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DTC Marketing
• Currently Chief Operating Officer of Chatterbox Wine
Marketing Services and VinoVisit.com
• Instructor, SSU Wine Business Institute
• Previously 7 years as President of eWinery Solutions
• Previously 2 years as COO of New Vine Logistics
• Previously 4 years as CEO of Morrell Wine Group
• 15 years as a specialty retailer
• MBA Cornell University Johnson School of
Management
• Lover of all things food & wine
• Passionate about direct to consumer wine marketing
Who am I and Why am I here?
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DTC Marketing
Where are We Going Today?
• Past, present, future overview of direct to consumer channel
• Analyze the DTC channel ecosystem
• Learn about Omni-Channel marketing
• Explore the D-E-A-L model of customer progression to
Connect/Collect/Convert customers and prospects
• Discuss email, mobile and other marketing strategies and execution
• Break out customer retention, loyalty and engagement strategies
• Dive in to customer relationship management (CRM)
• Look into the future of retail marketing
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DTC Marketing
THE TRUTH IS, ITS HARD. VERY HARD.
It is hard to capture the essence of your brand online. This is everyone’s
challenge.
Visitors are exposed to a number of stimuli that help frame their experience at
your winery. They breathe fresh warm air that blows across the valley floor as
they enjoy expansive views, marvel at architectural details, and soak in the
overall ambiance of your tasting room during their visit. All of these things help
engage and interest them.
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DTC Marketing
It’s Not Only Me…….
“Marketing is no longer about the stuff
you make, but the stories you tell.”
Seth Godin
Best Selling Author, Entrepreneur and Marketer
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DTC Marketing
And Even More………
“ The notion of connecting a luxury
wine brand with its wider digital and
cultural ecosystem is now a matter
of survival.”
Ron Scharman
Wine Consumer Advocate
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DTC Marketing
GROWTH STATS
The consumer direct channel of the wine
industry is the fastest growing and most
profitable channel.
Do you have all the tools necessary to be
successful and ride the wave?
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DTC Marketing
GROWTH STATS
• 2013 U.S. wine shipments grew 3% to 375.2 million cases with an estimated retail
value of $36.3BB. This represents 21 consecutive years of volume growth. This
trend continued in 2014.
• The U.S. has been the largest wine consuming nation in the world since 2010.
• Direct to Consumer (DTC) shipments by US wineries grew at an impressive 15.5% in
2014, hitting a record $1.82 BB. Total volume was 3.95 million cases, up 13.6% over
the prior year.
• Direct-to-consumer shipments in February 2015 grew 4% over the same time last
year and were up 14% over the past 12 months. The total value of February
shipments hit $132 million.
• *Data from Wine Institute, Wines&Vines, & ShipCompliant
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DTC Marketing
EFFECTS OF 2005 SUPREME COURT RULING
Supreme Court decision on May 16, 2005 changed forever
the wine landscape for the direct-to-consumer wine
market.
The Court’s majority opinion stated, "If a state chooses to allow direct
shipments of wine, it must do so on evenhanded terms."
The Court ruling: Regulate, But Do Not Discriminate
The States response: Regulate, Don’t Discriminate, But Do Complicate
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DTC Marketing
OPPORTUNITY OF THE DIRECT TO CONSUMER MARKET
Domestic / Intl
Wine Producer
Wholesalers Retailers / On Premise
Consumers
Direct to consumer 10% of sales ($3.4BB)
Wholesaler distribution 90.0%
of sales ($36BB)
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DTC Marketing
WINE INSTITUTE LATEST UPDATE
• 43 States out of 50 have
some provision for winery
direct shipping to
consumers.
• Importers and internet
retailers are restricted to
fewer states, depending on
method of shipment and
licenses held.
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DTC Marketing
The evolution from early 2000’s to present day, personal computing has changed 10 fold.
What’s changed? Bigger, More Complex Sites
2003 2015
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DTC Marketing
THE WEB HAS BEEN GROWING FASTER THAN STORES….
27%
25% 24%
20%
3% 2%
16% 15% 16% 17%
15%
6% 5% 5%
3%
0%
-3%
2%
4% 4% 4% 4%
-5%
0%
5%
10%
15%
20%
25%
30%
2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
Annual growth rate 2004-2014* eCommerce versus retail spending
Growth in e-commerce Growth in non-e-commerce retail
*Source: U.S. Commerce Dept., Internet Retailer
Note: All other retail sales excludes auto dealers, gasoline stations and fuel dealers, and restaurants and bars.
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DTC Marketing
MORE PC’S GATHER DUST
*Source: U.S. Commerce Dept., Internet Retailer
44%
11%
45%
Percentage of time on retail web sites
Smartphone
Tablet
PC
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DTC Marketing
MOBILE COMMERCE SOARS
Source: *IBM; **Adobe
• Mobile devices accounted for 32% of online retail
sales (52% of traffic) over 4-day 2014 Thanksgiving
weekend*:
• Tablets 18%,
• Smartphones 14%.
• Mobile commerce sales grew 16% on Cyber
Monday over the same day last year.*
• 19.0% of online sales came from mobile devices,
about the same as in 2013.**
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DTC Marketing
MY PHONE IS MY LIFE
NOT MOBILE-ONLY, BUT MOBILE-FIRST
• More than half of consumers’ digital time is spent on
mobile devices (60% according to comScore in June of
2014) – that’s over 3.2 hours per day.
• According to Altimeter, consumers check their
smartphones upwards of 150 times per day.
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DTC Marketing
THINGS TO WATCH: MILLENNIALS
The crowd is here
Comfort level with mobile
transactions
Ease of purchasing
Millennials
Growing FAST!
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DTC Marketing
OMNI-CHANNEL RETAIL
Today’s shoppers expect a single
shopping cart that follows them on
their customer journey
THAT MEANS through multiple
touchpoints – instore, online or on
the move – so that customers
have a seamless experience.
