Michael McNally wrote:Also at work here I think might be the downside of ratcheting up prices for a number of years (at the top end of the market).
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Let me know when Grange hits the $100 mark and I might buy a bottle.
Michael
A good example - I recall Grange at £25 a bottle in 1990 (when I first encountered it). Others recall it a couple of years earlier at £15. With inflation that might put it at, perhaps, £40-£60 a bottle. There are plenty of other examples, including the flip side of debased brands.
Australia was lucky to have
- Great value wines
- A willing champion in Oddbins
- Something new to offer the market
- A more than able UK marketing effort
- A market on the up
_ The great value is now (on average) fair value
_ Oddbins is dead in the water and no other major chain is championing great aussie wine
_ In some quarters there is a backlash (the Jacobs Creek / Yellow Tail effect)
_ Marketing isn't what it was - visible but not prominant
_ Market seems buoyant enough, but now clearly two-tiered between the supermarket / big chains and the small independants
Two options IMO
1) Address some of the issues above and/or
2) Push hard on emerging markets, especially Asia, where there is a rare geographical advantage