Minnesota Municipal Beverage Association Newsletter
(September 16, 2012 - September 22, 2012)
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As I See It...

2 Gingers         

 

Last week, my husband and I spent some leisurely time up on the north shore.

 

One afternoon, as we wandered in and out of a couple of bars, I tried to order a Big Ginger. No one had any 2 Gingers to make my favorite drink with.

 

On another occasion, I thought the couple we were visiting withmight like to try a Mexican nut, (Rum Chata and Amaretto), but this bar did not carry Rum Chata.

 

In each instance, I shared information about the products and where they could purchase them. The bartender's eyes slowly glazed over with boredom. Their facial expression screamed " NOT MY JOB, LADY. BE HAPPY WITH WHAT WE HAVE!"

 

What they had, was a lost sale.

 

When I returned to work, I wondered why establishments would not carry products that sell so well for me in the off- sale environment. Is it fear of change? Fear of a ballooning inventory? Fear of work? Or effort? I don't know.

 

What I do know is it is a new season! The holidays are ahead of us and it's time to put my inventory to work. Not just the big movers, but the other products as well. Geography is very limited in my store, so if a bottle is going to have a home here it will need to earn its place.

 

This week I will say good bye to a few bottles, some I have dusted so frequently they were beginning to feel like an old friend. They will be replaced with a different product that hopefully will sell. If not, they too will find a new home in the bargain bin, like yesterday's i-phone.

 

I know I don't need every flavor of vodka or every hue of Moscato. But, I do know, that if I don't embrace change, my customers may be shopping elsewhere.

 

Cathy Pletta

Kasson Liquor

 

City Liquor Stores See Green as Craft Beers Catch Fire
Money  

By Mary Jane Smetanka, Star Tribune

 

When the economy hurts, a little craft beer helps.

That seems to be the attitude among patrons of municipal liquor stores in the Twin Cities, several of which are seeing sales increase at a faster-than-normal pace this year.

 

By the end of August, Edina's liquor stores had surpassed sales as of the same time last year, even though its busiest store was closed six weeks for remodeling. Lakeville, which has the state's biggest municipal liquor operation, has seen sales increase about 6 percent so far this year. Richfield's sales are up about 8 percent, and Brooklyn Center is seeing a rebound in sales as stores continue to recover after three flat years during the recession.

 

Managers said savvier marketing of monthly specials and a craze for craft beers are driving sales.

 

"People are realizing that they still need to socialize, but they might not be going out and being as lavish as they used to be," said Brenda Visnovec, Lakeville's liquor operations director. "They're socializing at home with family and friends ... "

 

Craft beers have become a hobby, much like wine has been, she said. "People are drinking less by volume, but they're buying something more expensive."

 

City liquor managers are cautious about forecasting a record year, saying that much depends on the coming holiday season, traditionally the busiest time for municipal liquor stores. Everything from bad weather to how many Fridays there are in a month can skew month-to-month sales.

 

Trends point to a good year

 

But so far this year, customers who are watching for value, buying in bulk and willing to spend more for what's perceived as a quality product are pushing sales past the usual 3 percent to 4 percent annual gain.

"The trend in August was very, very good ... [but] I don't want to be too giddy," said Steve Grausam, Edina's liquor operations director.

 

Edina's busiest liquor store, near Southdale, last year became the first municipal liquor store in Minnesota to do more than $6 million in business, Grausam said. The store was closed for six weeks while the layout was changed to increase visibility and improve traffic flow, and a tasting area and display case were added.

 

By the end of August, the city's liquor operation had recouped what it had lost during the store's closure and still outstripped last year's gross sales by $11,000.

 

"Edina is a little bit different," Grausam said. "Younger communities may have residents who are more cash-strapped. We're lucky that we maybe haven't had as many financial difficulties."

 

Will travel for good beer

 

In Lakeville, craft beer sales is the trend that grabs Visnovec's attention. The store has a Brew Club whose members receive advance notice of specials. They are passionate about craft beer, she said.

