In Ep. 61, I continued the conversation with Nick Gillett from Ep. 60. He’s the Managing Director of Mangrove Global. We spoke about all the aspects of bringing Drinks Brands to market from start to scale, including distributors, Wholesalers, and all the links in the Drinks Ecosystem. I hope you will enjoy our chat.
Time Stamps
0:00 Intro
0:25 Portfolio Selection
8:20 Creating Your Own Category
16:42 Micro Categories & National Cuisines
23:20 Traditional & Modern Serves
25:53 Geographic Centered Marketing
30:25 Building a Neighborhood Presence
32:33 Overcomplicating Cocktails
34:10 Value of Off-Trade
37:44 Transitioning to Chains
41:21 Where To Find Nick
42:23 Outro
About The Host: Chris Maffeo
About The Guest: Nick Gillett
In Ep. 61, I continued the conversation with Nick Gillett from Ep. 60. He’s the Managing Director of Mangrove Global. We spoke about all the aspects of bringing Drinks Brands to market from start to scale, including distributors, Wholesalers, and all the links in the Drinks Ecosystem. I hope you will enjoy our chat.
Time Stamps
0:00 Intro
0:25 Portfolio Selection
8:20 Creating Your Own Category
16:42 Micro Categories & National Cuisines
23:20 Traditional & Modern Serves
25:53 Geographic Centered Marketing
30:25 Building a Neighborhood Presence
32:33 Overcomplicating Cocktails
34:10 Value of Off-Trade
37:44 Transitioning to Chains
41:21 Where To Find Nick
42:23 Outro
About The Host: Chris Maffeo
About The Guest: Nick Gillett
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Welcome to the Mafair Drinks
Podcast.
I'm your host Chris Mafail in
Eisode 61.
I continue the conversation with
Nick Gilad from Eisode 60.
I hope you will enjoy our chat.
One last thing, if you enjoy
this podcast, you will also like
the Mafair Drinks guides where
you will find all you need to
build a brand bottom U.
You can subscribe free or paid
on mafairdreingscom and I mean
like you met you mentioned a
couple of things and you know
occasion and brand.
So we'll we'll dig into that
more but let's start with the
brands.
You know like I'm I'm, I'm
interested and I think also the
listeners that especially like
the brand owner side of things
like they're interested into how
do you select the brands in your
in your portfolio.
Is there some element or is
there something you you know?
Like is it linked to?
Is it linked to this occasion?
To the?
I don't know the purpose, the
category?
How does that work?
The truth is a bit of a bit of
everything.
We get off with a multitude of
brands all the time, but I'm
sure we don't get, we don't get
off with every brand all the
time.
So we are choosing from what's
in our sphere of influence and
what we're offered.
We're in touch with the market.
So you know at the end of the
day we're a commercial
organization, we we need to make
profits and we need brands that
sell.
So we will be looking at trends.
We would like to think we're
ahead of that.
And this is where looking at
food trends, looking at talking
to Barton is looking at other
parts of the world, which we do
on a regular basis.
We'll be trying to get ahead or
at least be relevant to our to
our audience.
Sometimes wholesalers will ask
us because a, a, a particular
customer is asking for a brand
they've not been asked before or
a category and that gives you an
indication.
We will then look at the liquid
things that potentially we can
we can get and then we'll look
at what the category is, how big
it is, what market share and
then we'll talk about resources.
But we need products that can be
commercially successful over a
period of time.
We would like to have a solution
for every drinking occasion at
every cocktail.
We want stuff in most
categories.
Some categories, you can have
more than one product because
it's differentiated by style.
Whiskey is a great example.
Sometimes it's differentiated by
price because there'll be
different different occasions
and so it becomes a bit of a
melting pot of factors.
One, one of the key things for
for mangroves is we're looking
for long term brand partners,
right.
And we view it very much as a
partnership.
So I want to try and make sure
we can meet brand owner
expectations.
Some brand owners have
expectations that we think are
undeliverable or undeliverable
with the resources and we'd
rather say no early on than take
them on.
So that takes a bit of fact
finding.
And then there's a couple of
other elements which are very
difficult to quantify and you
couldn't tick box, but does it
fit what we do?
Can we do a good job for them?
Do we like the people involved?
That's quite important because
you're on a journey and those
journeys have ups and downs and
we certainly don't get
everything right all the time.
We quite often propose ideas,
lots of them have incredibly
successful dumb on.
We need to go through that
journey with a brand owner.
