In Episode 56, I continued the conversation with Georgie Bell, The Heart Cut's co-founder from Ep.55. She has extensive industry experience, having previously worked at Diageo, Bacardi, and the Scotch Malt Whisky Society.
We discussed how to explain a product, starting from a liquid, going into taste profile, storytelling, and target occasions. We closed with a dive into the life of a start-up with learnings and course correction to build bottom-up. I hope you will enjoy our chat.
Time Stamps
0:00 Intro
0:24 Where Do You Start
4:46 Importance Of Follow Up
7:41 Importance Of Normal Bars
13:05 Importance Of Off-Trade
15:18 When To Wholesale?
17:09 One Bottle, One Case, One Pallet
23:40 Building Demand With Partners
30:56 The Drinks Ecosystem
34:20 Start Up Challenges
47:34 Contact Details
49:19 Outro
About The Host: Chris Maffeo
About The Guest: Georgie Bell
In Episode 56, I continued the conversation with Georgie Bell, The Heart Cut's co-founder from Ep.55. She has extensive industry experience, having previously worked at Diageo, Bacardi, and the Scotch Malt Whisky Society.
We discussed how to explain a product, starting from a liquid, going into taste profile, storytelling, and target occasions. We closed with a dive into the life of a start-up with learnings and course correction to build bottom-up. I hope you will enjoy our chat.
Time Stamps
0:00 Intro
0:24 Where Do You Start
4:46 Importance Of Follow Up
7:41 Importance Of Normal Bars
13:05 Importance Of Off-Trade
15:18 When To Wholesale?
17:09 One Bottle, One Case, One Pallet
23:40 Building Demand With Partners
30:56 The Drinks Ecosystem
34:20 Start Up Challenges
47:34 Contact Details
49:19 Outro
About The Host: Chris Maffeo
About The Guest: Georgie Bell
The MAFFEO DRINKS Podcast is a leading drinks industry podcast delivering frontline insights for drinks leadership.
For founders, directors, distributor MDs, and hospitality leaders navigating the tension between bottom-up reality and top-down expectations.
20+ years building brands across 30+ markets. Each episode features drinks builders: founders, distributors, commercial directors, sharing how the drinks industry actually works. Not the conference version. Honest conversations.
Insights come from sitting at the bar.
Beyond episodes: advisory for leadership teams, subscription with episode deep dives and principles to navigate your own reality.
Beer, wine, spirits, Low and non-alcoholic.
Bottom-up Insights & Episode Deep Dives at https://maffeodrinks.com
Welcome to the Mafair Drinks
Podcast.
I'm your host Chris Maffeo in
episode 56.
I continue the conversation with
Georgie Bell from the Hard cut
from episode 55, so feel free to
listen to that as well.
I hope you will enjoy our chat.
One last thing, if you enjoy
this podcast, you will also like
the Mafair Drinks guides.
You can subscribe free or paid
on mafairdrinks.com.
We spoke a little bit like about
targeting outlets and places and
typologies about that.
You mentioned before the hotel
specific hotels, bars, hotel
bars, specific type of place,
you know, you know whiskey bars
and so on.
So how do you start when
building your brand?
I mean you've been working
previously on big companies
where you know the distribution
was pretty much done I guess
unless it was a a a new launch
so to say.
But how do you target like we
got without going into, you
know, trade secrets of the hard
cut, but just like where do you
start?
Do you start from, from a city,
from a country, from, you know,
I discussed in a previous
episode like Ilias,
Mastroiannis, like you had this
thing like saying like adult
ponds lakes see, you know, like
to really grow in that, that
kind of element.
So what's your, what's your take
on that?
What's your approach to that?
So we've about caught taking a
city LED approach, it's multi
LED actually.
Apologies, when the Hot Cup came
into fruition and launched
originally in September of last
year, so September 2023, it was
pretty much behind the scenes
party, the only ones heard about
us.
That's wonderful because it's
meant that over the last six
months we've been able to tinker
behind the scenes and actually
figure out what's working,
what's not working, figuring out
our distribution, figuring out
like just that, figuring out
timings et cetera, et cetera
which I'm sure we can get into
later on.
But we've also had AT to C focus
the first six months, so selling
through our own website and
that's been sort of almost the
primary is D to C So for D to C
less of a city approach but more
of a country piece.
We are AUK based brand.
We know that that's where our
audience will be.
That's where we can distribute
from, from our D to C set up
with the third parties that
we're working with who helped us
bring that to life.
Now as we're starting to go into
on and off trades because not
only are we set up as a company
to do B to B so we can filter
bars and to to off trade
accounts.
But we've also been able to set
ourselves up with two
wholesalers who have taken a
chance on us.
And I say that because coming
from big corporations and big
company background, you really
take for granted distribution.
You really take for granted
distribution and then you start
your own company and you go,
gosh, I'm starting from nothing.
Even if you're launching a new
brand within a big company, you
already have those relationships
in place and you already have
sort of deals in place with
certain accounts.
So you can be like, hey, I've
got this new brand, bring it in
as part of that deal.
So you already do have it set
up, but we're starting with a a
city approach of London because
that's where my husband and I
are based.
And then we're also looking at
Edinburgh as well, because
that's where I lived for 10
years.
