts Second Season Of Wine Films

Have you started making videos with the iPhone 3G-S yet? Wine sales and marketing agency Wilson Daniels Ltd. has, taking their iPhones and other cameras out into vineyards around the world for the second volume of online wine films in the Wilson Daniels Films documentary series.

Bret Lyman, filmmaker and proprietor of B.Napa Studio, who created the Wilson Daniels Films series last year is back this summer to expand the series of short films to include California and Oregon producers. Wilson Daniels fans, friends and followers can experience the filmmaking process by watching outtakes, reviewing scene shots, and picking their favourite landscape panoramics and people shots through Facebook and Twitter.

Wine enthusiasts visiting Napa Valley and Oregon’s Willamette Valley during film dates can also attend filming activities like a sunrise balloon ride with the filmmaker and winery owner, grape harvesting with the picking crews and editing parties at tasting rooms. Those interested in participating are encouraged to join the Facebook group for Wilson Daniels Wines or follow them on Twitter.

Filming will occur August 17-18 at Ponzi Vineyards and August 20-21 at WillaKenzie Estate. October filming dates for Clos Pegase and Silverado Vineyards will be announced in early September at Wilson Daniels Wines on Facebook.

By Deidre Woollard | Source :: www.luxist.com

Brand Failure From The Vine

Brand Failure From The Vine In 1996 the Australian government’s wine authority set an ambitious 30-year sales target. Imagine its delight when that goal was reached a full two decades ahead of schedule. Between 1996 and 2007 Australian wine forced its way into markets in a way rarely witnessed in any export industry. Nowhere was this more evident than in the UK, the biggest single market for Australian wine.

However, trouble is now brewing. Australian wine production is three times the level of 15 years ago, but global demand for it is tanking. In the UK, it dropped by 18% last year, in the US by 26%. According to Aussie wine critic Jeremy Oliver: ‘The industry is in crisis – anything less than that is avoiding reality. It is interesting that nobody really saw this coming.’

Not quite true, Mr Oliver. Your humble BSI blogger predicted these problems in an article I wrote for The Sydney Morning Herald in 2007. In it I stated that Australian winemakers were ‘on the verge of an almighty strategic blunder’. Next year is shaping up to be disastrous for Australian wine and it’s not too soon to learn some lessons.

First, don’t rely exclusively on sales data to plan your strategy. Booming sales of huge fruity Shirazs and oaky Chardonnays were the prime drivers of Australian success. Many wineries looked at the figures, extrapolated their growth and made more of the same. 

Unfortunately, sales data is a poor predictor of future consumer tastes. There is no replacement for recurrent qualitative and quantitative research, and without these insights, Australian winemakers have found themselves producing wine that many consumers simply do not want. 

Second, you can make sales from commodity wines for a while but not forever. While it has continued to generate enormous profits, the average price of a litre of Aussie wine has quietly plummeted from AU$4.36 (£2.18) in 1999, to AU$3.53 (£1.76) in 2008 and it continues to fall.

With irrigation costs and the Australian dollar rising in value, this commodification of wine spells disaster for winemakers who have continued to increase production at the expense of targeting smaller, more lucrative market segments, building more distinct wine brands and charging a premium for it.
‘We have had massive success with an approach of good wine and good price,’ Tim Kirk, head of the Canberra-based Clonakilla winery, notes ruefully. ‘However, in some respects that’s been the seeds of our undoing.’

Third, don’t get arrogant. Success has blinded Australian winemakers to the threat of South American rivals. Many producers still speak disparagingly of the quality of Chilean wines, despite the fact that these are now equally good, less expensive and usually made from more appealing varietals.

Lastly, beware an over-dependence on big retail. While it is impossible to be successful without selling through Tesco and Sainsbury’s, you’d better have alternative premium channels at your disposal too. The fact that 85% of Australian wine sales in the UK are accounted for by supermarkets tells you all you need to know about the kind of margins and promotional tactics that Aussie winemakers have had to endure. It also helps to explain why prices are dropping so quickly.

As my Aussie wife likes to remind me, the better the party, the worse the hangover. Well, it’s 7am and Australian wine is about to wake up after the mother of all booze-ups. It’s going to take more than a couple of aspirin and a fried breakfast to get her back on her feet again.

30 Seconds On…The Downfall of the Australian Wine Industry

    *  ‘We’ve seen growers who didn’t bother picking their grapes this year,’ says wine industry critic Stuart Gregor.

