Wine Competitions Why Enter?

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As I gear up for two big competitions where I’ll be judging in the coming months, http://www.fairplex.com/wos/wine_competition/ in May and http://www.sunset.com/marketplace/sunset-international-wine-competition-details-00418000074753/ in July, I’ve been reflecting on why wineries should participate.

I’m a fan of wine competitions and if you’re a winery, or an olive oil or spirits producer you should be a fan too.   I’ve been judging wine for close to 12 years now in California, an exercise that keeps my palate sharp and my frame of reference broad.   Each year, as the spring arrives in Monterey County, I head down to King City for the first judging of the season. Some people have daffodils and croci to remind them of spring, I have the Monterey Wine Competition which kicks off a series of 4 yearly  events at which I judge.

Coffeejudging.
Coffeejudging.

Judging at a coffee competition!

Many wineries over the past few years have pulled away from entering wines in competitions, largely due to budgetary reasons and sometimes due to a lack of a consistent gatekeeper internally to share the wisdom of participating in many (not all) but many of the wine competitions out there.   Several competitions tie in with wine & spirit retailers such as the Los Angeles International Wine & Spirits Competition, which is a great service to wineries that enter.  Here’s another list of reasons why wineries should enter competitions:

- The buzz if your wine makes it to the sweepstakes is the best 3rd party endorsement you could want.   50 to 80 different professional palates sent your wine forward and concur it has the chops, that’s more significant than a single critic’s review.

- If you get a gold or a silver medal, that has a lot of weight so to speak at retail or in your marketing campaigns.   If you don’t medal, hardly anyone knows that unless they want to study 2000 + wines that were entered and didn’t advance so your risk is a low one

- You’re serving consumers; in the sea of choices consumers have, a shelf talker or medal stickers are often the only life-raft they have in an overwhelming situation, do them a favor!

- More and more competitions are getting sophisticated with their software, this year the 1st annual Sunset Magazine Wine Awards lets wineries enter online so that they can track their results immediately once the competition is over.  I predict this will be the wave of the future.

http://www.sunset.com/marketplace/sunset-international-wine-competition-details-00418000074753/

- Wine competitions are a relatively modest investment when compared to other marketing spends a winery could make, and the returns are great.

- Many of the judges are renowned journalists, and we know they get inundated with wines to sample and try, many of which never even get to be tasted as it’s a full time job critiquing wine.   Here, if your wine proceeds forward, you can certainly get their attention a different way.

One aspect of wine competitions I’d like to see change is the marketing of the power of their panels.    I still subscribe to the fact that 50 to 80 palates liking a wine is a more powerful tool to a consumer than the proclivities of one critic (all due respect).  Also, the regional names of competitions in California only mean something to the people who run and organize them and not that that’s not important, but what is more important is for the consumer to understand the purpose and focus of that competition.  I wish there could be a little more differentiation in the larger competitions and that they could brand themselves with a terminology that is more broadly accepted, perhaps that day will come.

Meals on Wheels- The Gala of the Year

Meals on Wheels- The Gala of the Year

CCA attended Meals on Wheels' 25th Annual Star Chefs & Vintners Gala the other week, which benefits homebound seniors in the San Francisco area.

As We Commemorate Earth Month

As We Commemorate Earth Month

As we commemorate Earth Month, as more and more people are calling April, we reflect on one of the fundamental reasons we love the wine business. Being focused on agriculture as a business, naturally responsible farming for both the winery staff as well as consumers plays a big role, but there is much substance to the term sustainability as it relates to wineries and vineyards.

What Happens When You Enter Foodie Territory…

What Happens When You Enter Foodie Territory…

A few weeks ago, I represented Charles Communications Associates at what has to be one of the largest conventions in the nation: the Natural Products Expo West.

Black and Orange

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Spring training has begun; meaning SOMA has turned into a constant sea of black and orange. Because our office is a block away from AT&T park, this tends to make our lives a little difficult. The constant shouts from ticket scalpers, the overwhelmingly crowded MUNI on the bus ride home, and lets not forget that constant small of garlic fries we have to smell wafting through our windows. All this, mind you, while we are hard at work. Last Monday however, CCA decided to join in on the fun. In support of our favorite baseball team we threw on our winter jackets, fingerless-orange gloves and FEAR THE BEARD T-shirts and trekked on over to the stadium on the bay. After a few beers and far too many garlic fries, the Giants beat the Oakland A’s 4 to 2. Nothing like some old fashioned team-bonding at the end of a busy work day.

Go giants!

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On the road with Charles Comm!

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Wow, it’s March already? What a start to the year. We’ve kicked off 2012 with some road tripping on the wine trails, with stops in Napa, Sonoma, Livermore, and even a quick flight to Monterey.

As CCA’s new Social Media Director, I’ve been sharing snippets from our travels on our Twitter and Facebook accounts in real time.

Check out some of the highlights below!

Sipping sustainably in Monterey: We started February with a trip to Salinas Valley to check out how our friends at Carmel Road are making certified sustainable wines. Turns out that they’re using all kinds of unique practices to stay green, including bringing falconers in to help chase away the starlings that eat grapes, planting cover crops like barley to promote biodiversity in the vineyards, and also saving water in the winery with innovative tools (like a Zamboni-style cleaner for the winery’s floors!).

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Here’s a shot of Carmel Road’s Vineyard Manager Grant Cremers, explaining some of his team’s innovative, sustainability-driven practices —like using a double-headed pruning machine, for instance, which reduces time and fuel needed to get the vines in tip-top shape for harvest. 

Napa Valley Premiere: CCA proudly took part in Napa Valley Premiere, a weekend of wine tastings, fun and festivity culminating in an auction of wine futures from several renowned Napa producers. This year, the auction raised a record $3.1 million, which will go to fund the nonprofit Napa Valley Vintners Association. The organization supports a number of activities, including educational programs for masters of wines and master sommeliers and efforts to protect Napa Valley’s natural resources.  We enjoyed seeing our clients Pine Ridge Winery, Parallel Napa Valley and Hourglass strut their stuff.

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Discovering new tasting venues in Livermore: Who says wine tasting need be a formal, stuffy affair? We sure don’t! CCA recently joined Wente Vineyards’ winemaker and fifth-generation owner Karl Wente and 1WineDude.com’s Joe Robert’s for a front-porch wine tasting at Karl’s Livermore home. We tasted through the newest Wente releases while Karl explained the inspiration and production behind each wine, including Wente’s famed Riva Ranch Chardonnay.

CCA toasted on Karl’s porch to Wente’s fabulous wines and to the 100th anniversary of Chardonnay in the U.S.—a birthday made possible because of clonal cuttings brought to America’s shores by the Wente family! Check out Joe and Karl kicking back in Livermore in the photo below.

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Stay tuned to AllTheSwirl for exciting events and news ahead!