And it's where we have some
relationships and where there
are some brilliant cocktail bars
that we know that we have
friends behind the bars there
who love our brands when we're
looking at the right venues to
go in.
And I think when you're, when
you're doing your distribution
list, you can look at it in
terms of three different lenses
you want to be in bars that are
helping build your credibility.
You want to be in or let's say
bars, but accounts that are
helping build your authenticity
and you want to be in accounts
that have geographical
proximity.
So what I mean by that is
obviously credibility building.
So those award-winning accounts
that are out there that you know
will help build your credibility
within the trade because you're
found behind those bars, places
such as Lioness in London for
instance, authenticity is you
building up your space within
the category.
So for us that's very much your
whiskey bars.
So in London we're looking at
DRAM and also mill rides which
are really important to us and
we say a whiskey Club and
BlackRock and all of these other
brilliant whiskey bars that are
in London and then geographical
proximity which is sort of
helping that mental availability
for a consumer through a
neighbourhood.
So really that's that puddles
approach, you know, building up
in a post code.
Now you can write stuff down on
paper and you can save.
And I'm talking now from a hard
cut perspective, we can write
down, right, we want to be in
all of these accounts.
These are our dream accounts.
These are the ones we're going
after.
That's one and good if there are
accounts.
But what matters, and I know
you've written about this Chris,
is the bar manager already knows
what brands they want to bring
into their bar and if they've
not heard about you, well you're
not going to get in there.
You've got to make it your job
and your mind to be able to get
that bar manager to hear about
you, to then bring you in.
But not only get the bar
managers here about you to say
that they're going to bring you
in, but then get them to place
the order that isn't going to
bring you in further and that's
that's another stepping stone is
getting them to place that
order.
So we've picked accounts first
of all for the heart cut that
very much focus on credibility
and authenticity.
So first and foremost is the
authenticity bars are with the
bars in London because we know
that that is where people want
to drink a whiskey, where the
button is get what we're doing
and get they get why the hard
cut is doing something very
different to all other
independent bottlers out there.
With this new world whiskey
approach, with the
collaboration, with distinerism,
with the education aspect that
we're bringing in, which you
don't see across the others.
And we're also focusing on
credible accounts.
Again, some top 50 accounts, top
100 accounts, but also accounts
where we have friends behind the
bar while we're like cool, you
know us, you know what we're
about.
You know that we're pouring our
heart and our souls into these
brands.
And you know that at the end of
the day that the whiskeys that
are in these bottles are
incredible whiskeys.
And so that's that's what we're
going after right now.
Nice.
Now that's very, that's very
interesting and we discussed it
offline in the sense like with
you know with the with the MAFA
drinks guys like when I send out
these emails I know that it it
lands on something now because
it's it's very it's very
interesting.
I've been doing this strategies
for many, many years now like
this city strategies and and
what I felt and always as as an
issue when when I was let's say
I was getting a deck from the
global team in any company I was
working in and then it's lucky I
know the theory.
I know more or less what this is
about.
I know I need to pick the right
accounts, but then how do I do
it?
In Italian we say like between
saying and doing this, there's
AC in between.
No Alder, El farish, Adima
zumare.
And it's just like, I know it
and and I know that that
bartender promised to buy a
bottle, but my wholesaler hasn't
received that order anyway, you
know, so you know there's
something in between.
So I've done all the steps.
Right now it's not up to me.
But then of course I need to go
back and remind to place that
order.
No kind of thing.
You need to go back in and
remind and place the order.
But you also don't want to be
there, sort of being like, hey,
hey, Remember Me, that you place
that order, you know, pick that
annoying brass.
No.
And that and that's the that's
the thing.
But also it's important like
listening to you to what you
said about, you know, where you
have, let's call it like a
friends and family of the
bartending scene.
No, that sometimes you may, they
may not have to be super fancy
bars and you know, award-winning
bars, but they are the ones in
which you have a relationship
and you can test waters.
No.
And also like what?
One thing that I'm I, I write
about this in the guides because
I I've done it myself and I I
saw the mistake in that thinking
is that I used to think, I give
you a tangible example.
I used to live in Stockholm and
I there was a neighbourhood that
I really loved and we were used
to call it like Restaurant St.
because all the restaurant it
was really like in and out of
restaurants and bars and so on.
When I did the strategy on on
Peroni back then I blindly I
said that's the that's one of
the neighbourhoods that I want
to focus on.
But then when I placed the ping
on the pins on Google Maps, I
realized it was just like 5
places because I I did my own
segmentation on like it has to
be this type of venues.
So it's not like I don't care
where geographically they are
sitting, I want to have that
type of venues.
And I realized that there was
another neighborhood in
Stockholm that I would have
never thought of you know from a
top down perspective that was
really like over indexing on
those type of places.
So sometimes you have to
challenge yourself and you have
to let the map tell you back
what the reality is versus what
you thought because you will.
You may think, OK, this is like
shortage or this is like totally
Mayfair or this is totally so.
And then all of a sudden you
find out, I don't know, Clapham,
it may be a better suitable
place for the those particular
venues that you're looking for
because maybe those people with
that mindset hope that open the
bar that are looking for that
particular type of offering they
were looking for.
I don't know, cheaper rent then
short ditch and then they went
to Clapham and I think we we we
discussed it on what you think
is your target and what your
actual target is.