    * ‘The Australian wine industry… is suddenly in what looks like a perilous position,’ according to wine writer Jancis Robinson. ‘Like so many wine producers outside Europe, it has concentrated its efforts on the big retailers in the UK and has failed to build a solid distribution network for its better wines.’

    * ‘There is a perception that the American market for Australian wine is in serious jeopardy,’ says Jay Miller, Australian wine reviewer for influential newsletter The Wine Advocate.

    * The price collapse has forced Foster’s, Australia’s biggest winemaker, which owns Lindemans and Penfolds, to sell 31 vineyards across the country. Constellation Wines Australia, the second-biggest player, placed 26 properties on the market last August.

    * One of Australia’s big wine retailers, Dan Murphy’s, is selling cleanskins for about £1 a bottle – cheaper than most bottled waters.

By Mark Ritson | Source :: Branding Strategy Insider

Duck Pond Winery

Duck Pond Winery 1

Duck Pond Winery 2

Duck Pond wine design, which comes from Angeline Oey a visual communication student at Cornish College of the Arts in Seattle:

"This project is a rebrand and redesign project for two of the Duck Pond Winery product lines. The demographic is narrowed to the 21-30 years old. While keeping the duck illustrations as their consistent design element, I rename their product lines: “Bufflehead” for their red wine and “Harlequin” for their white wine. Their names are both inspired and taken from duck species which I also use as models for the illustration."

By Andrew Gibbs | Source :: www.thedieline.com

Monster Vineyards

Monster Vineyards 1

Monster Vineyards 2

Series of wine packaging with beautiful illustrations (by Belle Melchior), designed by Laurie Millotte, the in-house designer at Brandever.

“Lake Okanagan has been long been haunted by the presence of a Loch-Ness-like sea creature.Can such a formidable beast possibly be a true living creature? We said "…naaah"! Monster Vineyards exposes the proverbial wizard behind the curtains. It celebrates the many intricate contraptions that individuals might have conceived to create such a hoax.We have since spotted many Monsters in the company of tourists. And many others lurking in dimly lit restaurants across the nation. Our apologies to the believers.”

By Maja Pelc | Source :: www.thedieline.com

Modern wine paired with ancient Roman cuisine

Made in Milan

Where the Amazing Food Wine Company, which we covered a few years ago, created its wines for pairing with commonly enjoyed contemporary American foods—pizza, pasta, etc—Madeinmilan Wines has taken the opposite approach, focusing instead on a historical meal. The Italian label includes three wines from northeast Italy: Brutus (Sangiovese di Romagna), Paparazzi (Lambrusco Grasparossa) and Romeo (Cagnina di Romagna), and for Brutus, it recently launched a campaign that includes pairing with a five-course ancient Roman meal. Olive caviar, sweet ham, Imperial Chicken, herbed cheese and honey dates make up the specially crafted menu for the Roman banquet Madeinmilan suggests, with complete recipes available for download from its site.

With so many competitors in the wine market already, focusing on ancient pairings is an innovative marketing angle that may well be attractive to consumers seeking new insperiences and maybe some status skills to boot. Which just goes to show, of course, that it’s a rare product indeed that can’t be upgraded, reconceived or repositioned in some novel way to make it new all over again in consumers’ eyes. If that can be done for wine—surely one of the oldest products in the world—just imagine the possibilities for your product or brand!

Source :: Springwise

Dubai Airport’s Ultra-Pricey Wine Shop

Dubai Airports Ultra-Pricey Wine Shop

Many duty-free shops in international airports sell expensive wine and spirits but a new shop at Dubai International Airport’s Terminal 3 is one of the most extravagant yet. The shop, Le Clos, sells many of the world’s most sought-after wines including not just recent vintages but some legendary bottles like the Chateau Petrus 1947, Château Cheval Blanc 1961 and Domaine de la Romanée-Conti 2005. Their website shows that their range of vintages starts in 1945.

The shop is staffed with wine advisors with expertise on specific regions and varietals and whisky experts are also on staff for help with selecting the best single malts. There are several options for buying. You can pre-order through the online store and collect your bottles in the store before you fly out of Dubai. Or if you are making a return journey back into Dubai you can choose your wines ahead of time and pick them up after your flight.

By Deidre Woollard | Source :: www.luxist.com