Spirits don't have a ghost of a chance of taking over the market.
Ba-dumm-tss.
Spirits don't have a ghost of a chance of taking over the market.
I think brewmaster would be an easier sell because it's courses you can take at a college towards a major as opposed to some random hobby.Are there any other good "hobby into a profession" routes you could go funded by the GI Bill? They used to be pretty tight-fisted when it came to 'professional training and licensing' but I hear it's loosened up of late. I def would never have thought Brewmeistering would be paid for.
You realize that a lot of analysts think that the brew market is at a bubble point, right? Way too many brewers for a market that's not growing anymore.
Not to burst your bubble, but have you considered wine and spirits? Those markets are going to do better going in to the future.
Be careful trucking that Colorado beer east of the Mississippi - but if you do, make sure you get a fast car for a blocker.....(always did love that black Trans Am)
Postscript: Just saw this last night as Turner Classic Movies - can't believe Smokey and the Bandit is 39 years old. Thought a trailer might be appropriate for those who have never seen or heard of it.
The market could do for a correction; there's a lot of outfits out there who, once I taste what they're selling . . . ain't all that. Either not brewing to style, obvious faults, or other newbie mistakes. And while I'm a brewer, I'm not an eminently credentialed palate, either. So if I can tell, well . . .You realize that a lot of analysts think that the brew market is at a bubble point, right? Way too many brewers for a market that's not growing anymore.
Not to burst your bubble, but have you considered wine and spirits? Those markets are going to do better going in to the future.
Eh. The CO hipster brewers will just convert to growing the marijuba once the beer bubble bursts.
Hey there's an idea...use your GI Bill to get your pot-growing schools and certs. It'd be worth it for the irony alone.
Not the worst idea I've ever heard.
What are your thoughts on undercapitalization? Seems to be a common theme of the "two guys starting a picobrewery in their garage" stories, and those are the outfits I think will get bit. I read somewhere about $2M being a safe amount of startup capital, but I have nothing to gauge the credibility of that.I'm in the camp that the micro brewing industry is in for a correction in the next few years. I don't think the market will collapse by any means, but the breweries that will survive are the ones that meet a few criteria:
The industry is also going through a consolidation phase with the Bud, Miller, Coors buying up prominent micro breweries on the premise that it is easier to buy the competition than develop your own brands and following. It's good to be the 600 lb gorilla in this industry, unless you are a gorilla named Harambe, then that's a bad sign.
- They must make a good product. If @nittany03 or other non-eminent palates can pick up faults and mistakes in the final product, that is bad juju for the future of that brewer.
- The brewery needs the "it" factor. It has to have something different to attract customers. This is why you are seeing breweries specialize beyond just being a brewery into specific sub categories like belgian ales, sour ales, wood aged beers, etc.
- It has to have a decent marketing/events team. Used to a micro-brewery could attract customers because it was the only game in town. If you wanted a good beer, you want to your local brewery. Now, with multiple choices in every city (My town, Gainesville, FL with a population of 125k, has 2 established with another 3 in the works.) a brewery has to work a bit more to attract customers. Hosting live music, special events, and groups helps.
- It will need to have a good business plan/team on the non-brewery side of the house. A lot of breweries struggle on the business end aspect of running a brewery, making poor management choices that lead to lost opportunities or money.
All in all, there is room for success if a start-up chooses the right market and can create a good product. The days where a brewery was an instant success because it was on the leading edge of the movement are long gone, it takes work and grit to make a successful business in this industry.
Street Cred: accomplished home brewer that has spent three years as a coordinator for a 1600 patron craft beer festival working with multiple breweries and distributors. I'm actively courting a local brewery for a position on the business side of their house. So, I've educated myself about the industry....
What are your thoughts on undercapitalization? Seems to be a common theme of the "two guys starting a picobrewery in their garage" stories, and those are the outfits I think will get bit. I read somewhere about $2M being a safe amount of startup capital, but I have nothing to gauge the credibility of that.
@nittany03, this is my two cents...
That's the advantage of getting bought by a macro; you've now got all their infrastructure at their disposal. I mean, let's face it; if Bud's brew team wanted to brew a killer IPA or porter tomorrow . . . they could probably do it. Because as insipid as the taste is, light American adjunct lagers are a style where there's absolutely no room for error, and they make millions of barrels of that piss.![]()