You know there is always more of
a bit of a lag and a difference.
Yeah, I I would also say that
when you're starting a brand and
you're you're the brand owner
and you're in the very early
day, you can't be too pressure.
We're counting bottles.
You know, we're not counting
cases.
And yeah, I saw one of your
postings, something about how to
sell your first 1000 cases.
I'm like trying to sell my first
1000 bottles here, let alone
cases.
And when you're selling bottles
and counting bottles, which
we're very much doing, and I
mentioned before, we're going to
the Wild Whiskey Awards tonight,
we have to buy a ticket and buy
that ticket.
I'm like, cool, how many bottles
do we need to sell to be able to
buy a ticket to go to this.
But when you're doing that you
can't keep be too precious.
And it's all very well and good
having down on paper, as I just
said, you know, we want to be in
our credibility and authenticity
building accounts.
That's wonderful then.
And I said we want to be in
London and Edinburgh and we have
this narrow and deep approach
into it.
But then there's this wonderful
spirit shop in Bristol called
Spirited who have heard about us
and they're like, we'd love to
stop your brand.
I'm not going to say no.
Amazing.
The woman, Katie who runs the
shop is incredible, of course.
Yes, we want to be in there
because you've got the right
mindset for us.
So what I mean by you can't be
too precious is you can have a
city approach 100% and you can
try and go after your puddles
and then ponds, etcetera.
But you also have to go where
there is desire with the right
mindset for what you're doing.
And when you're trying to do
something different, which is
again what we're trying to do
with our risky.
You have to go where people
understand you and where their
appetite for that and appetite
isn't restricted by geography.
Absolutely, absolutely.
And and let's say the, the only
caveat to that, you know, like
just to clarify is that you need
to be able to have a supporting
route to market to enable.
Yes, because that's what many
brands do wrong at the same time
when they go after
opportunities.
But then sometimes these
opportunities are in another
markets, you know, in another
country, in another state, you
know.
And then all of a sudden it's
like do you have that
distribution And then don't
appoint A wholesaler just
because you have one account and
you're still like a tomb people
band kind of ran.
So try to focus on that
particular place.
But nevertheless nowadays like
you know there there are ways to
bypass that like with you know
either D2C or you know shipping
a Bolton and some because I
think that the important thing
is also to clarify you know what
kind of categories are.
You know some categories like
yours are value adding
categories.
You know, you know like they are
probably like more expensive
bottles then like a a random, I
don't know, gin brand or vodka
brand.
You drive value before volume
you know.
But with some other brands it's
more like they need to to build
a little bit more scale.
So there is also like a a, you
know a clarification to be done
on that now but what is like you
you you mentioned before like
what what is your take because I
used to be known as a non trade
guy and now I'm I'm pushing this
you know bottom up trade kind of
approach.
Now that that actually merges on
trade and off trade together
where you can do the brand
building, you know, because I
must say like before working on
whiskey brands, I didn't really
include those kind of like
bottle shops and more like off
trade, independent off trade
outlets.
And then I, I started working
with whiskey brands and then I
started to challenge my own
thinking on this.
And then it's like actually they
play a huge role in the brand
building aspects because a shop
clerk or a shop owner is playing
exactly the same role as a
bartender or a bar manager, you
know, in that sense.
So what's your take on that one?
Like what?
What is the importance of of
trade outlets in building the
brand?
For us, off trade outlets are
hugely important and independent
off trade as well, because
that's why we're going to be
able to, again, as a small brand
that's striving, as you said,
value instead of scale.
We we have in total 2000 bottles
right now.
We've bottled 6 casks of whiskey
from around the world from
brilliant distilleries and we
have in total about 2000
bottles.
I mean we don't have all of
those right now because we have
sold quite a few.
So independent of trade is
hugely important also because
the people that have often built
those accounts are in those
accounts understand what we're
about and they look up, they
look for good favours.
They look for brands that are
doing something a bit different
and brands with value added
components to it, which is what
ours is because the hard cut is
one of those social currency
stories, something a little bit
different.
That means for an off trade
venue they can go to their
regulars that come and hey we've
just had this whiskey brands,
it's super cool, it's new on the
market, let me tell you a little
bit about it.
And for them as an off trade
account that's brilliant.
We've given them something
that's different that they can
then pass on to their consumers.
And also in some of these off
trade outlets, you're sat
amongst your peers.
You know, I always keep
perspective.
There are people behind those
shelves that you want to be seen
with.
So they are really important.
And I say independent.
They're more than chain only
because often it's easier to
work with one venue than it is
with 345 just right now for us
because we don't have that scale
and we don't have that manpower
to you.
As I said before, 1 massive
thing we didn't overlook.
But one thing that has become
more and more and more important
is route to market and
distribution.
You can be the most brilliant
market chair.
You can be the most brilliant
whiskey person.
I'm not, but you can be.
You can have the most brilliant
idea.
You can have the most incredible
whiskeys, which I really do
believe we do.
But if you don't have the right
route to market, if you don't
have the right belief from a
wholesaler.
Because as I said, we're set up
to sell to bars and we do sell
to some bars, but a lot of bars
will only buy 3 wholesalers.
So if you're not set up through
the right wholesalers who take a
chance on you because you are
new, if you don't have the right
connections with the accounts
you're going after, if you don't
have the time to go into those
accounts, to chase those
accounts, to get them to go
from, yes, we're placing an
order to actually placing an
order.