Omni-
Channel
Retail
Direct to
Consumer
Retailers
Direct
Sales
Marketing
Wine
Club
Events
eCommerce
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DTC Marketing
DTC Best Practice: 360 Degree Customer View
eCommerce
Wine Club
Allocations
Tasting Room
Recipe Engine
Social Media
(Social Commerce)
Mobile
Telesales (inbound &
outbound)
SMS (Text)
Email Marketing
Visitor
Reservations
Newsletter
Mobile POS
Search Engine
Optimization (SEO)
Fax
Winery
DTC
Ecosystem
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DTC Marketing
Let’s Clear Something Up First…….
“Just as you cannot not communicate, you cannot not market
- Every time you answer the phone, it’s marketing.
- Every time you send an email, it’s marketing.
- Every word on your website is marketing.
- If you build software, your error messages are marketing.
- If you’re in the restaurant business, the after-dinner mint is
marketing.”
Rework by
37signals
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DTC Marketing
WINERY COMMERCE ECOSYSTEM
Mobile Commerce
Wine Apps
SMS Text
Commerce Anywhere
Pop Up
Virtual Commerce
Social Commerce
Facebook/Pinterest/Twitter
Crowdsource
POS
Mobile POS
Kiosk
Tasting Room
Wine Club
Allocation/Mailing List
Email
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DTC Marketing
WHAT IS ONLINE DTC TODAY?
Growing Number
of Wine
Commerce
Business Models
Winery Retailer – 8,000+ wineries in North America
Internet Retailer – www.wine.com, www.elanvineyards.com(17/20)
Discount Internet Retailer – www.wineaccess.com
Crowdsourced Production – www.nakedwines.com
Marketplace – www.amazon.com
Community Member Site – www.winecommune.com
Flash Sale/Daily Deal Site – www.winestillsoldout.com
Affiliate Marketing Site – www.bottlenotes.com
Wine Auction Site – www.winebid.com
Cause Marketing Wine Site - www.onehopewine.com
Mileage Redemption – www-lh-worldshop-gourmet.com
Loyalty Programs - www.foleyfoodandwinesociety.com/About-Us/Membership-Benefits
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DTC Marketing
eCommerce Basics
The digital footprint is increasingly important for
small-to-medium-size wineries that are shut out of
the three-tier distribution channel.
It starts with a great website…………
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DTC Marketing
Top 5 Reasons
• Magic: Wine is approximately 85% water, and 15% magic.
• Stories worth reading: There may be stories worth telling in the winery DNA, but they are
rarely found on winery websites.
• Differentiators : Why do so many winery websites look alike? Most winery websites look
like cookie cutters of most other winery websites on a gallery wall.
• What’s in it for me: As a consumer, there is no compelling reason I should care about the
brand, the user experience, or why I should stay browsing on the site. It’s all about “them”.
• Mobility: Recent national all industry data shows that only 45% of website traffic now
occurs on a desktop computer. Yet most winery sites give a poor mobile user experience.
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DTC Marketing
This Time It’s Me
“The bottom line is that making great wine has nothing to
do with creating a great visual palate and making me care
about the brand online. It needs to be relevant to my life,
not just the vintner’s.”
Ron Scharman
Wine Consumer Advocate
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DTC Marketing
USING YOUR WEBSITE TO TELL YOUR STORY
Strong branding is key
Include rich content
Use the tools built into your
website to improve your SEO
Gather data and market smart
Go Mobile!
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DTC Marketing
Before We Go Further, a Brand Is………
“A brand is a set of expectations, memories, stories, and
relationships that, taken together, account for a consumer’s
decision to choose one product or service over another…….
If the consumer (whether it’s a business, buyer, service, or
donor) doesn’t pay a premium, make a selection or spread
the word, then no brand value exists for that consumer.”
Define: Brand, by Seth Godin
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DTC Marketing
Building Blocks for Websites
Factors to Consider
• Software platform
• Compliance Solution
• Design/Project
Management
• Features
• Why websites fail to perform
Software/Compliance
• CMS/Cart Options
• Cost
• Training/Ease of use
• Integrations -ShipCompliant,
CRM, Marketing options
• Designer considerations, data
• User experience, SEO
Why Winery Websites Fail
• Design by committee, boring
• Hard to navigate, hard to buy
• Not engaging brand story or user
experience
• Bad Q/C, stuff doesn’t work
• Browser incompatibility
• Content/Data not updated
Features
• Ease of shopping – “1 Click”
• Ease of navigation
• Compliance made easy
• Rich, relevant content –SEO
• Multiple data capture opportunities
• Promotional marketing tools
Design
• Designer/template
• Site Map/Navigation
• Wire frames/sketches
• Functionality testing
• Brand relevance
• User Experience
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DTC Marketing
MODEL OF CUSTOMER PROGRESSION
DISCOVERY
• Search engine
• Word of mouth
• Advertisement
• Social Media
ENGAGEMENT
• Visits website
• Visits tasting
room
• Social Media
• Mobile
ACQUISITION
• Purchases wine
online
• Buys wine in
tasting room
• Joins wine club
LOYALTY/LOVE
• Email
communication
• Facebook shares
• Special events
• Ratings
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DTC Marketing
The Science of Discovery
DISCOVERY
• Events/Restaurant/Retail
•Search engine
•Word of mouth
•Advertisement
• Social Media
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DTC Marketing
How do you attract visitors and grow your
customer base?
Inbound Marketing is a system that allows
interested buyers to actually FIND YOU via a
combination of:
Content Marketing
Search Engine Optimization
Social Media
Lead Generation & Nurturing
Discovery: Getting Found
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DTC Marketing
Discovery: Content Marketing
1. Create useful, usable content that adds value
to the customer experience with your brand.
2. Perform outreach, and determine the best
outlets to publish (high-profile guest blogging,
social networks, your own website).