 

"It's incredible," she said. "We put out a blog saying we received Voodoo maple bacon-flavored beer, and we sold ten cases within an hour. ... The bottles retailed at around $15 each, and people were buying the limit."

 

Brew Club customers come from as far away as Plymouth, Visnovec said. "People are not real brand-loyal; they want the latest and greatest," she said. "They like to feel like they're special, and they're willing to travel for that."

 

In Richfield, too, craft beers "are huge," said Bill Fillmore, municipal liquor operations manager. But people are buying nice wines, too.

 

Richfield's most successful store is at 66th and Cedar Avenue, right along Hwy. 77 near the Mall of America.

 

Richfield municipal liquor advertises in the hotels near the mall, and it's paid off, Fillmore said. "It's been a particularly good year," he said. "We've had a lot of people from out of town, a lot of out-of-state travelers."

 

People have been price-sensitive for years, Fillmore said, but a warm spring spurred sales of "white goods" like gin, vodka and rum, and those are still going strong. Customers are willing to pay a higher price for something like craft beers.

 

"People perceive that the economy has gotten a bit better, or they finally got jobs," he said.

 

Tight margins

 

Brooklyn Center residents are still looking for good deals, said Tom Agnes, the liquor operations manager. He's hoping for a 3 percent increase by the end of the year.

 

"It's not like the good old days, when it was a steady 5 percent a year," he said. "You've got to work harder for what you get."

 

While 45 percent of the product sold in Edina is wine, in Brooklyn Center beer makes up almost half of sales. That market is split between premium and cheap beers. But flavored vodka also is popular and people are crazy for a monthly Minnesota craft beer special, said Agnes.

 

"I think when it comes to liquor, it's like groceries, they're going to buy it," he said. "But we used to go through a case of Dom Perignon [$169 a bottle] in a year. Now we go through half a case a year."

 

In the end, what matters to cities is not so much sales volume as the profit they can spend on parks, fire engines and other city needs.

 

Liquor store managers said they're braced for price increases on wine, beer and spirits, all linked to poor grape and grain crops. They are hoping those price increases don't hit before the holiday season.

 

"That's still our goal," said Grausam. "Each and every year we want to make more money."

 

Two Months til Opening

Construction   

By Pippi Mayfield, DL-Online

 

Every day Lakes Liquors (Detroit Lakes) Manager Brad MacMaster gets questions on how the new municipal liquor store is coming along.

 

Answer: Right on schedule.

 

The outside brickwork should be done this week, the floor should be as well, the coolers will be installed this week, and the target date for construction to be finished is still Nov. 1. MacMaster plans to take a couple weeks to stock the shelves and then open the doors Nov. 19.

 

The old liquor store will stay open until the new one opens.

 

Though the building's height may be deceiving from the outside, it's only a one-story facility. Inside, there is room to be filled.

 

"It has a very open feel to it," MacMaster said.

 

The ceiling is 16-feet high, and the shelves that will line the middle of the store are only four feet high so people coming in can see the store and everything it has to offer without being blocked by shelves.

 

"We did that intentionally," MacMaster said of keeping shelves low.

 

Product will line the west and south side walls, and windows were intentionally put up high to not interfere with shelving, but were incorporated for lots of natural light.

 

There will be three checkout lanes up front and a customer service desk that will also have a register and will be used for wine tastings.

 

There will be public restrooms upfront as well. MacMaster said there are restrooms in the existing liquor store, but they aren't very accessible.

 

Along the east side of the store, there will be 30 cooler doors, stocked with beers of all varieties.

 

"We should have beer selection bar none," he said.

 

In the middle of the cooler space will be the beer cave. It will be glass on the wall facing out to the store. Even though it's technically called a cave, it won't be cave-like.

 

MacMaster said the benefit to a beer cave is both to the customer and the employees. For the customers, it's more cold beer on hand, and for the employees, it's less handling of the beer.