That's such a big area that if I
was to go back and relook at how
we were planning this as a
brand, I wouldn't change
actually anything for the world
because I do think we we've
built this brand in the right
way from the bottom up, from
very, very small learning along
the way and also not within our
own echo chamber, which is
important.
But one big thing would be
placing more of an emphasis on
how are you going to get a
conversion from yes, I will take
your brand to actually having it
behind the bar.
Yeah, and this is, this is like
what I, what I often stress
about what I call the unsexy
stuff when creating a brand.
Because of course it's it's more
fun to create, you know the
label and the story and and
everything.
And that's why, like I don't
work with that part because I
just inherit whatever the brand
owner has has developed.
Like, I don't want to challenge
anything.
You know, I could, I could say
whatever like about I like it, I
don't like it or whatever.
But then it would be like a
subjective conversation.
What I'm interested in is, is to
really convert that into a, what
I call a commercial essence, you
know, from a brand essence to a
commercial essence.
So what does that mean in terms
of bars?
What does that mean in terms of
typologies of bars and and
typologies of people?
And then you deep dive and you
go into what is the occasion
there, who are we fighting in
the menu who are we going after
And then you know you really
make it available.
No.
And to and to your previous
point like you know the the step
between being, you know the the
non wholesaler type of stage.
I call I call it the one bought
the it's funny because I'm I'm
building a course, a digital
course about this.
It's taking me a long, long time
because of time struggles, but I
call it the one bottle stage and
then there's A1 bottle, one
case, 1 pallet and these are the
three stages of a brand.
And it's funny because you
mentioned that like when when
you read my post and I was like
we're talking about the one case
1000 cases, no.
And then the first is there's
1000 bottles and there is that
moment that that is A1 bottle
stage, which you're thinking in
bottles, you're not thinking in
cases and you're probably
haven't appointed A wholesaler
because no wholesaler wants to
talk to you.
We are, yeah, we are in.
We're in bottle stages but we
are dealing with like we had a
had a six case order from the
wholesaler, 6 cases, my
goodness, one, it's huge.
That will pay for our PR company
for a month and a bit in my past
life if you were to say to me in
a sort of a Bacardi, if it's I
am sure if it's like how we've
sold six cases to a wholesaler,
I'd be like what starting.
But for us we're like that's six
cases.
It's so much so at the end of
the day, Chris, honestly and I
hope you're getting and it's
owning your own business.
Yes, it it's incredibly
stressful and everything, but it
it's so fun.
It is so fun and it's so
exciting because it's
challenging you in so many
different directions that you've
never been challenged in before
and you're figuring stuff about
out about your brand.
You're building it as you go
because with every new
conversation that you have with
a wholesaler, with an account,
with each time for me we do a
consumer tasting.
We're like picking up what,
what's dropping, what's
sticking, what's sticky here,
right.
And you're building as you, your
brand, as you're going on, as
long as you can have that
flexible mindset and a mindset
that's based on absorbing.
Information and then filtering
it out into a brand in different
ways.
It's it's really fun.
Absolutely no.
And I I mean, I'm, I'm smiling
because I, I like what you say
about 6 cases or like 1 bottle
or whatever that that amount is,
is that it reminds me of, let's
say for me is the same thing
with, let's say, listeners or
subscribers to the guides or you
know, like sometimes even when I
saw that message, it wasn't a
message.
It was like a post that you did
about you listening to the
podcast while you know, watching
your twins.
And it's one of those things.
And I really urge any listener
to reach out to me, you know, if
you feel that way now.
Because what I feel is that I, I
save all those messages.
By the way, you know, I have a,
a screenshot of every single
message that I receive because
for me it's like it's first of
all is the fuel to keep me going
because sometimes, like, it's a
lonely work now.
I mean, I'm sitting in front of
the screen typing or the, you
know, recording and everything.
But it's also like when you know
you when you think like if
somebody took the time to
actually go out there and either
write me a note or write me a
review or write a message or
share me with their peers.
It means something because it's
it's an effort and it may take 5
minutes, but it's an effort, you
know, from from people.
So it means you touched
something on that person.
No.
And it's the same thing when
they want to get a bottle from
you.
It's just like, you know, they
love your story.
So I I bet that at the
beginning, it's almost like when
they say I'll place an order,
like, you almost don't believe
it.
No.
You know, it's just like, no,
OK, like he said it, but he
didn't mean it.
Like, OK, let's let's carry on
And the conversation.
Yeah, I want it.
You know, I'm buying it.
And then it's just like, really,
you know, because that's the the
power of that moment.
No.
But one thing that I want to say
about what you were saying
before about the, let's say, big
players is that don't
underestimate the fact that even
big brands, they are bought in
bottle quantities because we
think in, OK, like wholesalers,
of course, they're buying
pallets of brands.
But when I work with big brands,
I'm also surprised sometimes
that you know that the majority
of the outlets, they buy
bottles.
Maybe they buy a bottle per
week, but they buy bottles
because they don't want to have
stock.
You know, very few people buy a
case or something unless they
know that they're going to sell
3-4 bottles out of those 6
bottles.
So you know, sometimes there is
this thinking that there is this
kind of like small brands versus
big brands and so on.
