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Archives for May 2006

A Quick Trip to 21A

May 3, 2006 By Jay Brooks

I made a quick trip into San Francisco’s 21st Amendment brewpub yesterday to pick up their new canned beer for a tasting this evening at the Celebrator offices. I met brewer/ower Shaun O’Sullivan after the Giants game, during which Barry Bonds hit #712, at the brewpub and we sat with some friends for a quick drink.

21A brewer Shaun, Joe, from Eldo’s Brewery, and Jen, from Magnolia Pub & Brewery.

Brewers Shaun and Joe.

Shaun, Joe and Jen drink a toast to the new cans.

The Watermelon Wheat, now in cans.

Filed Under: Beers Tagged With: California, San Francisco

Coalition of the Willing Shrinks to One

May 2, 2006 By Jay Brooks

Back in early February I commented that the Here’s to Beer campaign, which was originally supposed to be a coalition of the nation’s breweries, was only Anheuser-Busch and the Beer Institute. Since this propaganda campaign was so obviously an A-B driven effort, I further commented that I felt this tainted the objectiveness of the Beer Institute. It turns out that they agreed, because it was reported today in a Business Week article that “The Beer Institute trade group yanked its logo off the campaign after the first television ad ran during the Super Bowl. The institute would not say why.” Anybody have a guess?

So the Here’s to Beer propaganda is now officially just an A-B effort. A-B “Vice President Bob Lachky said the company is happy to carry the banner for all brewers nationwide.”

From the article:

“The reality of it is, this program really doesn’t need brewer support,” Lachky said. “We kind of always envisioned this thing as being an Anheuser-Busch-led initiative.”

That must be why he spent a great deal of time flying around the country trying to convince other brewers to “set aside their differences and fight the common enemy of wine and spirits” and craft brewers. It’s called spin because that sounds so much better than not telling the truth or saying they were wrong.

As I’ve said before, the funny thing is that the basic idea of promoting beer is a good idea. It’s just that A-B is the absolutely worst company I can imagine to take on this task. They could make decent beer but instead make a highly engineered food product. You don’t ask Wonder Bread to teach people about what great bread is. It’s too bad the Brewers Association doesn’t have the kind of money needed to do television ads, because I can envision a group of regional breweries doing pretty effective PSAs. A concerted effort that taught people what good beer really is would have enormous long term benefits for craft brewers as a whole. But TV is a game only giants can play, so that’s not really feasible at this point.

Also from the Business Week article:

While brewers are sitting out the campaign, Lachky said Anheuser-Busch is focusing its efforts on beer wholesalers. Next week, the company will launch a Web site called http://www.herestobeermarketing.com* that will offer beer wholesalers free promotional materials.

“The thing we learned as we went along is that the real audience of this is the beer distributor,” Lachky said.

I guess going directly to their consumers didn’t work very well, so they decided on the distributors instead. At least they’re already motivated to sell beer, after all that’s their job. But it sure seems like all they’ll accomplish is promoting their own brands. I’m sure all the A-B houses will embrace this program — they’ll probably all but have to — but I can’t imagine the Coors, Miller or independent distributors will have much incentive to use A-B produced marketing materials. But that’s said sight unseen, so who knows. It will certanly be interesting to see what they come up with.

___________________________________________________________________

*Note: the website is not only not up right now, but the domain name has not even been registered. Business Week listed the new domain as herestobeermarkerting.com and I assume they meant herestobeermarketing.com without the errant “r.” Just to make sure, I checked both spellings and neither one has been registered. But it does strike me as odd that a week before its announced launch in a major business magazine, I could still have registered the domain name myself.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Business, National, Websites

Sire, Sire Pants on Fire

May 1, 2006 By Jay Brooks

vs.

It was reported that “on Wednesday, Miller paid for an airplane to tow a banner over Anheuser-Busch’s St. Louis headquarters that read, ‘Sire, sire pants on fire.'” That was the same day a front page Wall Street Journal article appeared in which Anheuser-Busch finally admitted making changes to the formulas for their two most popular products, Budweiser and Bud Light. I just love the idea of this public fracas between the two big American brewing giants devolving to the level of a schoolyard fight. Obviously, Anheuser-Busch has long played the role of bully in this fight and bitter rival (pun intended) SABMiller wasted no time in all but using the “L” word in about as public a way as I can imagine. I presume “sire” is a reference to A-B’s vainglorious claim that they are the king of beers. But it’s still a little odd that Miller didn’t go the extra step to use the “L” word, though of course it was undeniably implied. My only regret is that I haven’t been able to find any photos of the plane flying over the brewery. Surely somebody must have taken a picture of so odd a sight as that.

Two days later Miller ran a full-page ad in USA Today claiming that A-B lied (this time apprently using the “L” word) when it had continually denied that its recipes had been altered over the years.

From the article:

The newspaper story also quoted Anheuser-Busch executives as denying that any changes were made in response to increased sales over the past three years by Miller Lite, Miller Brewing’s No. 1 brand.

The issue first surfaced in November, when Miller began running three TV ads that said Miller Lite has more taste than Bud Light despite changes in Bud Light.

Anheuser-Busch said then it had not changed the beer’s formula, and it complained to TV networks about the commercials.

Miller, however, said last fall it could substantiate its claims through documented increases in “bitterness units,” which measure the amount of hop bitterness in beer.

Advertising Age on Thursday, April 27, the day after the Wall Street Journal expose, ran an article entitled Miller Moves Quickly to Exploit Rival’s Revelation, in which they report that Miller’s ad agency has been challenged to begin using the information revealed in Wednesday’s Wall Street Journal article as soon as possible, and perhaps as soon as Friday. Apparently Miller’s ad agency, Crispin Porter & Bogusky, was up to the challenge given the full page ad in Friday’s USA Today.

From the Ad Age article:

The Journal’s report said that, in August 2003, A-B Chairman August Busch III told hops growers in the Pacific Northwest he intended to increase the proportion of hops used in A-B’s beers in order to give the beers more taste after decades of gradually lightening their flavor to adjust to changing consumer tastes. “I told the growers of our desire to use more hops in our brewing for the purpose of delivering more amplitude and hop flavor in Budweiser,” Mr. Busch told the paper.

While brewers tweak their beers all the time, that admission provides significant marketing ammunition for Miller, the No. 2 brewer behind A-B. Miller ran ads in November 2005 saying it detected a “changed” Bud Light, citing increases in bitterness and carbonation. That attack followed a 2004 campaign by Miller claiming its beers had “more taste” than A-B’s.

Funny stuff. I can’t wait to see what happens next.

UPDATE 5.5: I finally found a photo of the banner.

Photo by Bill Stover, Associated Press

Filed Under: Editorial, News Tagged With: Business, National

One Month Later: Wild Hop Lager Website Still Down

May 1, 2006 By Jay Brooks

At the end of March, someone posted a comment that the Wild Hop Lager website was down. This was a couple of days after I did a phone interview with Bob Scowcroft, Executive Director of the OFRF about the nature of the donation they were to receive “with every purchase of Wild Hop Lager,” as the website indicated.

Since that time I’ve been checking periodically and it’s remained down for at least a month now. Today, it still only says “This page is temporarily down. Please check back later.” Now I don’t know the official period of time something continues before it’s no longer considered “temporary” but in internet time, a month is an eternity. I certainly thought there would be something put up in its place by now. Perhaps the strategy for Wild Hop Lager is changing, but what’s taking so long? Who knows?
 
 

 
 

A screen capture of the original Wild Hop Lager website that has been down for a month. If you’re having trouble reading the text, click on the image to view the screen capture full size.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Business, National, Organic, Websites

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