We don't take brands and then
not talk to the brand owner.
For us, brand owners have access
to an awful lot of data, far
more than some though.
They can see the journey of
their brand.
They can see how every penny's
spent and allocated from
marketing budgets.
We don't do stuff and not tell
people we don't take money
upfront.
So we're delivering stuff and I
use the word partnership quite
carefully.
Having said that, every now and
then there's a product that we
just go, yeah, let's do it
because well up until recently
with my business, right.
So we've got a couple of things
in there where I just really
like the guy.
I really like the products.
I found it.
It doesn't make people money.
We we work with some brands
because I think they're the
right thing to do.
We're lucky we're in a position
where we can help support some
brands because the people are
great or the A fossils, the
brand is really good.
Often that's ahead of the
market.
So, you know, we've had
sustainable spirits.
We've had fair trade spirits for
many years before they were a
thing because of the people
involved and because we've
thought they're right and
because the liquid's great,
right.
I mean that that bit doesn't
change.
We're probably one of the very
few companies to have an Eric in
our portfolio.
I'm very proud because the
family behind it are great.
The product's lovely.
It's just always going to be
super niche.
But we can carry that and and
and and we have one of those all
offers, but our portfolio
develops according to where the
market is and sometimes we've
got gaps.
You know we've had a gap in you
know a house bourbon for many
years because we haven't quite
found the right, the right fit.
One of the lessons I was taught,
you know John, John Coe was a
great business partner to have.
He taught me a lot of things
about business, but one of the
things he is I get terribly
enthusiastic.
I love what I do, so I can get
seduced quite easily by brands
and and and people and beautiful
settings and reminded me on a
frequent basis.
It's what you say no to that
defines your business.
So it's very easy to say yes to
everybody and sometimes we say
no to brand owners.
We know the brand may well be
successful, but it's probably
going to be more successful with
somebody else because of their
coverage or their segment or
what they're trying to achieve.
I've said no to products that I
part of me wishes we could have
done, but it wouldn't have been
the right, wouldn't have been
the right thing.
I I do remember that mantra on a
regular basis.
I think the other thing that as
a importer, I don't want to make
it sound like the biggest
responsibility in the world, but
we have a responsibility to some
of the new brand owners who have
put their life and soul quite
often their their, their money
and their savings into a brand.
I I don't believe we should take
it on unless, you know we're
we're pretty convinced by the
success we can deliver because
it's too important for them.
I mean for us, if it doesn't
work, we could probably go ahead
and get another brand.
But for some of these brand
owners, it might be their one
shot and if there's a better
partner out there or a different
model, then I think we have a
duty of care to to tell them.
So you know, it's a, it's a big
variety of factors, the
commonality of the liquid in the
people.
But we spend a lot of time out
in market.
We we speak to a lot of people
in the trade.
We look at a lot of trends
around the world to try and make
sure we're relevant.
We have brands that leave us
because their priorities change
or their resources change.
And I think if you looked at
cocktail trends as a as a
really, really good example back
when I did Kashasa Mojitos and
Kyperinios with the #1A flip
plot for number one and two as
of the biggest selling
cocktails, they're still
prevalent on most lists, but
once they weren't the trending.
I think we're espresso Martinis
and Pornstar Murphenis and
spritzes at the moment.
Drinking trends change and so
your emphasis on having brands
in that portfolio change and and
then every now and then you take
on brands and the phenomena that
is aparol.
OK on the world.
Us like everybody else went
great.
We'll just take on aparol and we
we've we've had products that
gone head to head and what you
find is I would argue we have a
better tasting product more
compelling argument, beautiful
story to tell.
But when you remove aparol from
the list consumers well you
haven't got Afro.
I'll just drink something else.
I'll have a beer and you're a
bit like well, OK.
So sometimes you know we we get
products in, we can see a
category growing but the work
that's being done by others is
tough to shift and you have to,
you have to flex.
With them to the last point just
before I forget like there are
some guys that I've that I
follow like on online and they
talk about you know creating
category design basically now so
like creating your own category
as a brand and they say they're
basically the category leader
takes usually the 76% of the
category and then all the others
are fighting for 24%, you know
now I don't know about the
evidence but it rings true, you
know as a rough number if you
are and by category I don't mean
you know whiskey or you know
bourbon or you know like those
kind of things.
But I mean like this kind of
like micro categories like to
the upper example, you know,
they created the demand that was
not there.
I mean it didn't exist.