But ultimately at the bar, it's
a pretty even fight.
And that's the old thing about
building bottom up that if you,
if you think top down, of course
you're thinking pallets and
importers buying a container and
ultimately especially in
spirits, I mean I come from beer
and beer was, you know, it's
really like a bigger volume
business.
But in reality, like on on
spirits, people still buy
cocktail by cocktail that makes
a bottle and and so on, because
there's so many bottles on that
back bar that is quite
challenging.
Then it's another story on
actually being in the cocktail
menu and being able to support
with, you know, money or
investment and so on.
But that's another story.
But like what I'm interested in
knowing is like you mentioned
before that bartenders like they
already know what what they want
to get.
So how do you build that demand
before you enter the bar and
because you're working with
other distilleries, because
you're a bottler, you know how
do you play with their demand?
So they say you know like
because they have probably built
already, you know they are a
step ahead of you in building
that demand.
So how do you work with that and
how do you partner with those
distilleries to actually build
kind of like a mutual demand and
and get in?
Yeah, great question.
So as I said before,
collaboration is really
important to what we're doing at
the Hulk up.
So where some independent
bottlers stop, we start or we
carry on.
So obviously an independent
bottling model is we buy cars
from distilleries and then we
bottle them.
And for the most parts, I'm
saying for the most part here
because it's not everybody, but
you'll see the independent
bottlers name front and centre.
And then you might seem tiny
little typo underneath the
distillery from which the
whiskey inside or the spirit
inside came from.
But it's about the independent
bottlers.
And if you look at our labels,
our labels are spliff in half,
1/2 is about the heart cut, the
other half is about the
distillery.
It's a collaboration.
We pick our tasks in
collaboration with them.
We're here to help tell their
story of their distillery
through a different voice,
through our voice using the
whiskey that we have from that
bottle.
So the whiskey is the
storyteller, as it were.
Again leading with the liquid.
Why does it taste the way it
does?
Because of some of the the way
it's made and let's talk about
that from a distillery
perspective and we as a hard cut
are curating that and we're
helping consumers explore new
old whiskey through the single
cast collections that we create.
Now with that in mind and that
model, we're looking to be seen
as a force for good, as it were,
for that distillery, to help
them get more share on the back
bark.
So you'll be able to see on our,
for instance, our bottle number
six is from the Cotswolds
distillery just outside of
London.
So for the Cotswolds, the
brilliant thing about our
bottling is that they might
already have two bottles on the
back bar and then they'll have
the hard cut bottle.
So it's the Cotswolds, that's
another bottle for them.
It's great for us and it's great
for them.
So in an ideal world, in the way
that we carry on this
conversation with the
distilleries, OK, we've bought a
bottle from you, that's a cast
from you.
Sorry, that's wonderful.
Can we send a bottle to your
brand ambassador that's based in
the UK?
Hey, are they doing any
tastings?
Can we give you some of our
stocks so that they bring that
in?
Because ultimately our bottle is
just a different guys of what
your whiskey that you've made.
We are here because of you.
Let's work together on this.
We're an extended voice for you.
We are almost an arm of your
marketing department because of
how we're positioning ourselves
as the heart cut.
So as we grow, that is one piece
and we've started doing it now
with some of the six
distilleries that we're working
with to date and we have some
more lined up.
But as we grow, it's about
working with those distilleries
to say, hey, you have a
relationship with this bar.
Brilliant.
Would you mind giving us an
intro?
Would you mind, you know, if
you're again doing a training
with them, would you bring us in
as part of that?
But hey, you want to be in this
bar?
We've already got conversations
over here going, so why don't we
bring you in and talk about it.
We have an event coming up where
they want to start with
cocktails and we're like cool.
We're not cocktail brands, but
astounding one of our partner
distilleries, an incredible
distillery from from Denmark,
you might have had it before.
That whiskey is wonderful in a
highball.
So why don't we start with
astounding highball to begin
with, again as a way of talking
about their brands.
So basically, the way we're
looking to work with our
distilleries is who holds the
relationship where, And let's
play this as a force for good to
help both sides out.
But yes, we're talking to bars,
but there's also a massive
online audience as well.
And there's also a massive
consumer audience, especially
with whiskey, with whiskey clubs
and whiskey shows, right.
And that's one area, I think
with whiskey clubs and whiskey
shows that you perhaps don't see
as much without the spirit
categories.
So that's why yes, for whiskey
bars are important, but also and
also off trade is important and
these whiskey clubs and whiskey
shows.
So as we're doing whiskey club
tastings like I have a tasting
with a women's whiskey night at
Drum coming up, I'm going to be
talking about the partner.
I'm talking about the heart cup
50% of the time, but 50% of the
time I'm talking about these
other distilleries.
And these distilleries might not
have had a chance to speak to
this club before.
So that's where the nice,
mutually beneficial piece comes
into play.
Yeah, I I love that because it's
an evolving relationship.
I would say now because
especially when there is that
element of like who holds the
relationship and then there's
another element that with those
distilleries growing most
probably at a higher pace than
than the hard cap, because you
know, it's obvious that they
will be like that.
You know, like just from a
production perspective they will
at some point whether they have
done it already or not, like
they will lose control of their
distribution.