3. Identify influencers who will share your
content and further discussion.
4. Pay attention to the responses, and engage
your audience.
5. Analyze the results, measure the impact (new
links to your website, new visitors, increased
social media activity, more sales).
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DTC Marketing
Wine, food, travel forums
Existing customers
Referrals from local
businesses
Social media channels
Friends and family
Special events
Wine publications and
blogs?
Search Engine Optimization
Search Engine Marketing
Ratings and Reviews
Getting Found
Building Advocates
Discovery: Socializing Brick & Mortar
Source: www.tripadvisor.com, Ram’s Gate Winery
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DTC Marketing
Wine, food, travel forums
Existing customers
Referrals from local
businesses
Social media channels
Friends and family
Special events
Wine publications and
blogs?
Search Engine Optimization
Search Engine Marketing
Ratings and Reviews
Getting Found
Building Advocates
Discovery: Socializing Bricks & Mortar
Source: www.tripadvisor.com, Ram’s Gate Winery
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DTC Marketing
People To People
• People are already writing reviews
• Opportunities to connect directly with
customers
• Helps search engines find you and
increases ranking
• 90% of local searches = purchase or visit
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DTC Marketing
Heavy Traffic
• TripAdvisor has more than 60 million
members, and more than 200 million
reviews
• More than 315 million travelers visit
TripAdvisor each month
• TripAdvisor offers a wide range of
marketing opportunities, advertising and
content solutions
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DTC Marketing
CANVAS App
CANVAS and VinoVisit join two
great winery resources. The
Concierge Alliance offers the
hospitality industry a clear and
easy way to book their customers
at wineries in Napa and Sonoma.
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DTC Marketing
Mobile Discovery
• Winery Client Comment:
“Something interesting from
all of our analytics is that 30-
40% of all of our traffic comes
from iPhones. Hence the
importance of mobile sites.”
~Ed @Regusci Winery
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DTC Marketing
Consumers are on-the-go and want quick
and easy access to basic information.
99% of the time, they want to do one of
five things:
Call Winery
Find Tasting Room
Locate Wine
Buy Wine
Join Wine Club
Go Mobile!
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DTC Marketing
SUMMARY: TRUST, TRUST, BUY
FB ad friend
hotel referral
I discover you
1
I trust you
2
I buy when in
need
3
FB post
tweet
email
FB post
winery visit
Social helps each step
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DTC Marketing
Wine, food, travel forums
Existing customers
Referrals from local
businesses
Social media channels
Friends and family
Special events
Wine publications and
blogs?
Search Engine Optimization
Search Engine Marketing
Ratings and Reviews
Getting Found
Building Advocates
Discovery: Socializing Brick & Mortar
Source: www.tripadvisor.com, Ram’s Gate Winery
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DTC Marketing
•The User's Search or Query - This is the thing a searcher
types in. In the example above, someone is looking for
information or products relating to Apple computers.
•Organic SERP Listings - These are the "natural" listings. To
produce these results, Google uses a series of metrics to ensure
that your site is relevant. To have your site show here, you have
to effectively "score well" on that algorithmic test.
•Paid SERP Listings - These are advertisements, or "sponsored
links." You can have your ad displayed here by launching a pay-
per-click search campaign, and by ensuring that yourmaximum
CPC bids and Quality Score allow you to secure a high enough
ad position for the keyword you're targeting.
SERP Basics – 3 Key Components
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DTC Marketing
Why Do SERPs Matter to Me?
Because ranking your site in the proper SERP position will be the difference
between success and failure in your search marketing campaigns. Consider
the following insights provided by recent Google published stats:
• 68% of searchers select a result on the first page of search results.
• There is a disproportionate number of clicks (approximately 40%) on the
number one listing.
• Reaching the first page in paid search is equally important.
• In other words, most people click on the first page, and most of those people
click on earlier results. The higher your search engine results page ranking,
the more traffic you'll get.
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DTC Marketing
How to Improve Your SERP Positions
• Research Key words
• Organize (group) the keywords
• Manage your SEO workflow
• Manage your PPC workflow
• Act on the analytics
• Observe the results
• Repeat!
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DTC Marketing
Your Website is a Marketing Tool
More traffic to your website leads to more purchases, visits to your tasting room, and brand recognition. But most wineries
struggle to get visitors who search for anything but their brand name.
Think about what's relevant to your winery - the varietals you make, the region you're located in, or the story behind your
labels. Create a list of keywords that you can associate that go beyond your brand name. Branded search traffic accounts for
about 95% of most winery websites traffic, which means they aren't getting much exposure from new, unfamiliar faces.
Instead, try to focus on building your site to be a hub of information for not just your wines and your history, but the
surrounding area, the vineyards, the AVAs, places to stay, things to see, and anything else that's relevant. Your website should
be a flytrap for tourists looking to plan their vacation, or visit that special winery with a picnic area, great view, or wedding
venue.
3 Traffic Sources you must cultivate:
Organic search engines.
Referral sites, especially from local
regional sites.
Local maps search results.
Varietals
• Cabernet, Rose, Muscat
Regional
• Carneros, Willamette, Rutherford
Others
• Wine tasting/tours
• Weddings
• Boutique
Build a relevant list of keywords
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DTC Marketing
Finding Keyword Variations
Use tools like Google Adwords Keyword Tool and Ubersuggest to find lots of keyword variations, along with their search volume.
Why it's important: Wineries can capitalize on regional terms and attract a broader range of new visitors to their site. Within any given region,
especially tourist areas, you have ample opportunity to find topics to include on your website and possibly attract a new customer as a result.
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DTC Marketing
Assessing the Competition
Don't expect to put “Merlot" in your meta tag, and simply hit page one. Many factors come into play in ranking, but a few stand out. Most
importantly is the number of links coming into your site. Each link counts as a vote, and quality links can boost your keyword rankings. You also
need to focus on creating engaging content on a regular basis.
