I just want to hear some tips/advice/stories on how someone makes the jump from brewing in the kitchen to making something that can actually sell. I'm not talking about quitting my job, buying a brewery and knocking out 100,000 gallons in the next year. I mean how do I make the step before that: how do I start making a name for my beer? How do I market a product that doesn't have 100,000 gal/yr behind it? How do I actually sell it? Do I have to get a liquor license?
For example, I'm thinking the best way to get my name out there is to try to market my beer to the local restaurants in my area, so they can sell it as a local craft brew or even as a brew made especially for that restaurant. I figure going directly to restaurants would help me get a feel for how much volume I need to generate (since my brand would likely sell slowly considering all the other popular brands on the menu), and with that I can create a baseline for how much more volulme I would need to produce for each new restaurant selling my beer. Is that a good place to start? Would selling directly to restaurants require me to deliver my beer in a pressurized canister for use with a tap? If so, then how exactly do I go about developing a price model for the canister. Beer by the six-pack or case is derived from the cost of a bottle, but how do I figure out cost of a canister?
Then, in time, I could go directly to liquor stores, but that product would most likely be sold in six-packs, so now actual marketing comes into play, because the six-pack has to have the logo and branding and all that. So I'd have time to come up with the money and resources to start the branding side of the business, because I'd start with the restaurants which may not even require bottle labels. But even just to sell bottles on the side, what's the price model for that? I calculated one of my recipes to cost almost $1 per bottle. Sam Adams sells for that, so how could I compete pricewise with that? Or do I even need to worry about that? But even if I could sell my beer for $1 per bottle, I'd be making at most $0.10/bottle. That's not a good profit margin...
This all comes from just me brainstorming, because I don't have any experience in the beer industry other than making a lot of my own beer for a good number of years. Am I way off? Anyone got any better ideas? Or better experience?
For example, I'm thinking the best way to get my name out there is to try to market my beer to the local restaurants in my area, so they can sell it as a local craft brew or even as a brew made especially for that restaurant. I figure going directly to restaurants would help me get a feel for how much volume I need to generate (since my brand would likely sell slowly considering all the other popular brands on the menu), and with that I can create a baseline for how much more volulme I would need to produce for each new restaurant selling my beer. Is that a good place to start? Would selling directly to restaurants require me to deliver my beer in a pressurized canister for use with a tap? If so, then how exactly do I go about developing a price model for the canister. Beer by the six-pack or case is derived from the cost of a bottle, but how do I figure out cost of a canister?
Then, in time, I could go directly to liquor stores, but that product would most likely be sold in six-packs, so now actual marketing comes into play, because the six-pack has to have the logo and branding and all that. So I'd have time to come up with the money and resources to start the branding side of the business, because I'd start with the restaurants which may not even require bottle labels. But even just to sell bottles on the side, what's the price model for that? I calculated one of my recipes to cost almost $1 per bottle. Sam Adams sells for that, so how could I compete pricewise with that? Or do I even need to worry about that? But even if I could sell my beer for $1 per bottle, I'd be making at most $0.10/bottle. That's not a good profit margin...
This all comes from just me brainstorming, because I don't have any experience in the beer industry other than making a lot of my own beer for a good number of years. Am I way off? Anyone got any better ideas? Or better experience?
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