What you're doing there with you
know you are basically like a a
reminder like what I have in my
profile now on LinkedIn is like
I I have brands secure and sell
repeatedly their first 1000
cases in a city because that's
what brands do wrong now that
you know they forget about the
the foundational 1000 bottles
and cases in a city when they
grow.
When you become like 100,500
thousand bottles or cases brand,
you know you forget about first
fundamentals no.
And you will be a constant
reminder of the first handful of
brand building bottom up trade
accounts.
And maybe you know that
particular distillery in that
particular account is becoming a
little bit dusty and you are
like there like to remind them
and to take the dust off their
other two bottles that they have
with your shiny new bottle, you
know.
So it becomes like a constant
reignition.
It's a little bit like when in a
fireplace, you know, when you
put the new wood in, you know,
and then the older woods, you
know, gets light up a little bit
more at the beginning. 100% it
is that and it us talking about
the other expressions within
their range.
And every time we get a mention
from a journalist, it's not just
about the hard cut, but it's the
hard cut.
X bottling, hard cuts, Downing,
Butting, Hiro Bottling, Easton
and Liquor Company bottling.
It's always a reminder of this
other branch.
That's why, as I said, always a
collaboration.
I love that because it's it's
part of what I always talk about
about the drinks as an ecosystem
now because there is this
tendency like to to think in
silo like the sales versus
marketing and the sales and
marketing together against
production in the S and OP
meeting.
And then again like the
logistics are late and this one
is late and so on.
But ultimately we all part of
the ecosystem but also with
importers, wholesalers,
distributors, chains, bottle
shops and everything.
You know, we all there together
and it's very difficult to to
know where you know, to
attribute, you know where that
sale came from.
You know it could be that you
sell a bot.
So because somebody listen this
episode or it could be that they
were on a on a stand and they
saw they were in an airport and
they saw an Instagram post about
maybe was the distillery that
mentioned in their profile that
you were launching it.
You know, it, it can be
anything.
And you know, like getting out
of this attribution thing and
getting more into this.
And my friend calls it like
karma points.
You know, it's just like you
just do something good for
others and then somehow it will
go back to you.
I remember one of the best
feeling when I used to live in
Antwerp.
Yeah, when I did my thesis.
And one of the best feelings
there was was that, you know, I
used to go into a pub and they
have this pinch.
And like these small pints, like
they are 02, I would be sitting
at the bar and then I was
ordering around for people.
But you would buy around for
your friends and then people
would buy another round and
another round.
So it was that kind of like
buying around, but to the
extreme level because at some
point during the night you were
buying it to random people and
some random people came to you
like knocking on your shoulder,
giving you a beer for free.
You've never met that person.
You know, it wasn't like part of
your inner circle.
It was just like a random said
because everybody we're always
at that so we were all regulars
of that pub.
So at some point you know I
would have paid back that pint
you know, and but you were not
doing for the immediate return
of lyokam buy.
Some nights I bought 10 pints
and got back to you know some
other nights I got in and I
drank for free all night because
I never get.
I never got the chance to
actually pay that round back and
then you pay to a random people.
Then I I like this feeling about
the on trade as as an ecosystem
now because it's not about like
getting a Commission or getting
anything.
It's just like you know you're
doing something, you know like
sometimes you just mention the
name and you get a listing
because you know you just did it
that way.
Sometimes like you did the extra
work you you brought the bottles
of your partner distillers to
that training and they got a
listing with their products on
top of your product.
You know and it's this nice
mutual looking after each other
because ultimately there is
space for everyone if you are
differentiated enough to
actually know what you're
looking for and communicate to
consumer what to expect from
your liquid and brand.
Just to wrap up, we were smiling
before because one of the
questions that I wanted to ask
you was if you have a team and
then we laughed together about
that, What is your take on the
challenges of this startup and
building with the team, with not
having a team And tell us about
that because this is something
that resonates with a lot of
people.
And I was talking to a girl from
Texas the other day that is a
listener of the podcast.
And and she said, you know, she
said, like, I love to hear these
stories on the podcast because
of course, when you're
bootstrapping, you're always
kind of like in in that
continuous struggle, even in a
positive way, you know?
And she told me, you know, it's
so nice to hear that everybody
has similar kind of like
struggles, you know, that I'm
not the only one.
And she said something that
resonated with me as like I hear
that in their voice when they're
explaining, you know their
passion but also like what
they're going through and we all
this in in it together now.
So I want to give you some space
to to talk about you but also
like to alleviate the pain of
many other listeners in a solo
or dual band.
And they say like, hey, this is
not only me, I mean like this
everybody has similar challenges
than than we do.
Yeah.
So Chris, as I was mentioning
before, when you own a startup,
you are always on, you are
always on.
There is no 9:00 to 5:00.
So my husband and I that that
own the company and it's just us
working on that.
And yesterday we had an e-mail
through from a Japanese
distillery and they were like,
hey, we'd love to, we'd love to
work with you.
And we're like, Oh my goodness,
instead of us reaching out to a
distillery, A distillery to come
to us, which is wonderful.
And in the e-mail they said that
they're coming to London and
they'd like to meet us and our
offices.
And I'm reading this e-mail on
my phone and I look around me
and I'm standing in the kitchen
And then my husband, we're on
day two of weaning, so my
husband's trying to feed the
girls pureed potato.
