There is more to working with wine distributors than just telling them what you want done.
So you’ve landed a new wine & spirits distributor, entering a market you weren’t previously available in. How exciting! Wouldn’t it be so awesome to see your product on the shelves, by the glass, or on cocktail menus? Surely, now that you’re available, the orders will start rolling in any day. If you’ve been here before, you know where this story goes – the tale as old as wine, beholden to our 3-tier system here in the United States.
Months roll by with no depletions – plenty of meetings, but no sales. What gives? All the advice out there – just grow locally until you’re ready to land a wine distributor – why did it sound so promising? What are you doing wrong?
Well, there was a time when this story ended happily – approximately 30 years ago. You weren’t given bad advice; you were given outdated advice.
If you want to sell more wine or spirits today, two things are going to need to happen: 1) adjust your expectations of what your distributor can and can’t do for you in today’s market, and 2) put the following strategies to work and help your wine distributors help you.
The longer you’ve been in the wine & spirits sales game, the harder this concept is to grasp – what distributors used to be able to do for their suppliers they can no longer do. Why? Quite simply there are too many suppliers & brands and way too few distributors. As a result, that sets up a new reality that if you fail to appreciate will leave you seriously frustrated. You need to help your distributors help you!
So, YOU must adjust to the new reality and let go completely of any notions that you can somehow get your distributors to perform at a higher level. Let me be clear. The diminishing of distributors’ capabilities is not a matter of “motivation” or intention. It’s simply a function of being in a very overwhelming situation. So, stop the seriously flawed belief that somehow more training, more communication, more accountability, and more incentives will improve your distributors’ performance. Put your bleeping “trackers” in the paper shredder where they belong!
When I look at a typical wine sales job ad, I’m astounded to see evidence that this way of thinking is still very much alive. As I peruse the “essential functions of the job,” I see bullet points that are so out of touch with reality it’s sickening. How could so many people be so wrong about something so obvious? Here’s why: people are making the fatal assumption that what used to work still does.
Now, for those of you reading this who are finally ready to accept the new reality and DO something about it, consider this article to be a nickel’s worth of free advice. It’s time to start helping your wine distributors help you.
I think it’s wise to re-calibrate your expectations to the lowest common denominator and slowly, incrementally move up from there.
Think about the most basic capabilities you NEED from your distributors:
a) Purchase pallets of your products and store them in their warehouse.
This is what you can expect from your distributors today.
Then the next level is to have their sales reps actively building new distribution for you. But here’s where things start to go wrong for most suppliers. This is not going to (and should not) happen without YOU doing your part. I’ve spoken before on how to earn the respect of your distributors but unless YOUR footprints are all over the marketplace, you’ve got no right to expect the distributors to do it. In fact, a good rule of thumb is the best you can expect the distributors to do for you is MATCH YOUR EFFORTS. Once again, help them help you!
Now, if you are one of the countless supplier “partners” that feel it’s the distributors’ “job” to do these things you simply must wake up and recognize those days are long gone. It’s not a question necessarily of whether not a distributor CAN sell your products but more one of WILL they sell your products. And whether they will or won’t is completely up to YOU. You need to be the lead dog on the sled- not them.
Once you’ve come to terms with the cold hard facts that you’re going to be limited in what you can expect the distributors to do for you, you can then get busy executing a newer, more modern approach to building distribution. I suggest these three important steps:
Take responsibility for generating demand for your brands with both trade and consumers. How do you do this? There are several powerful ways, but I highly recommend a combination of Facebook Lead Ads and email marketing. We’ve used Mailchimp, and recommend it to all our clients. Use the highly targeted Facebook Lead Ads to grow your email list (one for trade and one for consumers) and use the email list to market and “sell” your wares. There is a learning curve to all of this but isn’t it wonderful to have something that is completely within your control?
Look, there are no doubt varying degrees of successful collaboration between suppliers and distributors. There are those who do an exceptional job, those that are average and those that truly suck. I suggest you figure out where YOU are on the spectrum and resolve to move up the ladder to the next rung.
I will just say this in closing. There is a magical correlation between how hard YOU work in the market and how hard your distributor works for you. So, go forth and leverage it! Help your distributors help you!