I mean, like even even for me
being Italian, I mean in Rome
where I grew up, where I was
like 20 years old, the sales
guy, like, I've never seen
anything around Rome with
apparel.
Like it was always like a
Northeast Italy, like kind of
like Venice or region, you know,
then they took on Milan, then
they started spreading, then
they went outside.
And that is also like very
important to understand when we
think about successful brands
because otherwise we always
cherry picking on what we think
works.
You know, like whether is a
brand where it's a typology of
bar, like in the bar that sells
loads of cocktails.
And then all of a sudden we
think that everybody goes out
and drinks a lot with lots of
cocktails.
And I I remember those years
when I was going out, it was all
about mojito capirosca capirina,
you know, in Rome.
Like those were the three magic
cocktails.
Nobody drank gin and Sonic.
Maybe they were like, you know,
vodka, vodka, soda, vodka, lemon
or whatever.
But what what you answer to my
question may brings me back to
what Paul Letko from Few Spirits
told me in one of the earlier
episodes.
And also, I mean, whenever I was
chatting to him, they was always
saying, like, it goes back to
three elements.
You're either emotionally
relevant, strategically relevant
or financially relevant.
Does it make sense money wise?
You know, you bring more money,
more margins in.
You know, you are emotional
because you're a great guy, a
great girl and you know, like
Nick loves you because of the
passion that you're bringing.
And maybe to really bring in
more margins, it doesn't really
bring more business.
But you know, he wants to bet on
you kind of thing.
Or then strategically, it's like
what you were saying before, you
know, like I'm missing a
bourbon, you know, or I'm
missing in mezcal in the
portfolio, You know, let's go
with this one.
And and I think there's a lot of
stuff of what you were saying
about managing expectations from
a brand owner perspective, from
a trade perspective, from a
distributor perspective.
Because when I work with brands
and there's always this kind of
like, you know, everybody wants
to take over the world, but then
like do you have, do you have
what it takes?
And then you have the money.
I think a big misunderstanding
about the industry whenever I
talk to you know, younger but
also like senior leaders is that
it's considered an FMCG fast
moving, but it's actually not
fast moving.
You know, like it takes a long
time to build it and especially
a lot of people that come into
the industry not from an on
trade perspective.
You know when they come from an
off trade perspective, you know
people that have been working, I
don't know for PNG or Johnson
and Johnson or whatever you name
me like pharmaceutical companies
and so on.
They take a slight different
angle because they are used to
big numbers, big agreement, push
the button, have a meeting with
the buyer, get distribution, 200
stores.
That's not how you know drinks
brands are built.
I I couldn't agree more.
I mean, you you mentioned a
couple of things there that are
true.
Just to use your football
analogy, it always makes me
smile when they talk about a
young player bursting on the
scene.
It's as if he woke up one day
and put a pair of football boots
on and went out was an overnight
success.
Typically he's been 10 years in
the making through academies and
everything else.
A lot of brands are the same.
The work was done.
They probably remember this
first bottle they sold.
That was probably the hardest
bottle, right?
And whether it's your first
thousand cases or your first
10,000 cases, they are
definitely the hardest compared
to the next 50,000 because you
have 0 awareness.
Consumers have never heard of
you.
They probably don't even know
what the product is.
You're in a category that it's
not, not top of the list.
It's not there.
I mean if you were coffee
liqueurs 10 years ago, there
were a couple espresso martinis
weren't a thing.
Suddenly a drinks trend comes
and you find these brands that
have been around for a long time
now.
It's crowded with with new
entrants and and people extend
the category both in terms of
quality, price or devalue the
category and so it becomes wider
and bigger.
But the building blocks that go
in and I I always find it quite
interesting, there's clearly
money to be made.
You know, you see celebrity
brands.
You see brand owners who who who
get great, who sell out to the
big companies.
Some of the most successful
global companies are in drinks.
That's not by accident.
You know, the agio aren't the
biggest company because they're
lucky or because of a consumer
trend.
They're clearly doing an awful
lot of things, right.
But a lot of their brands have
been around for a very long
time.
And when people come in and one
of the things we get from brand
owners is, oh, you know, I want
to be a percentage of, you know,
Brand X.
Well, Brand X has been spending
10s of millions for decades.
If you look at some of the
Italian spirits, they've been
around for a very long time and
now they're experiencing a
renaissance because the cronies
are incredibly popular.
Everybody has one list.
So can Paris done, Done great.
And I think sometimes you got to
be there and your time will
come.