We have a whiteboard next to us,
which is just a dumping ground
of everything to do with the
business scribbled on so many
times.
And then to do lists cross off
And then what if we do this, How
about we change the story that
way?
You know, it's incredibly
because you have to be dynamic
in these first instances.
You can't be too precious on
one's sticks.
This Is Us, you know, everything
is changing and this
flexibility.
And I'm like, well, this, this
kitchen right now is, this is
our office right now.
And I don't really think they're
going to want to come here.
We took a picture of it.
We've got bottles, we've got the
whiteboard, We've got the girls
eating potato, you know, stuff
on the floor, me answering
emails while trying to prep for
the day ahead while prepping for
this podcast as well while
putting in an order through our
ordering system.
We don't have a team.
We have us and we have a way of
working and actually we haven't
spoken about this, but when
you're working husband and wife
together, you have to be.
That's a different working
environment as well, which as I
said, you know with this brand
has been building up for a long
time.
So we found a really good way of
working together and we both own
certain parts of the business.
I he is very much sales and
operations and I am marketing
and brand and distineries,
right.
And that's kind of how we split
it out which works really well.
We each have the primary voice
on it, but then the other will
come in and check over if it's a
sensitive e-mail or
brainstorming.
And you know, we always run
things past the other, but we
ALS also have own relationships
that we own and parts of the
business that we own.
And if things get a little bit
heated and we don't understand,
we're like, cool, let's just
take a break, let's step out
couple of minutes and then we
come back and we're like, how
OK, how do we actually see this
coming to light.
There can be challenges within
that.
As I said, I, I, I loved your
podcast with Paul, the founder
of Few Spirits.
We've bottled from Few Spirits
Incredible Whiskey #5 for us.
And he said that as a founder,
his main job as he grew was to
fire himself.
He needed to fire himself from
every role that he had picked
up.
We're at the other end.
As founders, we need to hire
ourselves.
So every day is a school day
while learning new things All
today, right?
I have to do social media.
How do we do this?
What songs do we need to put on
our reels to capture attention?
That can be quite challenging.
But it also helps you realize
that when we do get investment
in and we will be going out for
investment, what are the type of
people that we're looking to
hire that could not only fit
within that ecosystem?
I'm not just talking about being
in our kitchen flinging potato
around, but you know, within the
dynamic ecosystem that we're in.
But because we've had to learn
some of those skills, what are
the skills now that we're
looking from for these people
that when we do eventually hire
that we'd like to bring in?
And to build on what you're
saying, is that because when you
said that I got it right away
what you want to say because
it's I'm doing the same but from
a kind of like software
perspective now.
So to say, you know, like I
started with, I was editing my
own podcast.
I look for the right platform, I
change.
I'm a little bit of a nerd
probably like I could write
about like software and
microphone and everything
because I digged into everything
that I wanted to buy.
But you know when you want to
offload yourself with things,
it's a totally different way of
doing it.
If you have done it because you
mentioned like choosing the the
music for the reels, what is the
volume what is the the
thumbnail, what is the thing
where the the software that we
are recording now on, you know,
I had another software, I didn't
really like it.
Now I I like this one better.
I cannot just hire a digital
agency or someone.
That will come in with their
tool because I know all of them.
So whenever I haven't, let's
call it like an interview with
anybody that I want some help
from.
I already asked them which tools
you're using.
What is this?
This is my practices.
I have all my systems, I have
all my nerdy things for saving
files, Dropbox, all these kind
of things.
So you have to match with me,
but also you have to match with
the flexibility that I've
developed in that and juggling
many balls at the same time.
Which makes it tougher to hire
someone because you just don't
hire someone blindly because you
know what to expect.
You know if they're organized or
not, you know if they are doing
certain things or not.
Which makes it very, very
challenging for a a founder LED
business to really fire him or
herself.
No, because all of a sudden you
know and and this is what we
were discussing before like
about do you sell by yourself?
No, obviously you do.
But sometimes it's a bit of a
chicken and egg because we were
discussing this before.
Sometimes it's like I am self
funded.
You know, I pay for this
podcast, you know, I don't, I
don't have sponsors, I don't
want sponsors.
So I want to keep it
independent.
So I pay for now for the editing
of the podcast and and
everything, all the softwares
and everything.
But what if I had done a
different choice in the
beginning?
What if I had half â¬1,000,000
funding because I had pitched
the podcast to someone?
Would I do the same things that
I'm doing now or would I do them
differently?
And I wouldn't change anything,
but probably I would have done
many things differently because
I would have hired people
relying on their knowledge.
Now it's my knowledge and I want
to transmit it to the people
that will be hired in my
business.
And there's no right or wrong.
Don't don't get me wrong, it's
just like between bootstrapping
and being funded and so on, but
it's just like that.
You need to be able to have a
clear understanding of what what
you are going to get in for you
know, be careful what you wish
for.
I would say, you know, because
you know, do you want to get,
you know, sometimes like I get
some not really offers, but
people like asking me like to do
businesses with.
And that's like I don't want
funded businesses because I left
corporates to be on my own and
to manage on my own and not not
to not have any boss because in
the end of your clients are your
bosses, your listeners are your
bosses, your subscribers are
your boss.
You know, you always have a boss
anyway, but it's just like on
what you want to do.