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DTC Marketing
Focus on Local SEO T0 Attract More Visitors
When you do a search for "your region" + "winery" does your website appear in the maps area? This is the "Places" results, and these search
results differ from regular organic search results in that they appear for people located very close to your business. They want to find you, but are
you listed high enough?
In order to rank well in the local search results, you need a two things.
A verified Google+ Local page for your business. www.Google.com/places. Multiple NAP (name, address, phone) listings on site like
citysearch.com, yp.com, hotfrog.com and others. For a more complete list of sources to get business citations, visit Getlisted.
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DTC Marketing
Thinking Beyond Your Website
Content marketing is a huge buzzword right now, and it requires you to both create original content
of your own, and interject yourself into conversations relevant to your business.
Where do people learn about you?
Travel forums:
http://www.tripadvisor.com/Tourism-g580460-Napa_Valley_California-Vacations.html
Blogs:
http://justwandering.me/2013/03/09/napa-valley-wine-tasting/
Wine discussion groups
Wineberserkers travel forum
There are tons of places where you can tap into new audiences. The wine lifestyle transcends
cultures and gives you lots of opportunity to cross-market into other groups that go beyond straight
up wine lovers.
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DTC Marketing
Discovery: The Customer Funnel
Unaware
• Purpose: Create awareness, brand discovery
• Blog posts, web page, customer stories, advertising, industry trends
Interested
• Purpose: Provide usefulness, education, create interest
• Regional travel guides, events, independent articles, demonstrated values, email newsletters
Desire
• Purpose: Incentivize, stir emotion, demonstrate values
• Demonstrate charity contributions, connect with lifestyles, build community of social sharing
Purchase
• Purpose: Secure customer, provide good experience, build loyalty
• Reviews & ratings, customer service, upsells and promos, personalized content, streamlined
checkout
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DTC Marketing
Discovery To Do List – Top 5 Things
1. Expand company profiles on both local and national travel and tourism sites
like Fodors, Wine Travel Guides, Virtual Tourist, and Lonely Planet.
2. Encourage visitors and fans to leave reviews at Trip Advisor, Zagat,
Google+, Facebook.
3. Create useful and usable website content that includes resources, things to
do, local knowledge, and popular destinations near your winery.
4. Claim your Google+ Local page.
5. Contribute guest blog posts on travel blogs and websites to increase
exposure from new audiences.
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DTC Marketing
MODEL OF CUSTOMER PROGRESSION
DISCOVERY
• Search engine
• Word of mouth
• Advertisement
• Social Media
ENGAGEMENT
• Visits website
• Visits tasting
room
• Social Media
• Mobile
ACQUISITION
• Purchases wine
online
• Buys wine in
tasting room
• Joins wine club
LOYALTY/LOVE
• Email
communication
• Facebook shares
• Special events
• Ratings
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DTC Marketing
The Art of Engagement
ENGAGEMENT
• Visits website
•Visits tasting room
•Calls winery
•Social Media
•Mobile
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DTC Marketing
Every tasting room visitor is a
potential customer
Collect email addresses
Personally invite to Tasting Room Events and
Winemaker Dinners
Welcome “Check ins” via FourSquare, Facebook
Promote reviews of your business (Yelp, TripAdvisor)
and wines (Cellartracker)
Communicate Club benefits and incentives
Convey your winery’s story
Don’t be afraid to ask for the sale
Engagement: Build Relationships
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DTC Marketing
• Tasting rooms captivate the
hearts and palates of the
consumer
• Tablets extend the engagement
instantaneously.
• Email automation monetizes
your engagement through
highly targeted offers.
Tasting Room Abandonment
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DTC Marketing
• Use your metrics to evaluate and improve the
hospitality at the winery.
• Receive an automatic email when a low rating
is received.
• VinoVisit provides the winery with daily reports
of all the data points, including reviews.
Using an iPad,
this tasting room
data collection
app is easy to
use, fun for the
visitors and
invaluable for
monetizing tasting
room traffic.
Winery
Ratings
Tablet
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DTC Marketing
Collect data
• Build your customer database by
collecting Name, Email, and Zip code
data.
• A generous incentive increases the
likelihood of getting multiple entries from
everyone in the group.
• VinoVisit provides the winery with a daily
report of all data points and customer
reviews.
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DTC Marketing
• Collect valuable feedback on
the customer’s tasting room
experience
• Build your customer
database
• Monetize winery visitations
with automatic email offers.
Convert Customers
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DTC Marketing
• An ecommerce microsite is
customized for your special offer
• No internal resources required
• No cost to develop the website
• Microsite is dedicated to “a very
exclusive wine or wines”
The Iron is Hot
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DTC Marketing
• Website uses your compliance configuration
• Website uses winery payment gateway
• The tasting room customer journey began
when they walked through the your doors.
• We help you begin their engagement by
connecting with them within 48 hours of
opting in to your mailing list.
The Conversion Begins
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DTC Marketing
• “Decomplexifying” customer marketing
data is crucial to building and
annuitizing a successful DTC business
• We measure success through Google
Analytics
• We provide insights into how best to
allocate marketing resources ($’s and
people) going forward.
By the Numbers
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DTC Marketing
• We learn from what’s worked and what’s not.
• We improve each successive campaign from
actionable insights.
• We continually test what we know against what we
think we know.
Actionable Insights
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DTC Marketing
MODEL OF CUSTOMER PROGRESSION
DISCOVERY
• Search engine
• Word of mouth
• Advertisement
• Social Media
ENGAGEMENT
• Visits website
• Visits tasting
room
• Social Media
• Mobile
ACQUISITION
• Purchases wine
online
• Buys wine in
tasting room
• Joins wine club
LOYALTY/LOVE
• Email
communication
• Facebook shares
• Special events
• Ratings
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DTC Marketing
The Results Speak for Themselves
ACQUISITION
• Signs up for Newsletter/Blog
• Purchases wine online
• Buys wine in tasting room
• Joins wine club
• Signs up for wine event
• Purchases from catalog or
telephone driven by email
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DTC Marketing
Customer Acquisition
• Acquisition
– Where do you get traffic from?
