Posts Tagged ‘South Africa’

South African Wine in China

Tuesday, September 15th, 2009

Stumbled upon a great article this afternoon, “Promoting South African Wine in China.” Originally sourced from allafrica.com, you can access the article via this link directly.

The article discusses the failure of official promotional strategies of Brand South Africa wines.

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No matter from which angle you look at it, however, SA wines are promoted too irregularly in China, if at all, and for the most part China’s burgeoning middle class has little inkling that our country produces any wine, never mind being a source of excellent wines.

French wines sell themselves with little effort due to an enviable country brand positioning they hold in China. Australian wines, especially the Jacob’s Creek brand, is advertised so extensively that its posters could rival Coca-Cola billboards in Africa. All this while this year we celebrate 350 years of SA producing wine, yet nothing is being done to generate awareness of this in China.

[South Africa Vineyard ~ http://www.ultimatehideaways.co.uk/]


Yet while this logic is apparent to most, SA wine exporters seem either completely ignorant of China’s growing consumption market – or are so utterly scared of the foreign of foreign markets – that it is not even considered. Of equal concern are the companies already exporting to China that do little to promote their brands in the local market; for them I have included some takeaway points.

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Much like Mir Global’s own efforts in promoting Argentinean wines, a major challenge has been to educate the Chinese consumer on the mere fact South Africa even produces wine.

The author describes one particular situation where Cloof Wines of South Africa combined cultural and historical education with a marketing event they hosted at a South African restaurant in Beijing. Upon learning about South Africa in such a situation, the culturally curious Chinese became eager to sample a “exotic” bottle from a place like South Africa.

Cloof Wines is a South African company which has signed up with a large Chinese distributor but is also seeking further opportunities in other market segments within China that the distributor does not target.

From our experience we feel this is the ideal way to approach entering the Chinese market with a novel and niche product like South African wine. The distributor instantly enables a particular wine to begin branding itself with the Chinese consumer. If your wine has found success, or a potential client sees that you are already operating and have a presence in the market, he/she will be far more willing to do business with a entity it already perceives as legitimate and having experience in the China market.

I definitely suggest reading this article, which inspired this small analysis at Globowines. It presents two clear wine marketing strategies for the China market–one which the author of the article feels to have succeeded, and the other which he feels has failed.

~ Bennett Reiss – International Trade Consultant at Mir Global Marketing LLC

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2009 Southern Hemisphere Wine Harvests — Chile, Argentina, South Africa, Australia, New Zealand

Tuesday, June 2nd, 2009

The results are out, the reviews have been written, and now its time to sample the 2009 wine harvest. At lease this is the case for producers in the Southern Hemisphere of the world.

As producers in North America and Europe watch their grapes ripen, vintners in Argentina, Chile, South Africa, Australia, and New Zealand are preparing to sample their first bottles of 2009.

A healthy growing season is paramount in the process of ultimately producing a quality wine. This is of course why certain regions in the world excel in wine making. These regions are blessed with extremely conducive climates for growing grapes used in wine making. This is why regions like Mendoza, Argentina have historically been known to consistently produce high quality wines. Click here to read more about the region of Mendoza from Mir Global Marketing’s home page)

This article from the Winespectator.com provides links to the publications reports on how the 2009 grapes have turned out in Chile, Argentina, South Africa, Australia and New Zealand.

Argentina: Heat spike hurts Argentine white wines, but reds weather the warmth

Chile: A warm and dry year leads to ripe wines and slightly higher yields

South Africa
: South Africa’s wine regions enjoy a cool, dry season, producing quality across the board

Australia
: Yields are down in most regions, but a cool, dry season may have produced elegant reds

New Zealand
: A moderate growing season bodes well for the country’s reds and whites

To access complete country harvest and grape reports from the Winespectator.com, please click on each respective country link

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The Global Wine Market

Wednesday, May 6th, 2009

Wine & Drinks Business Review – The world’s wine market- an evolving panorama

A consistent theme of this site will be discussion about the ever evolving state of global wine markets. MIR Global decided to start this site as a resource for people to come not only to keep current on major news/development in the wine scene but also to discuss the ever changing nature of it.

First lets talk about supply. During the past decade wine production has exploded in many new countries. Wines from the United States, Chile, Argentina, South Africa, Australia and New Zealand have become household names around the world. Europe is not the only kid on the block anymore.

Now, consider the demand side of things. China, South-East Asia, India and Russia have suddenly emerged as the future major wine markets. With incredibly large populations, robust economic growth and a ever more interconnected global economy wine producers have switched their focus to Asia.

Described in this article from the Wine & Drinks Business Review

Countries, such as China, India and Indonesia, will compensate for the stagnation of Western economies.

The companies with strong international orientation will benefit from the demand coming from Asia, which will balance the markets that are more inclined to a stability situation, such as the Northern-American and the European ones.

Some facts from the same article

* European wine production falls to 161.6 million hl versus 163.6 million hl in 2007

* French production falls to 41.4 million in 2008 from 46 million in 2007.

* Argentina is decreasing to production to 14.6 million hl

* Chile’s production grows to 8.6 million hl in 2008, not sure what it was in 2007, article doesn’t say and a google search did not yield immediate results. If anyone knows please share.

* South African wine production increased 5% to 10.2 million hl.

* Australia’s production grew a pretty stunning 30% to 12.3 million hl.

* New Zealand finishes off the count, growing a astounding 39% to 2 million hl.

Now in terms of exports from some traditional European markets, decline where seen across the board, with Italy taking the biggest hit proportionately.

* Italian exports fell to 17.8 million hl, which breaks down in layman terms to loosing about 7% of the share of Europe’s exports.

* Spanish exports on the other hand gained 8.5% of the European export market of fine wines, exporting 16.9 million hl.

* US exports rose over the threshold of one billion dollar sales (+6%), with a volume of 4.9 million hl (+8%), of which 90% came from California.

* France had a 10.5% fall in the volumes, at 13.7 million hl.

* Australia showed a decrease of 11% at a little less than 7 million hl.

Click here to access the full article: “The world’s wine market- an evolving panorama.”

Courtesy of [wine.drinks-business-review.com]

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