And I want to be able to adjust
the strategy.
I don't want to have a corporate
meeting with investors to decide
that I want to change certain
things in my company.
But you may want to do that
because you may be a different
person than I am.
And then you may not want to
have that freedom.
You may want to have more of
those signposts to guide you.
And that's totally fine.
There is a brilliant book.
You've probably read it.
It's called The Founders Dilemma
and it talks about why you're
setting up your company, you're
setting up for money.
It's I think you talk about
being money or power and kind of
the two don't go together.
It's a it's a brilliant book,
that book.
I mean we've kind of believed it
so many times, but I think you
know ultimately you can't wish
for the other thing.
I'm so happy we've done what
we've done with our business
that we've set it up just us and
we funded it just us because
it's meant that we've been able
to be dynamic to learn as we
grow, to grow as we learn and
actually really shake the
business out and to what it is
now compared to what it was six
months ago, right.
And we've been able to be
incredibly with that.
And we've also been able to be
on our own time scale again,
working out logistics, working
out really the practicalities,
getting a cost from a country to
our boss wing hall to our
distributor to get it to the
photographer, to then realize
there's a packaging problem to
get it back here, to get it back
there.
You know, now if you've got
investors coming on and they're
expecting things to go out as
clockwork, when you say they're
going to come out at the right
pace, well then you've got a bit
of a problem.
So I love that we've we've done
what we've done over the last,
you know that the business has
been through that over the last
six months and now that we've
been able to iron some of those
pieces out now you can go and
for us, I'm just talking us as a
business now we can go OK.
Now we figured some of that out
now we could probably OK
bringing investment in because
now we have our ducks in a row,
we thought we had them in a row
and we very much didn't.
So I'm keen to speak to many
other founders on this and what
point did you get investment in?
Did you know it was the right
time?
How do you know it's the right
time to bring investment in?
Is there ever a right time?
Do you just go with it?
But as I said, I do not regret a
single thing about how this
business is going to what it is
today because it's been really
helpful actually being on our
own, dying and figuring that out
from the get go rather than
exposing ourselves too quickly.
Yeah, I can imagine.
I can imagine this is also
something that I I mentioned to
you to you earlier like you just
need to go with 80% good.
It's better than 100% perfect
especially because no matter if
you are a perfectionist or not,
it it's a matter like that
perfection doesn't exist.
You know like and you cannot get
it because until you go and test
the market it doesn't work.
And if if it was you know if it
was a science, it would be much
easier for big brands to nail
every single launch, right?
You know, but they don't, you
know, they still do mistakes
with billions of dollars of
investments cumulative all
around the world, there are
still huge companies that do
really bad launches, big
mistakes and so on, because it's
ultimately like human
interactions.
We trade with wholesalers, with
distributors.
There are opportunities that are
saying and the important is to
be agile.
That's the first thing, you
know, like not to build that big
infrastructure that you cannot
really move anymore, but also
like to really be able to get
opportunities and and just play
with it and sensei, OK, does it
work?
I was reading something about
Spotify.
You know, you know, they don't
launch a novelty.
You know, they launch maybe in
one market only to some people
they tested, they let you test
the updates and then they roll
it out to other people, you
know, so you could test
something in five bars, see if
that works and then you roll it
out to your other thirty 5100
bars.
You know, it doesn't have to be
like we are used to thinking big
companies on we're going to
launch in 600 wholesalers on the
same day, you know, because it
it doesn't have to be that way
and especially like you cannot
even do it as a as a small brand
anyway.
You literally don't have the
time or the manpower.
You you just you just can't do
it.
You can't.
So let's wrap it up.
I don't want to steal more of
your of your time.
I want to give you some space to
tell our listeners where they
can find you the hard cuts.
You know anything you want to
mention on here?
Thank you.
Well, the hard cut, as I've
mentioned a couple of times
during this chat, is an
independent bottle there that
spotlights New World whiskey
distilleries.
And what we do is create a range
of incredible single cut bottle
things to help consumers explore
and discover new distilleries
that they might not have come
across before.
So we are very much an aid to
consumer discovery of this new
world whiskey landscape.
We have 6 casts out to date or
incredible whiskey, very, very
different depending on your
taste.
From our head of Smoked single
Malt finish and Madeira cast,
from Astounding Distillery in
Denmark all the way through to
our rye whiskey from Few Spirits
in Chicago that's been finished
for three years in a so
turncast.
Phenomenal.
We're available via our website,
theheartclub.com.
We're also available through the
Whiskey Exchange, and you can
find us from a wholesaler
perspective through Speciality
and Three Drinks One.
Fantastic.
So thanks a lot Georgie for your
time and I hope to thank you in
person at at some point.
For a whiskey.
Absolutely.
Of course.
That was a given.
Or a whiskey, of course.
All right.
Take care.
Thank you.
I will come to one of your taste
things so I can taste them all
in in the same time.
Thank you so much, Georgie.
Thanks, bye.
That's all for today.
Remember that this is a two-part
episode, 55 and 56.
If you enjoyed it, I have a
small ask.
Please rate it, comment and
share it with friends and come
back next week for more insights
about building brands from the
bottom up.
One last thing, if you enjoyed
this podcast, you will also like
the Mafair Drinks guides.
You can subscribe free or paid
on mafairdrings.com.