How Santa Rita’s consumer first strategy is driving global market growth
By Richard Siddle
The world over major wine producers are having to act and behave in very different ways to how they did things ten or even five years ago.
The global market in that time has become more demanding, complex and competitive, particularly now that China, large parts of Asia and the US have really opened their doors to imported wine. The growth in smart technology and improved logistics and distribution systems, all backed up with real time cloud computing analysis, means global wine players have had to step up their game in all aspects of their business.
Businesses like Chilean and Argentine wine producer Santa Rita Estates. To keep pace with what is happening around the world it has had to turn the way it operates on its head, says head of marketing, Jaime de la Barra.
Yes, the number one priority for a wine producer of this size is the quality and availability of its wine, but the key difference now, stresses Barra, is that it is now 100% focused on the needs of its different major export markets and their consumers. That is what is driving the decision making taking place in its vineyards.
A change in thinking that is best demonstrated by the fact that Barra, as marketing director, will have meetings with the group’s winemakers at least a couple of times a week so that they are fully up to speed to the styles of wines, the flavour profiles, the price points and the demands from buyers in the key markets where it wants to work.
Santa Rita still wants to be making quality, authentic wines that are true to the soils and regions where they are made, but it has to do so in a way that Barra says is completely in tune with the kinds of wines that consumers around the world want to drink. It might sound obvious, but it was not the way it used to operate in the past, and that market first strategy is certainly not the way a large number of major wine producers behave.
For example, it has worked hard to tone down and adapt the greener characteristics common in some Chilean wines, particularly Carmenere, in the US which is looking for more fruit forward styles.
To do so means investing time and money in all its key export markets. When VINEX caught up with Barra in London this week he was fresh from a meeting with its international consumer insights consultancy where the focus was not on looking at the next wine trends, but rather the “mega consumer trends” that are dictating the way we behave in all aspects of our lives.
“We need to be looking at the trends that will happen in the future,” he says.
Escape from uncertainty
It’s from that analysis that Barra believes the wine industry needs to be focused on understanding the following key areas: comfort; uncertainty; sensory; and indulgence.
Comfort in that consumers are looking to buy into brands, retailers and services that offer them reassurance, nostalgia, and a nod to when life was less stressful. Which, in turn feeds into the uncertainty factor, driven by issues such as Brexit and President Trump’s hostility towards world trade and immigration.
But as our daily lives have become more stressful and complicated we are also looking to break free and indulge ourselves from time to time. It’s why we have seen the Prosecco boom as it offers average consumers that moment of escapism, that ability to have an everyday treat that helps pick you up and take you away from the stresses of the day.
We have also become more demanding about where we spend our money. It’s why it is the experience, the opportunity to touch, and feel and do something new and different that is driving so many of our purchasing decisions. Wine producers like Santa Rita can’t expect consumers to want to order wine every time they go out for a drink. Wine, simply, does not satisfy what we are looking to do on every drinking occasion.
“We are losing share to craft beers and spirits. We need to stop looking at our belly buttons and just talking about our family history and how many generations of winemakers we have had. Just having a wine brand is not enough any more. It is much more about being relevant to any particular drinking occasion.”
The best a wine company can hope for is to make your wine offer as relevant as possible to consumers when they do want to open a bottle of wine. Is your wine right for that wine drinking occasion? Does it have the right flavour profile, alcohol level, sustainability and ethical credentials?
That in a nutshell is what is dictating the way Santa Rita is now running its business, says Barra. “You have a responsibility to your consumer to over what deliver what they need.”
He adds: “We are not just producers that sell, but marketers that produce what we market.”
Which is why those meetings with the winemakers are so important to ensure everyone in the business is on the same page.
“As our chief executive says. We are not producing grapes. We are producing bottles of wine and that is a big difference,” says Barra. “It’s why it is so important our winemaking and vilification teams are connected to the market.”
It’s also why it is invested in new skills and new ways of working. It has long been a challenge for wine producers to find the most effective way to tell their story that truly engages with their target audience.
Santa Rita is now prepared to go the extra step in that story telling, by actually producing its own content that it can share with potential partners, customers, retailers or restaurants in their respective markets.
If you really want your wines to sell and make a difference on shelf, then create the content, the videos, the blogs, the tweets, the GIFs that your retail partners can then use and share with their customers. Santa Rita even goes as far as creating content and videos for the key partners it is working with.
Company working as one
To do so involves the support of the whole company, says Barra, from the vineyards up. “You have to work upstream and downstream to make this work,” he says.
The time for global campaigns is over, says Barra. Yes, 80% of your core message might be the same the world over, but to really connect and be relevant to a local market you need to tone it, adapt it and make it compatible with the way people are drinking and buying wine in those markets.
“There is such a blurring now between above the line and below the line activity. If consumers like your brand and are interested in what you have to say then will go out and look for your content,” he explains.
For Santa Rita that has meant working far more on a combined, coherent messaging strategy that brings all its brands and sub-brands together. A communications message that is as relevant domestically and in South America as it is around the world, he says.
All of which places far more pressure and focus on major producers such as Santa Rita Estates to ensure its wines are being managed by the right distributors in the right sales channels. Does your distribution partner really understand the market they are in? The trigger points to push, most effective way to talk to your target audience?
“We need to be building and delivering the most relevant content for each of those channels. Consumers will not forgive you if you’re not where they expect you to be. So it’s not just brand awareness, it’s about having the most relevant message. If you don’t have that you are wasting your money.”
Santa Rita at a glance
Production:
* Santa Rita sources grapes from 7,000 hectares of vineyards, 4,000 of which it owns and 3,000 are through contracted growers.
* It is part way through a seven year $25m replanting programme that will see it replant 1,000 hectares of vines with virus free, clean vines. 2018 was the first crop to be taken from some of these new vines.
* By doing so it has discovered 17 different characteristics of Cabernet Sauvignon being grown on four different soil types.