• Behavior
– What are visitors doing on your website?
– How engaged are they?
– What content is most interesting to them?
• Outcome
– What is the result of their visit? (purchase, signup)
– What is the per visit value of a traffic source?
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DTC Marketing
Converting visitors
• Newsletter signup form
– Critical best practices – Let’s discuss
• Email Campaigns
– Critical best practices – Let’s discuss
• Events
– Use your imagination; can drive ecommerce conversion
• Direct Mail, Catalog
– Can still be effective; can drive ecommerce conversion
• Telemarketing
– Outsourcing for best practices
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DTC Marketing
Newsletter Best Practices – Make It Easy!
1 - 5
1. Your registration form should request the user’s email and as little
else as possible.
2. Present the opportunity to sign up on every page on your site,
and in the same spot.
3. Try to show an actual sign-up form on each page instead of just a
link.
4. A one-time pop-up requesting visitors to sign up is okay.
5. Include a link to your Privacy Policy as close to the form as
possible.
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DTC Marketing
Newsletter Best Practices – Make It Easy!
6 - 10
6. Include an example of what your customers are signing up for.
7. Present a clear confirmation after your customer signs up.
8. Wait until AFTER the initial sign-up to ask more detailed questions.
9. Send an email confirming the user’s registration.
10. Consider a discount code for a future purchase in the
Confirmation Email.
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DTC Marketing
Newsletter Signup – Or Make It Hard
If you want someone to sign up for your newsletter,
make it easy.
Do not:
1. Hide your newsletter link
2. Ask for huge amounts of information
3. Demand more information after the user submitted what was asked for.
4. Force customers to enter all their information all over again if they
make a mistake in one particular field
5. Forget about thanking them for subscribing
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DTC Marketing
Email Still Rules
EMAIL MARKETING ROI
According to Exact Target and HubSpot:
• Companies view email marketing as a better return on
investment than PPC, content marketing, social media, offline
direct marketing, affiliate marketing, online display advertising,
and mobile marketing.
• Email Marketing has an ROI of 4,300% (Based on marginal cost)
• 66% of in-house marketers rate email as having “excellent” or
“good” ROI
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Volume versus conversion
Wine
Club
Red
White
Cart Abandonment
• Low volume
• High conversion
Browse & Process Abandonment
• High volume
• Lower conversion
{
{
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Email Marketing
1 - 5
"Think of how you can make the user love your mails rather than
how to land in the Inbox."
• Know your audience
• Find Out What Subscribers Want and Honor and Deliver on That
• Mitigate Deliverability Risks by Delivering Value Not Just Email
• Have a clear value proposition for subscribers and customers
• Don’t just batch and blast – segment your list and use preference
based marketing data
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Email Marketing
6 - 10
"Think of how you can make the user love your mails rather than how to land
in the Inbox."
• Test different types of content and promos to see what generates the best
engagement rates, and look beyond opens and clicks to measure success –
spam complaints, unsubscribes, etc.
• Think responsibly, and responsively – make sure your emails are mobile
optimized
• Test your promos carefully before blasting away
• Use designated landing pages or guide customers to product pages that are
relevant
• Use an email marketing platform that guarantees high deliverability rates
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• Largest Web-based email service in the world
• Has become the standard bearer for ad supported,
consumer email services.
• Currently has more than 600 Million users worldwide.*
• Adding more than 1 Million new users per week.*
• 66% of Gmail users open their email on a mobile device. **
• One Billion people have downloaded the Gmail Android App
as of 2014.***
* Quora 2015
**Mashable 2014
***Digital Trends 2014
Gmail Achieves World Domination
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• Clean your data
• Send out test emails first to an email address at major ISP’s
• Use “Content Dialysis” software to check your content for
spam inducing results. Ex. Content Detective
• Stop using the word “Free”, all caps, colored fonts, etc.
• Try sending text format emails vs. HTML.
• Go light on imagery, links, and heavy content.
• Drip your emails, and break down your large lists
• Provide a clear unsubscribe list
So What Do I Do Now?
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What is Cart Abandonment?
“Shopping cart abandonment — when shoppers
put items in their online shopping carts, but then
leave before completing the purchase — is the
bane of the online retail industry, and that
includes the wine industry.”
BusinessInsider.com
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Here’s Why
• Approximately $4 Trillion worth of merchandise will be abandoned
in online shopping carts this year..
• This equates to approximately 68% of all shopping cart
transactions
• 63% of these are potentially recoverable, according to BI
Intelligence.
• Shopping cart abandonment will continue to increase as more
consumers shift to online and mobile shopping.
BusinessInsider.com
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And Really Why
• An abandoned cart does not automatically translate to a “lost sale”.
• Three-fourths of shoppers who abandon shopping carts say they plan
to return to the retailer’s website or store to make a purchase.
• Initial emails, sent 3 hours after a consumer abandons a cart,
average a 40% open rate, and 20% click through, according to
Listrak.
• You can expect up to a 20% recovery rate on abandoned carts with a
well executed retargeting program
BusinessInsider.com
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Shopping Cart Recovery Tips
• Strike fast – 50% of carts are typically recovered in the first few hours after
abandonment.
• Produce a series – typically 3 emails over a 7 day period.
• Stage your incentives for returning – increase the discount or other
incentives through the series of emails.
• Segment and test different creative, subject lines, offers, calls to action, and
messaging to see what works best.
• Appreciate the value of an email address – no recovery possible without it.