But unfortunately, money has a
big part to play and brands
typically will fall into a
number of categories.
You either start the very big
pot of money and you spend it
all gaining market share and you
hope to you to go to your next
stage of brand, either a sale or
an investment cycle or whatever
before you run out.
I mean that's that's a perfectly
legitimate business model that
some people have followed and
done very well or you are living
hand to mouth and so you can't
invest too much ahead of your
brand sales which just makes
your journey much longer.
And it means that every listing
you get and every penny you
spend has to work very hard for
you.
That's where we help a lot of
brands.
There's always someone with more
money and bigger reach and and
various things.
I think one of the biggest
changes and one of the biggest
challenges for brand owners is
even when you have all the
constituent parts to go
together, you might find a buyer
could be a grocery buyer, could
be a wholesaler buyer just says
no, just doesn't get it, just
doesn't share your love and
passion and doesn't give you the
opportunity.
So if you're new new brands
especially in grocery at the
moment quite challenging sector
in the UK, the and the buyers
are tasked for getting return on
their shelves make perfect
sense.
It's exactly what they should be
tasked with.
And some are relatively new for
drinks and some don't understand
the taxation system and just the
sheer capital employed for
brands to to get to that stage.
And they say, oh, you know, we
back small brands, we'll give
you a chance, we'll give you 6
months.
Well, in spirit purchases, you
know, most consumers and they'll
take it home, they'll have a
couple of drinks a week.
It takes a while for that bottle
to go down.
So you wouldn't know if you have
a repeat purchase or not.
And so the expectation on brands
to return FMCG sales and
multiples all is unrealistic in
a lot of lot of areas at the
moment.
And I think when you find drink
specialists who love and nurture
brands, it's very different to
work with.
And you you get some
opportunities to do it because
to win over consumers in today's
crowded market is tough, is very
difficult and takes a lot of
time and explanation, but all
trends start.
Somewhere going back to the
previous point about this micro
categories that I'm starting to
talk more about, it's also about
having a bit of a bet now
because you also need to create
that demand.
You know, to do your previous
example about the espresso and
coffee liquors and you know
espresso martini, it's always
like a bit of bit of a chicken
and egg.
Now like it was it for the
espresso martini or was it for
the the coffee liquor people
pushing it and to the right
people so that they created the
coffee, you know, the espresso
martini, there's always an
element about, you know, all
these new categories and and you
made a a very interesting point
at the beginning that I didn't
follow up on that.
It's about history.
I'm a big history lover know
everybody knows about it now.
But for me, it's always about
this kind of like traditional
occasions, you know, So I mean
here I, I live in Czech
Republic, you know, beer is the
top of the game, you know, and
I've been lucky to work it for
the, you know, one of the top
breweries here in the country,
like my my wife, when we go to,
like, talking about Pearson
Roqua now, for example, like
when we go to a small town in a
village that we don't know
anything about, you know, like
instead of checking Google Maps,
my wife just points at a sign of
Pilsen, Ruquel on a square with,
you know, there's there's four
different signs of beer outside
pubs.
She just picks that one because
she says automatically that's
going to be the best restaurant
to eat because they spend on the
most expensive beer.
So automatically probably
they're going to have like
better meats, better chicken,
better veggies or whatever, you
know.
And this is like not only my
wife, you know, it's just like I
I've, I've tested that across
all people that I know.
But long term brand building as
you said, I mean like they've
been around 480 years with this
beer brand.
You know, it has linked to a
certain perception, you know,
another example like I used to
sell Peroni in the UK, you know,
whenever we were selling and I
I, I built it in most of Europe,
a part of the UK, because there
was another team there and I was
always sold in these arguments
from the UK.
You know, and it was like I'll
look at what the UK team is
doing and I for me what the
answer was always like, first of
all let's look at the investment
that are totally different ball
game from my country.
And then the other thing is
that, you know, Nasrad, Zura,
Petroni like has been in the UK
since the 60s.
So to your previous point, you
know people have been eating
pizza and drank that beer for 40
years, generation, your father,
your uncle, you know everybody
go into an Italian restaurant.
So check that, you know, like
how how developed is the Italian
trade into that country.
If if you take an Italian brand,
it's totally different to talk
UK, Germany, France or talking
Poland, Czech Republic or
Finland.
You know, because you may have
10 Italian restaurant versus you
know 7000 Italian restaurants in
a in a country, you know.
So there there, there are always
like different kind of things
that you need to take into
consideration when you start a
small trend.
