In the US wine industry‚ Casella Wines created Yellow Tail‚ a new wine that broke away from competition and created a new market. They did not simply offer wine as an expensive drink but rather as a ‘social drink’ available to all kinds of drinkers and consumers: cocktail‚ beer and other drinkers of non-wine beverages. In just two years‚ Yellow Tail became the quickest growing brand in the histories of Australian and U.S. wine industries and is the most imported wine in the U.S. Yellow Tail surpassed
Premium Wine
made French firms dominate the wine industry in the past. In the mid-1600s‚ a Bordeaux producer applied new techniques that led to a new age of large-scale fine wine. The development of fine wine was enhanced by the introduction of glass wine bottles sealed with cork. These innovations not only helped wine last longer but also made it age better. After the First World War‚ overproduction and fraud prompted French government took steps to protect and strengthen the wine industry. By 1935‚ the AOC system
Premium Chardonnay Wine Cabernet Sauvignon
Global Wine Wars 2009: New World versus Old World Executive Summary The concept of wine-making was originally an art dominated by several European countries‚ mainly amongst the noble class‚ competing against one another for the highest quality wines. Traditionally set in their ways‚ from their methods of planting‚ to harvesting‚ to marketing channels and their consumers‚ the “Old World” wine-makers were unprepared for what was ahead of them as the “New World” growers joined in the struggle
Premium Wine
Brief: The Wine Industry The wine industry includes red wine and white wine. Vines were first planted in the Middle East before 4‚000 BC. Through vine plantation and wine production‚ wine trade emerged in Greece‚ Crete‚ Phoenicia and Egypt and spread widely in Mediterranean. Wine industry rapidly developed with the help of the Catholic churches in The Middle Ages. In seventeenth century‚ new techniques and innovations were turned up to improve the wine to satisfy the globalization and colonization
Premium Wine Europe
of fruit wine: Fruit wines are fermented alcoholic beverages made from a variety of base ingredients (other than grapes); they may also have additional flavors taken from fruits‚ flowers‚ and herbs. This definition is sometimes broadened to include any fermented alcoholic beverage except beer. For historical reasons‚ mead‚ cider‚ and Perry are also excluded from the definition of fruit wine. Fruit wines are usually referred to by their main ingredient (e.g.‚ plum wine or elderberry wine) because
Premium Wine Alcoholic beverage
current issue and full text archive of this journal is available at www.emeraldinsight.com/1751-1062.htm IJWBR 19‚2 A qualitative study of Chinese wine consumption and purchasing Implications for Australian wines The University of Western Australia‚ Perth‚ Australia Abstract Purpose ± This research aims to examine Chinese consumers’ wine consumption and purchasing behaviour. Design/methodology/approach ± The study‚ conducted during the Chinese New Year in early 2006‚ used in-depth interviews
Premium Wine Alcoholic beverage
Global Wine War 2009: New World versus Old Case 1 Synopsis: Please provide a brief synopsis of the case. Discussion Questions: 1. How did the French become the dominant competitors in the increasingly global wine industry for centuries? What sources of competitive advantage were they able to develop to support their exports? Where were they vulnerable? By the Christian era‚ wine became part of the liturgical services and monasteries planted vines and builtwineries and the European
Premium Wine Terroir Europe
ASSOCIATION OF WINE ECONOMISTS AAWE WORKING PAPER No. 1 Editor Victor Ginsburgh THE IMPACT OF GURUS: PARKER GRADES AND EN PRIMEUR WINE PRICES Héla Hadj Ali Sébastien Lecocq Michael Visser April 2007 www.wine-economics.org The impact of gurus: Parker grades and en primeur wine prices H´la Hadj Ali† S´bastien Lecocq‡ Michael Visser§ e ‚ e ‚ September 2005 ∗ Abstract The purpose of this paper is to measure the impact of Robert Parker’s oenological grades on Bordeaux wine prices. We study
Premium Bordeaux wine Wine
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY France is the biggest wine producer in the world (7-8 billion bottles sold in 2010). 17% of French drink wine regularly‚which is a total of 9.35 million people. We identified that buying wine requires knowledge of the different kinds of wine and that many consumers find it difficult to get the information when they want it. Our team has identified this pain point as an opportunity to launch our product using smart phones and RFID technology on the wine bottles. The solution is an application
Premium Wine
Wine was a delicacy‚ more sophisticated than beer. It was reserved for the prestige in ancient Greece and Rome‚ reflecting their power and status. Those who drank wine often looked down upon beer drinkers. Wine was often shared between guests at a symposium‚ where individuals would participate in intellectual discussions about a variety of subjects‚ ranging from political topics to philosophical questions and rhetoric. The formal atmosphere of the gatherings was a reminder of how civilized the Greeks
Premium Wine Alcoholic beverage Marketing