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A Click to Call email is a mobile
optimized email announcement
for a winery telesales
campaign. The object is to
allow the consumer to simply
call or email their interest to
purchase.
What is Click to Call?
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• Consumers receive hundreds
of emails a day, mostly read
on a mobile device.
• Click to Call emails are
optimized for all mobile
devices.
Optimized for Mobile
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• Each email is personalized to
address the winery customer.
• Focused Call to Action - “Call Us” or
click to email us is emphasized for
greater conversion rates, upsell, and
best user experience.
Personalized
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• Mobile optimized with clear call to action “Call Us”.
• One Touch – User clicks phone number and it instantly
dials.
• Lean: Limited text and imagery.
• Content “above the fold”.
• No landing page or driver to the cart.
• Sales captured through inbound phone calls.
The “Click-to-Call” Difference
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• “Click to Call” kicks off the winery
telesales campaign.
• The email offer ‘whets’ the
consumer psyche before they
receive an outbound call.
• Great deliverability, opens, clicks
and conversions.
• Winery messaging and branding is
consistent from the email to
telesales campaign.
Why It’s so Important?
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• Omni-channel - Customer has two ways to
order wine.
• Quick and flexible engagement to a specific
offering.
• Soft sell that finds lost revenue in your
customer database.
• Highly targeted for outbound telesales to
customers who have clicked on/opened your
email campaign or announcement.
• Allows for profitable upsell beyond initial offer
Quick Engagement
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The Ultimate Toolkit
• Unparalleled deliverability, opens,
clicks and conversions.
• A-B testing of subject lines, content,
and offer is part of all campaigns
• ExactTarget is the best in class; the
most dominant player in the email
service provider category.
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• Collaboration with winery marketing team to maintain consistent
branding.
• Subject lines are personalized.
• Pre-headers with important messaging about your incentive.
• Click to Call emails are rigorously A-B tested to ensure deliverability.
• Each email is tested through *Litmus for optimal viewing and user
experience across all browsers and devices.
• Winery approves everything – from creative to subject line.
• Post send, lists are appended to acquire updated email and phone
numbers for winery customer base.
(*Litmus email testing and marketing analytics)
How Does Deployment Work
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• The Click to Call is the
beginning of the campaign.
• It’s the first initiative in a
relationship-based telesales
campaign.
• Analytics provide insights for
follow up marketing efforts.
When Does Deployment Occur
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Additional Omni-Channel Components
• Add direct mail with the same offer at the beginning of
telesales and email campaign.
• Add buy button with link to landing page and campaign
shopping cart.
• Tie in social media marketing for campaign on Facebook
and Twitter – link to call or email.
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• More contacts, engagements and
sales, plus upsell.
• Phenomenal metrics. Outperforms
winery’s existing email software.
• Great customer insights.
How To Define Success
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We Help Wineries Succeed
• “Click to Call” broadens winery outreach and contact rate
beyond telesales giving a large return on a telesales
campaign.
• Appending your data will clean up bad email and telephone
contacts and return valid emails and phone numbers.
• ExactTarget email technology is proven to get email in to the
inbox with higher deliverability than any other email engine.
• Drive More Wine Sales!
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It’s Not Only Me…….
“Don’t just focus on your product. Think about who your
customers are, what they care about, and where they
hang out. Embracing and engaging with your customers
means understanding them, their needs and desires.
Give your customers more than just your product – give
them something important and useful to show that you
understand them and their needs. The goal is to become
part of your customers’ everyday lives, not just a company
at the other end of a financial transaction.”
Jacek Blout, Blogger
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MODEL OF CUSTOMER PROGRESSION
DISCOVERY
• Search engine
• Word of mouth
• Advertisement
• Social Media
ENGAGEMENT
• Visits website
• Visits tasting
room
• Social Media
• Mobile
ACQUISITION
• Purchases wine
online
• Buys wine in
tasting room
• Joins wine club
LOYALTY/LOVE
• Email
communication
• Facebook shares
• Special events
• Ratings
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Tell Me You Love Me
LOYALTY/LOVE
• Email communication
• Join Wine Club
• Newsletter/Blog
• Facebook shares
• Special events
• Ratings
• Imagination
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WHY IS UNDERSTANDING THE JOURNEY VITAL?
A return customer is….
10-15x
more likely to buy in the future after the 1st purchase
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Retention: The Heart of the Matter
AT THE CORE OF DIGITAL RETENTION:
USERS CAN LEAVE YOUR BRAND FOR
SOMEONE ELSE.
ALWAYS REMIND CUSTOMERS WHY THEY
FELL IN LOVE WITH YOU
IN THE FIRST PLACE
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Retention vs. Loyalty
Loyalty is About Growth
Loyalty and loyalty marketing programs work to
transform a customer’s positive interactions with a
winery into positive outcomes for the customer on an
ongoing basis.
They recognize the right behaviors and result in a
higher value customer for the winery and higher
value experience for the customer.
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Retention vs. Loyalty
Retention is About Decline
Retention is about the preservation, rather than growth
of a customer. Retention campaigns are focused on a
positive indication that this customer is on their way out
the door.
It’s no longer about growth or what could be, it’s about
knowing what is about to happen to your customer and
doing something about it.
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Retention vs. Loyalty
You Should Do Both
Retention and Loyalty are two different types of
marketing campaigns. Companies should have
both campaigns working in tandem as part of the
on-going customer conversations.
Without these campaigns, businesses miss critical
communication points that could result in bigger
returns and long lasting relationships.
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The DNA of Customer Loyalty
• Loyalty programs are employed to drive customers to shop with a
retailer.
• Many schemes are purely “transactional” where the customer enjoys
the experience but would switch to another brand at the drop of a
hat if the alternative offered a slightly better deal.
• Many wineries and online wine retailers are striving to get their
customers to have an “emotional bond” with them, because high
retention rates translate into significant business profits.
• Achieving this requires a whole new approach to loyalty.