But you have a very fertile
ground there where there like
there's a lot of like demand and
and knowledge about a certain
category.
I think beer.
Beer is quite an interesting
category, partly because of the
scale and and who owns it.
But if you looked at something
like Madri Madri is that Spanish
beer that's been created and
Molson Coors make it in the UK,
right?
But it went everywhere really
quickly and so people were like,
oh, I think I've had this on
holiday.
I've made this because it just
resonated with the occasion.
Triumph of marketing an absolute
triumph of marketing and it it
proves what can be done if you
have the resources and and and
you you can control the market
to put out a million terraces or
you know, however they've done
it.
But you talk about different
countries and the UK
traditionally probably had you
know a beer culture and I I
would say around the world not
necessarily as as a rule the
best drinking culture.
That's not what was there.
You know when I started out
everyone went to look at New
York for cocktail trends and and
things and very quickly I I
think the UK became a hotspot
for creativity and some some
some amazing drinks trends.
But everyone's different you
know now the moment kind of
spritzes long refreshing drinks
more fashionable in the UK than
than perhaps the drink servers
in the states are still quite
small strong brown drinks
obviously weeping
generalizations but we see a
huge interest in column inches
in in in like world whiskey and
people learning.
I think that's a result of COVID
part of anything else and so
people are experimenting into
different categories and and I
find it quite rewarding and the
world best single malt comes out
of the English distillery which
is great and so thing quality is
springing up from from all over.
We are fortunate enough to
represent Molinari right, an
Italian staple, Italy's number
one Sambuca.
Molinari would love nothing more
than everyone, the Sipper
Sambuca alongside their coffee
as an Italian cafe culture.
But we have a history of shots
and people setting it on fire
right?
So we're trying to explain to
people that it's totally
different and this is how we we
want to explain.
And so for us in this particular
instance we've taken a quality
argument role in the volume
argument and but it it's a long
build, right, to change a
culture and a perception around
occasions and drinking occasions
and it's not quite the same.
But you know the number of
people that go away on holiday
and they they'll drink a product
or a wine on that occasion on a
beach and it's the best product
ever.
And I kind of bring it home and
it tastes terrible, you know,
because drinking it on a rainy
day and London is, is not the
same.
And I think for brands the part
where I I kind of understand the
global markets, you're tapping
into an emotional need.
Right.
Nobody needs to drink amazing
cocktails to survive.
You know, it's a luxury and it's
a choice.
No one needs to spend loads of
money on premium brands.
You can, you can tick the box
for their health but people want
quality and and some aspiration
on a bit of TLC but it's very
difficult to to tell consumers
how to how to drink it.
I I don't know how true the
story is, but an anecdote from a
leading marketing agency who
were doing a lot of work on
Jägermeister and Jägermeister
was the shot.
It was in frozen shots.
It was a bartender's choice and
it was a phenomena.
It was driven by the States and
everything they were doing.
But some of the original
employees and founders, A
Jägermeister, were a bit like
that's not how it's supposed to
be drunk, it's supposed to be.
There's a DJCI think it hit
about a million cases at that
point and and some type of
drinking occasions may not be
traditional.
Things change.
Absolutely.
And nowadays I mean it is
consumed that like that with an
ice cold shots and so you can
change it like from a you know
from a bottom perspective that
is really like this is what the
trade.
I remember that when I when I
was living in Sweden there was
this brand called Galliano and I
had never seen it in easily.
And then I I checked in as I the
name sounds Italian and I say
can you pass me the box again
and check it out.
And and then I realized it was
an Italian brand and I've never
seen it in, you know, growing up
in Italy and it was like a
biggest thing in in Sweden for
some years because, you know, it
just took on as a trend of
somebody really created a a
serve or a poor.
I can't remember how it was
consumed back then, but like if
it was a shot or anything, but
it was totally different things.
So it's very interesting like
how you can blend the tradition
and the and the modern take of
consumption as well.
Now because there's always this
element of especially on the
drinks that are more on the
earlier side of the evening and
they're fighting on, you know if
you take a gin and tonic or you
know they're fighting with beer
or Prosecco or whatever and then
there are some other that are
more on the later side of the
evening and they want to get
closer to the to the beginning
of the evening.
Now like all these digestive
things, they may want to be
consumed as a highball, as a,
you know, as a long drink while
you know like the other brands
they want people to stick to.
It's like the gin and Sonic
trying to steal on wine and say
like, you know, if you had two
gin and Sonic before dinner, why
don't you carry on during dinner
to still drink another gin and
Sonia rather than having a glass
of red wine.
