Treasury Wine Sharpens Focus in U.S. With Instagram Push
28 December 2015 - 6:59AM
Dow Jones News
By Robb M. Stewart
MELBOURNE, Australia--Australia's Treasury Wine Estates Ltd. is
making another big run at the U.S. market, after overly rosy
estimates about demand there a few years ago led it to famously
dump thousands of gallons of unsold inventory.
Now Treasury, the world's eighth largest wine producer by volume
according to data provider Euromonitor International, is focusing
on pricier wines in the $10 to $100-plus range per bottle, rather
than popular but cheaper wines like its $6 a bottle White
Zinfandel. It has also ditched marketing staples such as close-ups
of bottles against stately vineyard backdrops, instead spending
millions of dollars on a campaign for its Beringer brand featuring
postcard-style images launched first on Instagram.
The campaign is Treasury's latest move in the important U.S.
market, which nudged ahead of France as the leading wine consumer
in 2013. Americans accounted for 15% of the $223.27 billion in
reds, whites and roses consumed last year, according to
Euromonitor.
Some observers are skeptical.
"Beringer is fundamentally a commercial, mass-market brand,"
said Daniel Mueller, an analyst at investment-research firm
Morningstar. While investing in the label is positive, it will be a
"long slog" building up its image, he said.
Beringer, which is best known for its mass-market offerings,
suffers from a lingering hangover in the U.S. after the company in
2013 was forced to destroy thousands of gallons of wine that had
passed its drink-by date, after overestimating demand for its
lower-priced wines. That cost it about A$150 million.
Treasury also faltered in a recent foray into low-calorie wine
with the Skinny Vine brand in the U.S. During that campaign,
Treasury invited consumers in a YouTube video to take a taste test
to see if they could distinguish between the low-calorie product
and regular wine. But the wines faced tough sledding because they
were seen as compromising on an indulgence, and Skinny Vine was
discontinued this year because of disappointing sales.
Treasury in 2014 fended off two takeover approaches, including
one from private equity giant KKR & Co. The company bet instead
on a turnaround strategy proposed by a new chief executive--
Michael Clarke, hired in March 2014--who has retail experience in
everything from Indian chutneys to gravy granules.
Mr. Clarke has focused Treasury on 15 brands out of a portfolio
of about 80, and is pushing the company to seek earlier reads on
popularity of products so unwanted bottles don't pile up.
Treasury posted total revenue for the year ended June 30 of 1.96
billion Australian dollars (US$1.42 billion), up 8.1% from a year
earlier, as it swung to a profit of A$77.6 million from a
year-earlier loss of A$100.9 million. Treasury in October increased
its bet on its U.S. prospects when it bought most of Diageo PLC's
North American and British wine operations in a US$552 million
deal.
The Instagram campaign is Beringer's first major U.S. ad
campaign in five years, elevating social media alongside
traditional advertising such as magazines and billboards.
In the series, dubbed "Better Beckons," ad agency J. Walter
Thompson Co. teamed the winemaker with Murad Osmann, a Russian
photographer with 3.7 million Instagram followers, for an initial
six photographs. Mr. Osmann's photographs feature his wife, Nataly,
in front of such scenes as the New York City skyline and the Golden
Gate Bridge.
The campaign, which focuses on several of Beringer's pricier
vintages, launched in the U.S. in late October and will run through
the holiday season, and is set to roll out across Asia next
year.
"With digital, you know immediately if people are engaged," said
Simon Marton, Treasury's chief marketing officer. The first photo
garnered 200,000 "likes" on Mr. Osmann's Instagram feed in its
first two weeks, according to Mr. Marton, who described that as a
strong start.
While makers of spirits and beer have seized on social media in
recent years, Beringer's Instagram-led campaign differed from many
wine companies' emphasis on product shots, said J. Walter Thompson
Creative Director Ben James.
Write to Robb M. Stewart at robb.stewart@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
December 27, 2015 14:44 ET (19:44 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2015 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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