This week's Portland launch of Michigan-based Founders Brewing highlights the fact that out of state breweries are targeting this market. Left Hand (Colorado) recently launched and Bell's (Michigan) has soft launched; Modern Times (San Diego) is on the way.
I get press releases announcing this stuff. They include quotes from brewers and distributors about how great it is to be working together. Then come the blog posts, regurgitated from the press releases. Nowhere do I find perspective on why breweries want to be here.
The reason I want some perspective is that Portland is the most developed and competitive craft market in the country. We're saturated with great beer, most of it made in Oregon. Why do interlopers from out of state think they can succeed here? What's their plan? Inquiring minds wonder.
Of course, those aren't things anyone wants to discuss publicly. Brewers and distributors spend plenty of time crunching numbers and evaluating the viability of a brand well before they decide to launch in any market. But you aren't going to hear about it.
My initial thought on Founders and Bell's was that they hope to tap into folks who have migrated to Portland from the Midwest. These transplants are starved for beer from their homeland and packaged product from these breweries sells quickly. Prices don't matter.
The problem is, you can't successfully tap a market long-term with migrants as your primary customer base. It's not sustainable. You've got to reach a wider audience, in Portland's case an audience accustomed to drinking mostly local or regional beer.
What's crazy about what's happening is it runs counter to the local focus that fueled the craft revolution. Portland got a great start because locals were willing to try early beers from Bridgeport, Widmer, Portland Brewing and McMenamins. Local has been a relevant factor ever since.
If interlopers from out of state are going to have increased success here, it may mean the local focus is diminishing somewhat. Or that, at the very least, we're becoming more open to drinking beer that isn't made here if it's good enough. That might not be such a bad thing.
Keep in mind that plenty of non-Oregon craft breweries have attempted to crack the Portland market. Few have succeeded on any kind of significant scale. Lagunitas has done well. Sierra Nevada has done well. Ballast Point is doing well. There are a few others.
Breweries want to prove they can compete here says author and longtime Portlander, Jeff Alworth. "We're the Big Apple of beer. If you can make it here, you can make it anywhere. Eventually, it seems like every ambitious brewery tries the Oregon market. Usually to their regret."
The thing about breweries like Founders and Bell's is they've been highly successful in their own markets and are in the process of expanding to other parts of the country. They make good beer and they've got GABF medals and dedicated fans to prove it. They want to succeed here.
As well, they're capitalized to make the investment required to succeed. "You need to have marketing boots on the ground to build a brand presence here," says one of my industry friends. "Breweries that aren't willing to do that or can't afford to do that have a tough time here."
In fact, more than a few Oregon breweries have cut corners on the marketing end. They expect to win fans because they're here. Some have even doubled down by pushing sketchy, inconsistent beer into the market. A few have gotten away with that approach.
Things may be changing. Well-funded interlopers with the appropriate pedigree are positioned for success here. Migration demographics could be part of that, but mainly Portland and Oregon may be coming around to the idea that good beer is good beer regardless of where it's from.
The result of that evolution is that sloppy, underfunded Oregon brands are going to be pushed out of the market by aggressive newcomers from outside. In fact, that displacement is already happening. Maybe that's good news for consumers.
Showing posts with label Founders Brewing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Founders Brewing. Show all posts
Friday, February 10, 2017
Sunday, April 22, 2012
Deliverance from Evil in 'Bama
I'm not sure how many readers of this blog may have seen the old Burt Reynolds movie, Deliverance. It's the story of a wild water canoe trip down a dying river in rural Georgia. The boys from the city wind up in conflict with some rural folks and it gets ugly, to put it mildly.
There's a conflict of a different sort happening down south now and this time it involves beer. Frankly speaking, there are parts of the old Confederacy where they still think Prohibition was a damn good idea, and they're doing everything they can to keep it alive with dreadful, antiquated laws.
One of those places is Alabama, where the state's Alcohol Control Board the other day banned the sale of Dirty Bastard beer, brewed by Founders Brewing Company of Grand Rapids, Mich. Profanity on the label was given as the reason for denying Dirty Bastard a place on store shelves.
Just to give you some perspective, this is the same state that allows the sale of Fat Bastard wine. And you can also find Raging Bitch beer in select stores, "select" being any store that wants to sell it. No word on Stone's Arrogant Bastard, but it doesn't sound good.
An attorney for the Alabama Alcohol Control Board says he thinks the decision on Dirty Bastard was right...bastard is something the kiddies don't need to see in stores. He defended the decisions on Fat Bastard and Raging Bitch, saying they happened years ago and the beers wouldn't be approved now. Now we're getting somewhere.
Free The Hops, an organization that is working to get the state of Alabama to at least move in the direction of sane beer laws, opposes the decision on Dirty Bastard. But they've got an uphill battle. More than a third of the counties in Alabama prohibit the sale of alcohol.
Another Alabama law prevents the sale of beer in containers larger than 16 ounces, effectively keeping many craft beers off store shelves. The "Gourmet Bottle" bill designed to fix this didn't make it out of committee in 2011. Free The Hops has introduced versions of the same bill in the state House and Senate for 2012. You can track their progress on the Free the Hops website.
Prohibition isn't dead in Alabama. It's obvious a good part of the state would bring it back full bore if they had the chance. It makes you wonder if these people are ever going to join the 20th century. Forget 2012.
There's a conflict of a different sort happening down south now and this time it involves beer. Frankly speaking, there are parts of the old Confederacy where they still think Prohibition was a damn good idea, and they're doing everything they can to keep it alive with dreadful, antiquated laws.
One of those places is Alabama, where the state's Alcohol Control Board the other day banned the sale of Dirty Bastard beer, brewed by Founders Brewing Company of Grand Rapids, Mich. Profanity on the label was given as the reason for denying Dirty Bastard a place on store shelves.
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Banned in 'Bama |
An attorney for the Alabama Alcohol Control Board says he thinks the decision on Dirty Bastard was right...bastard is something the kiddies don't need to see in stores. He defended the decisions on Fat Bastard and Raging Bitch, saying they happened years ago and the beers wouldn't be approved now. Now we're getting somewhere.
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Problematic in 'Bama |
Another Alabama law prevents the sale of beer in containers larger than 16 ounces, effectively keeping many craft beers off store shelves. The "Gourmet Bottle" bill designed to fix this didn't make it out of committee in 2011. Free The Hops has introduced versions of the same bill in the state House and Senate for 2012. You can track their progress on the Free the Hops website.
Prohibition isn't dead in Alabama. It's obvious a good part of the state would bring it back full bore if they had the chance. It makes you wonder if these people are ever going to join the 20th century. Forget 2012.
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