Posts Tagged ‘Direct Sales’

Viral Vines: Setting the Online Market Ablaze

Tuesday, March 6th, 2007

Viral WinesOne of the most common misconceptions I hear as a web marketer is that an industry, product, or web site is just not viral material. That is to say, the content is so boring, so drab, that it would be impossible to muster up any kind of promotion that would harness the attention of the web. I laugh. I laugh because I want business owners to remember what it was like when they first started – that buzz, that energy, that creativity and excitement. It is still there, it has just been drowned by years of repetition, monotony and struggle.

The truth is, any site with the right spin can go viral. You will have to be creative. You will have to work. But there is always something interesting enough to drum up that can be turned into a fantastic marketing windfall. We have never run a successful viral campaign that did not bring in so much traffic that the client’s site went down. Below, I go through a comparison of the pieces that make a viral campaign work in terms of starting a bonfire. The analogy bares out well, and provides some sage advice (if I must say so myself) in making a campaign truly work.

1. The Matches:
the initial spark
Without any doubt, this is the most important part of the campaign. Sink or swim, blaze or fizzle, your viral campaign needs substance. Luckily, you don’t have to put two sticks together and rub like crazy, there are plenty of ready-to-run themes that greatly increase the likelihood of a successful online viral campaign.

  1. Bad Customer Service
  2. Incredible Customer Service
  3. PopTechnology: Apple, Linux, Ipods, Ruby on Rails, Nintendo Wii, Gadgets
  4. Amazing Stories, Pictures, or Videos

The question for wineries is always how to include “primed-for-viral” topics into something drastically different from wineries and wine in general. Well, here are just a few grains to get you going

  1. Incredible Customer Service: Customer gets a bottle of your wine at a restaurant complains. Complaint makes it back to your winery. You contact the restaurant to find the customer information and send multiple free bottles to their house.
  2. PopTechnology: Include a Free Ipod Shuffle with a case of wine. The shuffle comes pre-recorded with tasting notes by the winemaker, recipes, and romantic music.
  3. Amazing Stories, Pictures, or Videos: The next time you get a cold storm that freezes some of your grapes and ruins them, run out there with camera and take some gorgeous shots of ice-covered grapes melting in the sun. Put those up on Flickr and watch the traffic come in.

The key here is value. Make your site something people want to see and read. Now that the ideas are rolling, lets start talking about turning that match into a bon-fire.

2. The Kindling: superficial burning that light the real flame.
Just like any fire, you can’t go straight to the logs. Well, you could, but your chances of success are greatly impeded. This is where the savvy of internet marketing companies really comes in handy. Here are some tips to help the fire get going…

  1. Profiles with Reputation. Most Web 2.0 communities value User reputation. Users who have been at the site and participated at the site for long periods of time are much more likely to be successful when posting stories than new accounts. Use an old, reputable account to post stories to sites like Digg, Reddit, Netscape, etc.
  2. Link to the Story. Make sure that visitors to your site who are reading the story know that they can vote on it at various web 2.0 sites. Remind them by putting buttons below or beside the story. This is always good for a few extra votes early in the running from your most loyal site readers.
  3. Friends. I am not going to say go get all your friends out there to sign up and start voting for your stories. I won’t even go so far as to say that you should tell friends already on the site to vote for the story. I am going to say that you should make friends on these sites (such as the “Friend” function on Digg) so that they will know when your stories are posted. Moreover, feel free to tell your friends about the story. Some of them may already have accounts at web 2.0 sites, and you have now earned an extra vote or two.

3. Firelogs: keep that fire burning long
The key to long-lasting virals is that they must be RESPONSIVE. While most viral campaigns at least leave up the comments section so that users can state their opinions, a truly responsive campaign will keep folks coming back for weeks. Let’s say that you are running a viral based on gorgeous photography you have of your vineyard. Make sure in your post that visitors know that “more pictures are coming soon”. Ask them if they know any tips for “taking nature shots without getting overwhelmed by the sun.” People need a reason to keep coming back, and setting up a responsive viral will accomplish just that.

4. Suffocation: Preventing your story from burning out fast.
The most common problem with a viral campaign is early suffocation. In the same way that not enough oxygen is getting to your bonfire for it to burn, a viral campaign needs steady or above-steady growth to sustain itself. Once it loses its edge, it becomes very difficult to push through. This leads to several very important, key factors in a successful viral.

  1. Keep your site up: Contact your webmaster / hosting company well in advance and let them know your intent on running a viral marketing campaign. Figure how much it will costs to keep that web site up when the onslaught of traffic comes. Pay it. If your site is down for 2 hours in the middle of a viral, you can count all your precious efforts good bye.
  2. Don’t over do it: Don’t spam the web 2.0 site with multiple stories on the same thing – I haven’t found a business that could stand more than a viral a week, much less one or more daily. Your site can’t handle it, and users will catch on really fast.

5. Gasoline: Artificial ways to boost your viral campaign
Covering a bonfire in gasoline works. You will get huge flames. And third degree burns. And a felony conviction for starting a forest fire. In the same manner, you can purchase votes from sites, get your friends to all sign up and vote, you can do almost anything you want. You will get caught, it will get out of hand, and you will have huge PR clean up job to handle. Imagine those million potential customers turning into an angry mob. It’s kinda like that. No. It is exactly like that.

Hopefully this will put some ideas into your head about how to use viral marketing effectively for your winery. There is no easier, cost-effective method of developing brand recognition. It is time to join the revolution. Great wines, viral vines.

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Direct-to-Paradox

Friday, March 2nd, 2007

As many of you may know, we have been working for a while in creating some innovative solutions for wineries to help them reach their customers. One of the elephants in the room is Direct-to-Consumer and Direct-to-Trade sales.

