Wine - Seeing the World Through the Bottom of a Glass (4)

Cross-posted from

What can wine tell us about the world? Plenty, it turns out.  It is one of civilization's oldest products.  At one time it was a necessity, when food was served rotten and water was where you washed and evacuated.  Now it is enjoying a resurgence.  It is an agricultural product, and a unique one.  You see, vineyards have kept records of temperature, yield, and ripeness-dates for centuries, giving us incredibly precise records that tell us reams about the global environment. It is also a luxury item, particularly at the top end.  As such, its sale and purchase can tell us volumes about the global economy.

Today we look at how modern technology is changing the way people sell, and the way people buy.

Hat tip to Fermentation, a Wine Blog for the initial story, and inspiration, for this diary.

The internet is doing more than changing the way we buy things.  Sure, it's convenient to do our holiday shopping at home, no crowds, no parking, and no sales tax (shhhh! don't tell anybody, that part's a secret).  But it is more, far more, than that.  The internet gives us access to goods we would never otherwise see.  It also gives producers, small producers, who would otherwise never get off the ground, a chance to reach consumers.  Wine is the perfect example of this trend.  It is a luxury product, fills a unique niche, and allows small producers and sellers to carefully target potential customers.  And specialty wine, a subset of wine itself, allows even more careful focus. A tiny little vineyard might not have a chance in the brick and mortar world, forced to sell its grapes to a larger consortium for lack of ability to market its own wine, to make relationships with wholesalers and shippers, and get off the ground. But with the internet, it is possible.

Israeli Wine Direct is a new niche website.  When people think "Kosher wine" they think syruppy Concord Grape wine.  Kosher wines have come miles, and many of the very good ones (truth be told, there are not yet great ones) come from Israel.  Israel itself has a growing wine-making business, but many producers are small, not yet able to maintain an international presence.  Israeli Wine Direct travels the Israeli wineries and offers the wines through its own wine club.  This would simply not be possible in the old brick and mortar days. Sure, mail order existed, but how would you even hear about it?  Now, emailing blogs, cross-posting, and a little cheap internet advertising, and you're in business.  

Winemonger does the same thing for Austrian wines.  Did you know Austria makes some great white wines?  Not many other people do, either.  Not just that, but if you did know, the chances of walking into your favorite wine store and finding one are about the same as finding a '61 Latour in good shape on the bottom shelf of the bargain bit.  Winemonger, though, gives those Austrian wineries access to American markets, and American consumers access to Austrian wines.  

Truly Fine Wines provides the same access to micro-vineyards and their products in Germany, the sorts of things you might remember from a trip, but never get your hands on over here.

It's not just foreign wines, either.  In 2006 California direct sales increased 33% (the huge jump because of the Supreme Court's Granholm decision).  From '06 to '07 it popped another 7%.  This is not so much about just wine sales, but sales from little wineries, the kind that make a few hundred or may thousand cases a year, rather than 50,000 or 100,000. These are wineries that used to be vineyards, selling their berries to other wineries, but now have the ability to market their own product.  This is great for the consumer, too. Why?  Well, these are wines made by the people who grow the grapes, make the wine, and put their name on the label.  It is often a labor of love, a family affair, with kids in the vineyards, walking the dogs (trained to sniff out pests or playing in the warehouse.  I once called one of these vineyards and had to wait a minute, because the woman who answered was giving her three-year-old a bath.  How can you not love that?

The internet is giving small business opportunity they never had before, and consumers new and better choices every day.  We have talked about this for years, and seen it once in a while.  Today, we see it really working, as we see the world through the bottom of a glass.



Display:


Tip Jar (2.00 / 3)

do we still do these here?


by dhonig on Mon Apr 07, 2008 at 10:52:10 AM EST

Re: Tip Jar (none / 0)

Good diary, nobody does Tip-Jars on MyDD


Bring Back MyDD - Just say No to Rec'ing Candidate Diaries.
by CardBoard on Mon Apr 07, 2008 at 10:57:52 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Tip Jar (none / 0)

That's why I asked. I didn't think so.  I also don't remember mojo mattering here, but read recently that it actually does, giving access to hidden comments, etc.  I was wondering if there wsa some change.  Mostly, I just comment lately instead of writing diaries. The wine-focused blog/diaries are new.  Thanks.


by dhonig on Mon Apr 07, 2008 at 11:22:00 AM EST
[ Parent ]

Re: Tip Jar (2.00 / 1)

Speaking of mojo and hidden comments and stuff, does anyone know what you have to do to get yourself a warning? I don't get TR'd all that often, but I recently made a sarcastic remark which got me about 14 HRs and TRs. I kind of expected to get an email from the admins. But I still haven't gotten a warning, and I'm wondering, if that many HRs doesn't get you a warning, what does?
Even John McCain lusts after teh engels.
by sricki on Mon Apr 07, 2008 at 11:49:53 AM EST
[ Parent ]

This diary has been a victim of (none / 0)

R-E-C-C-E-D.

This is a new bacteria disease that has been spreading like wildfire through hospitals.

Symptoms of this disease are:

a lack of negativity
decent content
not being an outright lie
not linking to RW news sources (without a proper disclaimer and only using RW sources when normal sources are unavailable)

To cure this disease, go and write a hit piece on either candidate, or go tell me to "Go Cheney yourself"

This has been an alert from the annoyed medical student coalition Chapter 9347.

dhoing very good diary.  I actually didn't know that Austria had a wine industry, I knew germnay did (I like a lot of the Rieslings from Germany), but i will have to check out some Austrian wine when I get the chance.


Student Guy=JoeMentum. No really Student Guy=JoeMentum, after all JoeMentum was an embarrassment so is Student Guy. This sig is FAIL!!
by Student Guy on Mon Apr 07, 2008 at 11:22:50 AM EST

Wonderful diary! (none / 0)

Happily rec'd!
Even John McCain lusts after teh engels.
by sricki on Mon Apr 07, 2008 at 11:44:50 AM EST

This AM I definitely feel as if last night... (none / 0)

I saw the world through the bottom of my wine glass.  

But - you know what - that's not so bad!  Better than looking directly at the world some days.

Thanks for the information.


by Shazone on Mon Apr 07, 2008 at 12:01:25 PM EST


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