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The DNA of Customer Loyalty
The three results that reflect the general components of customer
“emotional” loyalty programs are:
• Retention – keeping customers
• Advocacy – getting new customers through recommendation
• Life Time Value – increasing spend and frequency from existing
customers
Emotional loyalty demands consistency across channels, relevant and timely
promotions, customer intimacy and a real excite and delight element built on
top of a standard “I’ve got great wine to sell at a good price” story.
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Reinventing the Delivery Experience
“The luxury experience we are so very carefully
cultivating stops at delivery. We don’t need to
accept that. I think we can extend that luxury
experience and fill the gap.”
Jason Eckenroth
Founder/CEO ShipCompliant
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Delivery Experience Tools
• Use concierge services.
• Doorman.co
• Customized winery email on shipment status.
• Text customers when “Elvis has left the building”.
• Email alternate options.
• Ship to “hold at FEDEX”.
• Multiple winery fulfillment warehousing locations
• Maniacally focus on first-time delivery.
• Not allowing FEDEX and UPS to dilute customer luxury brand
experience.
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Delivery Experience Tools
• New from ShipCompliant.
• Correlation between deliverability on the first attempt and reorder rates.
• ShipCompliant found that customers were 27 percent more likely to order from a
winery again if the wine was delivered successfully on the first attempt.
• Winery customer service staffers report that half of the calls they receive revolve
around shipments and package tracking.
• Adult signature requirements, high freight costs, temperature concerns, compliance
regulations, and multiple carriers are just some of the challenges wineries face in
delivering seamless and personalized customer experience.
• Wineries can send customized, personalized emails to customers to directly deal
with tracking concerns, rather than forcing the customer to deal with shipping
carriers.
• Save your customers the aggravation of missing their delivery and improve your
bottom line through targeted customer education and a range of delivery options.
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Whether a customer buys wine in your tasting room, or on
your website, their information flows to one central
location.
Tangible benefits:
Full purchase history in one system
Segmenting customers for marketing
Customer can access their profile online
Access customer information from anywhere
One central customer record shared across
multiple systems
Tasting
room
Wine club
Website
Customer
Relationship
Loyalty: One Customer, One Database
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CRM – Customer Relationship Management
Simply put, CRM is putting customers at the heart of a business.
Today it is more important than ever to build better relationships
with customers as, in this day and age of social media, they now
talk to ???? people at a time. They have a megaphone, making it
easier for positive and negative messages to spread fast and wide.
With the support of technology, the goal of CRM is to have a 360-
degree view of the customer which will enable you to improve the
quality and satisfaction of each customer interaction and maximize
the profitability of customer relationships... a win/win for both the
business and customers.
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CRM Requirements for Success
1. Strategy. Your customer strategy identifies the customers the organization intends
to serve and articulates the desired customer experience to be delivered.
2. Process. Business processes are comprised of the practices associated with major
customer facing business functions in the organization. For example, marketing,
eCommerce, direct sales, partner sales, customer service, and field service.
3. Technology. Your technology environment plays an important role in enabling the
CRM business processes and is comprised of customer analytics, customer data
management, and technology infrastructure.
4. People. How people are organized and led has a large role in determining success
with CRM. You must pay attention to the organization’s corporate culture, leadership
practices, collaboration methods, training programs, and performance measurement
approaches.
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Know Thy Customer
1. How do you define your target audience (age-group, gender, education,
income, likings, ethnicity, lifestyle etc) and where majority of them live?
2. Who are your best customer types in terms of revenue generation and why?
3. What kind of relationship you want to build with your target audience?
4. What are the desires and expectations of your target audience?
5. What is the level of product use? Are your customers loyal to you?
6. What are the most common objections raised by your customers?
7. Who are the actual decision makers (who has the final say)?
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360 Degree View of Your Customer
Information about your members collected at each touch point outside your
website should be attached to the member profile record, creating a complete
view of your customer.
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Preference Based Marketing
• Your member data should not be limited to
just online sales and wine club members.
• As the direct to consumer sales channel
grows customers are finding more and more
touch points to interact with wineries or wine
brands.
• Information about your members that is
collected at these touch points outside your
website is easily fed into the member profile
creating a complete detailed profile of each of
your customers preferences.
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Filter and Segment Data
• CRM tools filter and segment data.
• The first step to understanding how
to market and sell to your customers
and prospects is to first build custom
fields to segment by preferences,
buying habits and behaviors.
• Filtering tools are used to create
custom marketing lists so that the
right message is delivered to the
right customer at the right time.
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Dynamic List Building
• The benefit of building a robust database
is being able to comb through and
segment that data so that you can market
to your customers in the most personal
way possible.
• Website tools help you filter your
customers into groupings based on
things they share in common.
• Lists are then created which with a
'profile' for a particular type of member,
which can be based on things like their
buying preferences in the past.
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Manage Member Data
• The integrity of your member data is
the key to successful CRM.
• Member maintenance tools allow
you to consolidate duplicate member
records, keeping your data clean and
accurate.
• Match your potentially duplicated
member records, then merge the
suggested matches, consolidating
address, payment and order history.
• Clean data is useful data. Find
duplicate data and merge records.
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Email List Segmentation
• Content is Primary
• Segmentation comes next
– Varietal preferences
(Special offer on Reds)
– Locals (Come to our next
event)
– Order history (We’ve
missed you)
– Club join date (One year
anniversary together)
– Credit card set to expire
(Update your profile)
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Business Intelligence
Listen, Learn, Act
• Tap into real-time critical business
data to increase your ROI on sales
and marketing initiatives.
• Business intelligence reporting
delivers key point-of-sale,
ecommerce, club member,
inventory, CRM, and telesales
information on-demand, with
responsive mobile ready reporting
capabilities.
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Google Analytics
• Google Analytics is a powerful tool
for evaluating the effectiveness of
your website in getting and keeping
user traffic.