We have recently spent quite a bit of time talking with wineries about some of our new methods, one of which being direct sales, and have received some very favorable responses, as well as some opposition.

One of the biggest “fears” expressed by wineries, especially the smaller ones, is they feel obligated to only use their current sales channel. Their fear is: if they were to begin selling direct, their distributors, who are fighting direct sales instead of asking how they can be a part of it, will take it as a slap in the face, and then either: A) refuse to continue distributing their wines; or B) become complacent in marketing the wines because they feel their efforts may be futile if the end consumer purchases the wine online. This is because they are not receiving any commission… because again, this particular distributor is not trying to find a way to become involved in direct sales, and instead is fighting it. (more…)

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Vilafonte’s Online Strategy

Monday, February 26th, 2007

Vilafonte

Combine the vineyard responsible for Warwick Trilogy, the California super-winemaker Zelma Long and the marketing genius of Mike Ratcliffe and on paper you have a match made in heaven. If on paper this team is unbelievable, on the palate, their Series M and Series C Vilafonte wines are nothing less than transcendent. The matching of a California winemaker with a vineyard in South Africa puts the term New World at the back of the mind, and suddenly we think New Age. What a great time we live in where travel and communication make it possible for winemakers from across the globe to collaborate and work on foreign soil to create an international icon.
What is most remarkable, however, is the harnessing of the digital age to communicate the magic of a rural setting. Ratcliffe was perhaps one of the first wine marketers to implement a harvest blog and took time off from his business trips to write thoughtful and insightful posts that take you close into the life of a winery. Watch here to see the Vilafonte 2007 harvest; or alternately read their blog; get a closer look into the final phases of the winery’s construction or go to the site ewine.co.za where you can listen to Zelma being interviewed by clicking on the sound file link.

The possibility for consumers to purchase wine online is one thing. But the capability to personally link to homes all across the globe and share an insight into a multimedia rich day-in-the-life of a life less ordinary is nothing short of amazing. Their online effort gives them the tools to demonstrate first-hand a world where farming becomes an art that can express the essence of the land, and can then go on to make impressions on the senses of people around the world. This is unlike anything that has happened before. A year ago, under the guidance of Mr. Ratcliffe, Vilafonte was a brand ahead of its time, but today I am happy to see that they are not only at the forefront of the industry in regards to branding… but in many instances, they’re leading the way.

(more…)

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Focus on your customers

Friday, February 23rd, 2007

flying-wine.bmpWineries are some of the most special places on earth, and to be able to journey there without the price of a plane ticket is one of the greater perks of drinking a bottle of wine. You can travel the globe just by testing your taste buds on an assortment of international vines. With this type of meaning in a product, why are wineries not more connected with their customers?

Well, first of all, they don’t even have time to focus on them because they are tirelessly trying to get distribution and placement in retailers. Distributors are so selective and retail space is so limited that the system gets clogged and wineries have trouble getting their product to market. Therefore, they have to focus all of their energy on either bribing and begging big distributors or going the more expensive route and trying to coordinate a multi-state distributorship with smaller distributors, ultimately costing them $1,000s in traveling, lodging, wining, dining, etc.

When they finally get distribution, they then have to work to get placement by again, bribing and begging big retailers and providing bonuses/incentives to salesmen or doing the traveling thing to get their product in smaller specialty shops. And to top it off, at the end of the day, after placements are made the wine doesn’t sell because there is no consumer demand.

This is all too crazy to make sense. This business is about a quality product that wineries put their heart & soul into and then share with their customers. It should not be about pleasing distributors and retailers. Wineries need ways to connect with their customers and develop strong relationships with them. We feel passionately about this at Grape Thinking and have devised some cool solutions to get wineries more in touch.

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Wine 2.0

Saturday, December 23rd, 2006

Last month, MySpace launched their UK website, and though their user registrations may be on the decrease, there is not doubt that they are the most influential Web 2.0 community in the world. To our young generation, one sees the limitless potential of communities fused with huge threat for saturation, as businesses scramble to try and find if they can benefit off of the prevalence of MySpace.The way MySpace has used music to link friends and promote new bands is rather visionary. Music in the 90′s became so commercial, and one couldn’t help but feel that large corporations were losing touch with the everyday consumer. However, now MySpace offers a forum and fan base to Indie Bands, and freedom of expression combined with creative license is thriving as bands are able to connect with their listeners in a personal and meaningful way that was never before possible on such a global scale.In regard to mass production and decrease in quality, one can see a similar trend in wine. Suddenly all Cabs have to be ‘BIG REDS’ and everyone wants high alcohol, and as soon as one tries to peddle a cab more aligned to the herbaceous Medoc style, wine buyers shy away.Wine, like friendship or music is about finding unity in diversity and multiplicity. We don’t want our friends to be the same as everyone else, nor do we listen to music that is repetitive and unsurprising, so why should we expect anything less of our wines?Wine is often the social liquid that can unify a gathering of friends in a great setting with excellent music in the background. Just as MySpace allows fans to include their favorite music in their group, as well as allowing bands to have direct contact with their friends, there is a definite gap in the market that would allow vineyards to have their own profiles, which users would be able to affiliate with. Just as MySpace allows bands to maintain blogs and post news, so too could this new community allow winemakers to connect with the greater public, receive feedback, post information on tastings and even have video blogs where they show the certain vintages being blended, tasted, crushed, bottled, labeled and released.In such a way, one would be able to support the diversity in wine and save it from becoming a homogenous, unidentifiable, mass produced commodity. Is there any company or organization creative enough or bold enough to take on this task?

I think there is…

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