enoch
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 29/1/06
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- 563
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At $110 a slab they will need efficiencies. Even the craft beers at $80 must be a tough sell.I just ordered some direct from the brewery $110/slab + $10 shipping.
At $110 a slab they will need efficiencies. Even the craft beers at $80 must be a tough sell.I just ordered some direct from the brewery $110/slab + $10 shipping.
They will absolutely use cheaper ingredients and cut costs on that side, as well as the efficiency of scale they can now achieve.
I think you're mistakenly assuming that we are still the target market. With the full power of Ab InBev's marketing department behind them, they can water it all down and, with a slick marketing campaign, create a larger and more lucrative market of new-to-craft-beer-types-who-don't-know-any-better than they ever had previously as Pirate Life.
Totally good on them though, I hope they're sipping booze in a yacht as we speak.
Is there a silver lining here though?
Does having all of these craft companies being bought up by the corps - even if they are watered down somewhat - mean that there will still be a higher-quality stable of beers getting pushed out into the broader market, who will undoubtedly enjoy them and incedentally push up demand for quality beer over and above the usual swill? In short, will this trend lift the averrage standard of beer across the board as more people are introduced to 'craft style' beer?
I think you're mistakenly assuming that we are still the target market. With the full power of Ab InBev's marketing department behind them, they can water it all down and, with a slick marketing campaign, create a larger and more lucrative market of new-to-craft-beer-types-who-don't-know-any-better than they ever had previously as Pirate Life.
Ok supposing that is the strategy. Why spend a **** load of money buying out a brewery with a large following of craft beer enthusiasts only to dumb it down, throw a lot of money at a marketing campaign to bring it into the vision of a new market, most of who know little about the brand whilst alienating the strong current market? Would seem a very high risk strategy.
It would make more financial sense to simply start up your own brand of dumbed down pale ales, market the **** out of that to the fence sitters.
Might as well make Yenda V2.0 rather than buy something out if that's the idea.
I know in the past these sorts of buy outs have resulted in a corresponding drop in quality, but I have the feeling that the multitude of buy outs of much loved high quality craft breweries in the past few months by the big boys is in recognition of the shift in consumers knowledge and appreciation of these types of beers in Oz. I reckon they are all trying to get a foot in the door and if one of them blinks (waters down the product) they will lose to the opposition.
I guess we will find out in a couple of years time.
Ok supposing that is the strategy. Why spend a **** load of money buying out a brewery with a large following of craft beer enthusiasts only to dumb it down, throw a lot of money at a marketing campaign to bring it into the vision of a new market, most of who know little about the brand whilst alienating the strong current market? Would seem a very high risk strategy.
It would make more financial sense to simply start up your own brand of dumbed down pale ales, market the **** out of that to the fence sitters.
Might as well make Yenda V2.0 rather than buy something out if that's the idea.
I know in the past these sorts of buy outs have resulted in a corresponding drop in quality, but I have the feeling that the multitude of buy outs of much loved high quality craft breweries in the past few months by the big boys is in recognition of the shift in consumers knowledge and appreciation of these types of beers in Oz. I reckon they are all trying to get a foot in the door and if one of them blinks (waters down the product) they will lose to the opposition.
I guess we will find out in a couple of years time.
Is there a silver lining here though?
Does having all of these craft companies being bought up by the corps - even if they are watered down somewhat - mean that there will still be a higher-quality stable of beers getting pushed out into the broader market, who will undoubtedly enjoy them and incedentally push up demand for quality beer over and above the usual swill? In short, will this trend lift the averrage standard of beer across the board as more people are introduced to 'craft style' beer?
Remember years ago when there where small breweries everywhere and all sorts of different beers
Remember when they all got bought up by the bigger guys
History is a funny thing
If they make the changes slowly who is going to notice.
Thats right, the craft beer lovers know that, the fence sitters and "new to anything not megaswill drinkers" just think they are hipster as **** drinking "craft beer' .Because people know that Yenda is just some manufactured thing. I reckon the market knows the difference between that, and an actual existing craft beer label that has a history in the craft beer scene. And if ray don't, the marketing department will make sure they do.
B
So a reasonably cheap marketing campaign for a legit label with a decent history, a decent distribution/production deal, and away you go. Would **** all over Yenda overnight.
This seems to be almost a weekly thing. Maybe Modus Operandi will be next week...
I'm bloody well hoping not; that's about the last independently owned brewery around. Id also take the money if it was offered but I too am worried these award winning breweries beers will have their recipes "tweaked".
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