I always feel that you still
need to take advantage and
capitalize on the traditional
occasion first and then you move
on.
You know, like what I was always
saying like to my colleagues
when I was sending Petroni, for
example, is like, you know,
let's secure this Italian trade
and then we move on to stylish
bars and and fancy clubs.
You know, let's not forget about
the Italian tree because that
will give you this kind of like
bronze sort of volume that will
help pay the bills while you're
building this aspirational brand
in a fancy Cipriani's or
Cicconi's or whatever.
But let's also secure the the
traditional white and Red Square
tablecloth kind of places
because there is something there
now and and what what, what what
is your take like we mentioned
earlier about the geographical
areas, not like the some brands
want to take on a specific
geographical area and on what,
what do you think about that in
terms of brand building?
Does it work to, from your
angle, to really take on a
specific neighborhood of the
city and make it big there
instead of approaching the city
at really bigger, bigger level?
I mean we've just just finished
our largest recruitment drive
ever or you know coming towards
the end of that and we've
recruited people all over the
UK.
We we've done that for a couple
of reasons.
I think if you're trying to test
proof of concept, then sometimes
working in the neighbourhood and
coming out works quite well.
If if you've got a product that
resonates particularly with
somebody or some group of
people, then maybe you start to
establish a heartland.
I think the mistake that a lot
of brands make, no, no, no city,
no person has a exclusivity on
creativity and knowledge and
everything else.
And a lot of a lot of brands,
especially when they come, they
focus on London, right?
Lots of brands focused on
London.
It's got high profile and
everything else.
But I just returned from
travelling around some other
cities around the UK and you can
find great places of people,
independents who want to be
different, who want to try
stuff, who, who want to support
new brands.
You know, Liverpool, Manchester
leagues, obvious places, right?
They're they're big city.
But you know, Glasgow,
Edinburgh, you know the these
cities all have some of the
world's best bars, right?
I mean, they, they may or may
not be winning the awards, but
they've got some incredibly
passionate, talented people.
But so does Bournemouth,
Southampton, Bristol, So the
small villages, we've got one
restaurant and and and one bar.
So it's I think for brands,
yeah, if you've got a finite
amount of resources you might
focus on one place.
But I I also think you need to
have a look at where your
perceived target audience is.
These days we're working from
home quite often as a commuter
belt, you know, rather than just
traditional city centres and you
also have to look at what your
competitors are doing.
For me, I I I'm not sure I can
ever have enough sales people
because I just think there's
great examples everywhere of
hospitality at IT at its best.
National chains are great, they
offer a consistent product, up
and down training and and so on
and so forth.
Rarely are they trend setting.
So beside where you want to play
and whether you need market
share or whether you you want to
create your own trend, I think
the rewards for being a trend
and establishing a drinking
occasion Douglas Ankara who you
know, unfortunately he's no
longer with us, you know.
Bless him.
I think he would have had a
chuckle about what the porn star
martini's become.
I think he would have looked at
that he he's he he tried for for
years and it's become a
phenomena in a number of places.
But when you look at big brands,
you know, we mentioned apple
roll earlier, that's become a
recognized drinking occasion.
Guinness is another.
You know, people are looking at
the way it's consumed and
everything else.
The rewards are big if you're
successful in those.
Countries, absolutely.
And so that's what brands are
obviously trying to take.
And there's still amongst
consumers the willingness.
You've still got those people
who want to be different and
want to find something for
themselves.
That is another great point, I
mean like about not going only
to the bigger city now, but ones
that you decide, let's say
assuming you decide to go for, I
don't know, Manchester because
it's just say OK, London is too
crowded and everybody as I is
asking for money and everybody's
focusing there.
Do you think there is a way of
actually kind of like owning a
neighborhood rather than just
like stopping at the trend
setting cities as such and and
and do you think there is an
element of you know on and off
trade kind of chance of building
a certain presence or or is it a
little bit more scatter like to
your previous point about it the
commuter belts, you know like
there's no there's no such thing
so you just need to make the
availability wider because there
will be people coming from North
London, South London.
I think your first strategy of
trying to own neighbourhoods is
very difficult to do from being
pushed in by a brand.
You got to bear in mind that
your brand is often a guest in
the outlet, right?
You know that if certainly if
it's an independent outlet,
they've probably put their
license soul into, you know,
hospitality, it's not an easy
industry.