• Implementing Google Analytics
tracking codes on your website helps
you gauge the amount of traffic to
your site and how consumers
behave while visiting your website.
• This information from your website
appears in your Google Analytics
dashboard where you can view this
data and use it to optimize your site.
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Connect the Dots Between Web Analytics
By connecting the dots between web
analytics and social media metrics, you
can understand – at a much deeper level
– the types of content that generate the
most awareness, value, and online
revenue for your company.
Learn how your prospects and customers
discover and engage with your social content,
and what content and media types drive
conversions and sales.
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Big Data in Action
The rise of the Datarati. “Big data” is one of the
most over-used and over-hyped words in
2015. While much of it is hype, what is not are
companies’ continued focus on data analysis.
Companies continue to invest in measuring social
media, understanding customer value and modeling
customer behavior. If you do not use your data to
talk to your customers, others will.
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Constellation Customer Segmentation Study
“The Genome Project”
Constellation Brands has released results of a comprehensive study
identifying six segments of wine drinkers based on their purchase
behavior, motivations and preferences. The study follows up on a
similar study conducted ten years ago.
Please read the article on the study in Wine Business Daily:
http://www.winebusiness.com/news/?go=getArticle&dataid=134683
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Constellation Segmentation Study
Outlines Motivations, Behaviors of Today's Wine Consumers
Consumer Segment - Consumer Profiles
Price Driven (21% of consumers)
• I believe you can buy good wine without
spending a lot
• So price is a top consideration
Everyday Loyals (20% of consumers)
• Wine drinking is part of my regular routine
• When I find a brand I like, I stick with it
Overwhelmed (19% of consumers)
• I drink wine, but it does not play an important
role in my life
• I don’t enjoy shopping for wine, and find it
complex and overwhelming
Image Seekers (18% of consumers)
• How others perceive me is important
• I want to live a life that impresses others
• I want to make sure the wine I choose says the
right thing about me
Engaged Newcomers (12% of consumers)
• I'm young and new to an intimidating category
• Wine is a big part of the socializing I do
• I’m interested in learning more
Enthusiasts (10% of consumers)
• I love everything about the wine experience
• I love researching purchases, reading reviews,
shipping, discussing, drinking, sharing with
others
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Final Thoughts
Things to consider in your DTC marketing strategy:
• What makes you different or your story compelling?
• How do you deliver the message to visitors in person or digital?
• Why should they care?
• What is your plan for building and maintaining customer loyalty?
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New Retail Concepts
• Selling the long tail of wine - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pa1-sV9FgjA - The launch of Amazon Wine
• Next Generation Wine Store - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IUQLsqkgZ3M
• Wine by Vente-Privee - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SKY_3NKE9tE
• A Wine to Change the World - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jd3xxwPnKJ8 - Cause Marketing
• Naked Wines - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qC7qop1Omgg – Crowdsourcing Wine Model
• Underground Cellar - Get yo' wine on in the Underground Cellar -
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eYF9aywOX7E
• Looking Glass - Champagne & Shopping - www.lookingglasshbg.com
• Banshee Wines - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZyMEEdE39EM – Banshee Wines has gone Google
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New Retail Concepts – Wine Apps
• Wine App market is exploding – all trying to connect search to intent to buy.
• Next Glass - The Science Behind Great Beer & Wine Recommendations -
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dTuWf1A5D1I
• Wine Apps – Vivino - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0I802FfNDIY
• Wine Apps – Plonk - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0_D7bAsOJVo
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Augmented Reality
• IT'S NOT A FUTURISTIC DREAM, IT’S HERE NOW.
• https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FHrtvUZSj50 - Augmented Reality Will Change Online Shopping Forever
• https://vimeo.com/50065093 - This is Augmented Reality
• https://vimeo.com/99008123 - Coke Augmented Reality in Athens
• https://vimeo.com/122899989 - Visa Augmented Reality in Poland
• https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=09vxKN1zLNI – Metaio Augmented Reality
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Virtual Retail - Tesco
“The future of retail is happening now”
• Tesco Homeplus Virtual Subway Store in South Korea
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fGaVFRzTTP4
• Tesco's Interactive Virtual Grocery Store In Gatwick Airport's North Terminal
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qJkt8uqcWro
At the broadest level, we create content to drive brand awareness within our target market. Your videos, blog content, social media presence represent most trustworthy outlets in customer’s eyes.
The crowd is here: Facebook reportedly is nearing the 700 million-user mark. Every month, according to Facebook, its members spend 700 billion minutes on the network. The average user clicks the Like button nine times a month, and three-quarters of users have “liked” a brand.
Consumers’ comfort level has tipped: People have been buying virtual goods within Facebook since it introduced the (now defunct) Gift Shop in 2007; the practice exploded with the introduction of FarmVille virtual currency in 2009. Analysts believe virtual goods could bring in around $12.5 billion worldwide this year, almost double 2009 sales, according to Adweek. If people are paying real money for virtual goods, it’s not much of a leap to start paying for tangible items.
And, of course, e-commerce has become second nature for many consumers, who are by now quite comfortable with the idea of feeding their credit card information into e-commerce sites. Internet retailing is expected to take in $197 billion in 2011 and grow to $279 billion by 2015, according to Forrester Research. Purchasing an item with a few clicks has become a habit for many people.
Macy’s Magic Fitting Room: In September 2010,Macy’s showcased the “Magic Fitting Room” at its flagship Herald Square store in New York. The kiosk’s mirror was linked to a touch-screen tablet computer, and shoppers scrolled through selected items, chose which pieces to “try on” (these were then superimposed on the shopper’s image) and shared the results via Facebook, email and text to find out what their friends thought of the various outfits.
NOTE: Image linked to: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E1rUdTITGCg
Prospects want content that relates to their interests. Think beyond your wine, and connect with a broader lifestyle.