 

Then along the eastern side of the building is the long storage area for product that isn't out yet. Product that MacMaster hopes there isn't much of though.

 

"I hope to get as much product out as possible," he said.

 

Another added bonus is at the entrance to the building, there will be coils under the concrete to heat the area. Customers won't have to worry about snow and ice at the entry to the building, and workers won't have to worry about cleaning the constant wet floors in the winter.

 

Ringdahl Architects out of Alexandria was the architecture firm on the project, and Bristlin Construction is the contractor.

 

MacMaster said it's nice to see all the pieces come together. "It's exciting to see the end product coming."

 

He gets comments and questions on a daily basis about the new store from those coming into the liquor store. In just a couple months, they'll be able to see it for themselves.

 

"A lot of people are excited with anticipation," he said.

 

There will be entrances to the new store off Holmes Street and Veterans Memorial Parkway.

 

On Tuesday, the Detroit Lakes City Council approved spending up to $40,000 for a reader board sign to be installed as soon as possible along Highway 10.

 

That way the public can be updated regularly on what's going on and specials going on inside once the store is open.

 

The next time someone starts listing all the reasons an idea can't work, ask them to give three reasons it can
Future Dates to Remember!!

2012 MMBA Regional Meetings

 

October 3 - Roseville

October 4 - Marshall

October 11 - Fergus Falls

October 17 - Austin

October 18 - Duluth

November 8 - Bemidji

  

2013 MMBA Boot Camp 

 

February 19 & 20, 2013

Breezy Point Resort

 

2013 MMBA Annual Conference

 

May 18 - 21, 2013

Arrowwood Resort

Ask A Director

Gary Buysse
Rogers
763-428-0163

Cathy Pletta
Kasson
507-634-7618
  
Vicki Segerstrom
Milaca
320-983-6255
  
Brian Hachey
Stacy
651-462-2727

Nancy Drumsta
Delano
763-972-0578

Lara Smetana
Pine City
320-629-2020

Michael Friesen
Hawley
218-483-4747

Tom Agnes
Brooklyn Center
763-381-2349

Steve Grausam
Edina
952-903-5732

Toni Buchite
50 Lakes
218-763-2035

Brenda Visnovec
Lakeville 
952-985-4901
 
Bridgitte Konrad
North Branch
651-674-8113
  
Shelly Dillon
Callaway
218-375-4691
  
Karissa Kurth
Buffalo Lake
320-833-2321
 
Paul Kaspszak
MMBA
763-572-0222
1-866-938-3925

 
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Minnesota Beer Activitsts Gearing Up For Sunday Sales
Sunday Sales Pro 

MMBA is constantly stressing the importance of becoming politically involved.

 

During this election season, talk to the candidates running for office.

 

If you can, get involved with the candidates who support your positions. It doesn't have to involve money.

 

Some MMBA members have yard signs in front of their house.

 

Others have pounded signs in the neighborhood.

 

Still others have distributed literature.

 

Candidates need to hear your voice, because, for example, Sunday Sales proponents have geared up to make their voices heard.

 

The Minnesota Beer Activists have started a pro-Sunday Sales petition.

 

Click Here to See Their Website

 

They have also printed

T-shirts and signs.

 

Click Here to See the T-Shirts & Posters 

 

As in the Wine in Grocery debate, in the end it is all about legislative votes! It is not about perceived public opinion.

 

Make your voice heard!

Sven Notices His Neighbor...
Boat 
Sven notices his neighbor has a sign in his yard -- "Boat for Sale."

"Ole," he says, you don't own a boat.  All you got is your old tractor and your combine."

"Yup," said Ole.  "And they're boat for sale."
Trinchero 
Contact Trinchero Family Estates 
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Contact Ste. Michelle Wine Estates

NABCA
Contact the National Alcohol Beverage Control Association
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Contact Minnesota Independent Ice Manufacturers Association

MillerCoors

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Contact Beam Global

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