They've designed their bar,
their outlet in their fashion
and so saying you must stop my
brand because we're everywhere
in this neighbourhood.
It's not necessarily an easy
thing to do and I'm not
necessarily sure it's the right
thing.
Having said that, brands become
a phenomena amongst
neighbourhoods because people
discover them and and to build
brands you need consumers to
have many touch points.
If, for example, every time you
order a gin and tonic in a
neighbourhood and it's your gin,
whether that's like or because
they like the guy or whatever,
that becomes a thing and then
people start to ask for it or a
particular cocktail that's
served.
I think what you find in places
like Manchester and Liverpool.
Arguably the bartender community
is tighter.
It's closer and they share good
practice.
There's probably more
independence in a smaller,
smaller area.
And sometimes they just champion
things because they like them,
It works for them.
I also think sometimes brands, I
can complicate it.
We get brands with a perfect
serve that bars need 25
ingredients in which to do this
perfect serve with all the
garnishes and everything else.
We represent Bounty Rama out of
Saint Lucia, right?
It's known as the spirit of
Saint Lucia.
It's everywhere in Saint Lucia.
Every Saint Lucia's grown up
with it.
It's bright colours, it's loud
music, it's calm.
And when we were talking to them
about perfect serves and doing
our research and everything
else, they're rum and coke,
right?
They're rum and coke with
friends and having a great night
out, that is their perfect
serve.
You suddenly go richly.
Makes a lot of sense.
Obviously in in in Saint Lucia
they're they're very proud that
it's shrinking the rum that
comes from down the road.
But I I think that element of
fun where brands can help
facilitate those great memories
and those occasions can form
that emotional things and not
every time is that a freeze
drive, avocado garnish, right?
I totally agree with you on that
one.
It's one of my battles to really
get brand owners to be more
pragmatic into like I I remember
an interview with with some
bartender in Paris.
I think they were, they were
talking about a brand that was
doing something with the vanilla
stick.
And he was like, you know how
much it is, You know, like you
know how expensive every drink
would be if if we did.
Yeah.
You know I'd say it's you know
sometimes it's cool on a
PowerPoint slide then it's a
little bit like going back to
the getting paid and the
payments and and and so on and
at the beginning you were you
were talking about like I love
that thing like the outlets
where there's a story to be
told.
This is very much in line with
something I'm I'm pushing out on
this new nomenclature of you
know I call it the bottom up
trade rather than on and off
trade.
Now the top down trade and the
bottom of trade because it's not
only about on and off.
It's like you know you've got
some on trade outlets in which
you cannot tell the story and
there are some off trade outlets
in which you can tell the story.
You know if you take all these
wine shops and the the bottle
shops and there are many in the
UK as well.
How important, also like the off
trade independent is in brand
building to support on trade?
Incredibly important.
Oh, I I can't, I can't emphasize
that enough for a couple of
reasons.
Typically they need a point of
difference to differentiate
between them and their groceries
because they can't compete on
price.
So they're competing on service
levels, availability and so on
so forth.
Typically, certainly an
independent op trade, they will
have a consumer who's gone in to
buy, right.
They're there because they want
to buy a bottle of something.
If I am a brand owner, that's
the person I want.
I want that undecided thing.
You know, why don't you try
this, this and that and and
everything else and the the
power of a sales person who can
bring a brand to life.
You, you, you can see.
So when we train people and we
say, look, we've got an amazing
whiskey here from Denmark, it's
made by 7 mad friends.
They're doing four more things.
They're doing stuff differently.
It's sounding it was originally
made in the family kitchen
within an abattoir.
People are like, wow, didn't
know that and and they're
engaged and they come in to do
it.
Compare that to here's a bottle
of whiskey.
I know nothing about it And so
those people have the time and
the contact to a winning
consumer and I and I liken
people who work in in those
stores and bartenders are saying
they they've got someone there
who wants to purchase and so
they can help influence that
choice and that where the
stories come in and the the
difficulty is for for us these
places are few and far between
other than Majestic who I think
do do a do a great job.
There's no real national chains
of off premise alcohol stores.
So you're having to train
individuals with with stores
that are that are quite often
far apart who don't necessarily
meet up and that's just labour
intensive and legwork and you
talk about brands being built
from the bottom up.
One of the people, one of the
reasons we're recruiting a lot
of people is we've got a lot of
stories to tell and we need to
tell them in person.
So we need more people to do it.
It it's it's not more
complicated than that.
I I I think anybody who can
engage with customers and and if
I'm a customer as well, I need
to understand why I'm being
directed away from something I
thought I wanted or why I'm
being upsold and often for a
small investment in terms of
spirits or wine.
Because taxation is such a big
part of every bottle.
For a relatively small increase
in in money, you can take a
shoes jump in quality and you
need to understand why you're
doing that.
You've earned.
You've worked very hard all week
to earn your money to go and buy
30-40 fifty pound bottle of
spirits.
It's a considered purchase.
You want to understand a little
bit about why it's getting a
recommendation, so that's why we
spend a lot of time telling
stories.
That's great to hear.
And and what, what do you think
like you mentioned chains now
like if you were to recommend as
a rule of thumb when to move
from independent kind of outlets
to moving on to bigger chains,
whether they are on or off
trade, when is the right time
for doing that?
And and I always say be careful
what you wish for not to brand
owners.
Is there a signal that you can
smell and and say actually it's
probably a good time to do that?
Or does it happen earlier on the
journey?
Like what?
What would you say is the rule
of thumb?
The rule of thumb is actually
there's no rule of thumb.
I mean we we have brands that
should be in grocery because
they're everywhere in the on the
trade but don't necessarily
resonate with buyers or don't
necessarily want to invest the
money.
You have to invest a
prerequisite of money to be in
unfortunately and we've got
brands that we just launched
that have gone straight into
grocery because they just hit
the spot with the buyer or a
trend or you got lucky on a day
or whatever.
I I think the advice is no
matter when the opportunity
because it's not in your
control.
We can present every day of the
week strong commercial strong
brand.
Sometimes buyers just don't see
it, don't don't view it's
important and you're up against
the the truly big boys and and
they are bamboozling with data
and amazing images and and and
all the resources that can be to
bear and a substantial
checkbook.
So the most important thing is
once you're in is you need to
rotate and if you're not going
to rotate you're going to be out
in six months or you know maybe
12 months and then getting back
in is really, really difficult.
So I think that the point where
you go in you you want to have a
fairly good idea that you got a
chance of staying in and that
will be an open conversation
with the buyer that will be your
commercial support, your plan
that's there.
But it's very difficult.
People used to use price
promotions to encourage shoppers
in to try and then you hope you
know old fashioned brand
building.
You hope that a proportion of
them prefer it to their previous
choice and stay with you.
But now you just see massive
category discounts in
supermarkets as they battle
against each other.
That doesn't help build a brand,
doesn't give you a chance to
stand out and talk to consumers.
So you engage in media and you
engage in advertising and it's a
big consider purchase for a
brand, right.
It's very, very difficult and
and and we say to some of our
brands, look honestly you'd be
better in the independence,
you'd be better working with
those specialists.
You'd be better working with
some of the online guys where
you can communicate, tell a
story and not spend a huge
amount of money.
And I think when you get
approached by three or four
supermarkets at the same time,
that's when you know you've
probably cracked it and you're
going to stay in.
I think it's what a lot of brand
owners think they want as
quickly as possible.
But in truth the rotation
numbers are relatively small and
you can invest in bar chains
that will do the same number of
bottles if not more for you than
a major supermarket listing.
So it's not a straightforward
answer.
It is very difficult to turn
around when they bang on the I
acknowledge that.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's a precious advice.
I think people will really soon
the last few a few minutes of
your answer like to they will
find some gold Nuggets there on
when to do it or at least like
you know really assessing if
they really want to do it or or
not.
So thanks.
Thanks a lot for your time,
Nick, because I'm conscious of
your time and I just want to
leave a little bit of space for
you to say, you know, how can
people find you and, you know,
redirect them to you if they
want to reach out to you and so
forth.
And thanks for your time I.
Was very kindly enjoyed it,
enjoyed it immensely.
Maybe it'll help one person out
there or it gives someone a bark
of enthusiasm.
I'd like to say the drinks
industry is full of great people
and is is incredible.
A wonderful place to work and
and and be very fortunate to
visit a lot of things and I
think if you're a brand owner
out there whether it's a million
other far more qualified people
than me, there's a lot of people
out there willing to help and
provide advice.
It's worth reaching out if
people want to get hold of us.
I'm nick@mangroveuk.com.
I can be found on LinkedIn and I
and I'm and I'm more than happy.
It may take me a little while,
but I'm more than happy to try
and provide some advice and
steering, and thanks very much
for having me.
Fantastic.
Thank you, Nick.
It was a pleasure.
That's all for today.
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