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Total Wine & More

Monthly Archives: March 2013

A Holistic View of Craft Beer Retailing: Final of a Three Part Series

21 Thursday Mar 2013

Posted by totalwineandmore in Beer

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Beer, Craft Beer, Retail

Check out Part 1 and Part 2, of this 3-part series, which discuss:
Part 1: Beer Singles-By-Style, Consumers Pilot Test, Beer Singles = Experimentation, and Fizzy Yellow Beer
Part 2
: Too Many Choices, Women Beer Shoppers, “Wine-ifying” Beer, the Restaurant/Bar and Retail Store Experience, and Beer Education.

GETTING BEER STYLES RIGHT

Brewers Assoc & BeerAdvocate Beer Style GuidesWhile not an exact science, and with room for variances based on brewer interpretation, defined beer styles do provide general color, aroma, flavor, and strength parameters within which beers may be purposefully brewed or in which they may fall, even without specific brewer intent, as a basis for characterizing the beer. Total Wine & More follows the Brewers Association Beer Style Guidelines as our standard regarding style definitions and vernacular, and we reference the beer style list on the popular BeerAdvocate.com consumer website, in an effort to ensure that our beer style nomenclature is not only accurate in accordance with a respected industry source (BA), but also in accordance with this popular consumer website which many beer enthusiasts reference in their early and ongoing learning process.

Some styles may seem a bit confusing based on the name on the bottle label, such as “Black IPA”, “Cascadian Dark Ale”, “American Black Ale”. Which is it, or are these three different styles? We know from the Brewers Association Style Guidelines that neither “Black IPA” nor “Cascadian Dark Ale”, by virtue of their omission, is a recognized style name or an IPA at all. These beers arguably do not belong in the IPA style category.

Beer Geek KnowledgeIn our classes and in Total Guide to Beer we teach customers the origin of this style and these various names, and we teach the Brewers Association official style name; American-style Black Ale. Where, then, should it be categorized within a style arrangement? Since the beer is not an IPA and is not part of any other larger style grouping, yet it is usually always strong in ABV (6% +), we have it in the Strong Ale & Barley Wine category.

It is true that if a person were to select a beer of this style from within the IPA grouping, she or he could get the wrong impression as to what IPAs are all about. We believe the same holds true for “Belgian IPA” with its unique aroma and flavor character from the Belgian yeast strain used, making it more suitable in our view to be in our American Belgian-Styles grouping.

There is obviously more than one “right way” to categorize some beers, and we’ve certainly heard from beer geeks looking for “Black IPA” in the IPA section, for example. While by no means perfect, we believe that our beer singles-by-style set is both meaningful and educational for the majority of consumers. As brewers continue to innovate, our beer set will continue to evolve.

THE NOVICES and THE SAVVY (GEEKS)

Questions signpost in the skyWhen launching our beer style arrangement pilot test in 2008 we suspected that some beer geeks may not like it. We “moved their cheese”. It’s new. It won’t initially make sense from “the way it has always been.”

But we also knew a few other important things:

– Make no mistake; we LOVE our beer savvy/geek customers. And we know the geeks are knowledgeable enough about beer to find their way around any beer set for the beers they seek. Novices don’t have that ready-knowledge.
– The reality is the geeks are far outnumbered by the non-geeks, and non-geeks buy a lot of beer, and will buy more if we can help them to navigate the wall of beer and discover flavors (styles) they like.
– In time, many of the geeks will come to actually like the set, perhaps even prefer it, or at least get to know it enough to know how to navigate to their list of beers. Yet, some will eternally dislike it. Regrettably, this will be part of the percentage of customers we won’t please with the way our store is set.
– 80/20 Rule: Where the prior alpha-by-brand set was great for the geeks (let’s say that is 20% of our customers, but the number is really lower than that), and this set was bad or unhelpful or indifferent to everyone else (the novices; the other 80% of our customers), and the style arrangement is more helpful to 80% of our customers, then the style arrangement is the right thing to do.

The pilot findings seemed to bear this out.

WIN-WIN-WIN-WIN

winwin2To be sure, consumers aren’t the only winners from this merchandising formula. All four tiers of the value chain, from brewers to distributors through to customers, are winning with this approach.

Brewers get maximum brand exposure through our buying program; we essentially carry EVERY BREWERY BRAND we can get a hold of in the markets we serve and EVERY year-round, seasonal and special-release beer item carried in distribution of those brands in the market.  Our 6-packs, case stacks, end caps, cold box doors, and other merchandising displays are driven by brand-adjacent displays, while the singles style arrangement helps consumers discover or rediscover American craft brands.

Distributors enjoy large buys and fast product sales from our stores. We work with both breweries and distributors to ensure ongoing brand displays and promotions.

In doing the above everyone wins and then Total Wine & More wins, and then this winning cycle repeats.

FINALLY

Brewery District imageWhen customers step into a specialty store such as Total Wine & More we hope that they are seeking a different beer/wine/spirits experience from that of a grocery store or warehouse club or convenience store. Customers should expect to not only be able to find packs and cases of their known favorites, but also a huge selection of additional choices that often cannot be found elsewhere, all at great low prices.

Customers should expect that, as purveyors of these fine products, Total Wine & More has knowledge and expertise about them and about the many different genres they come in. The ability to categorize accurately by style the many thousands of beers in our portfolio across markets across the chain, and write for each one an informative description that is visible on a shelf talker and via our website, is certainly more than any grocery or warehouse or convenience store is able to do or takes the time to do. Indeed, we would hope this communicates our expertise in craft beer to savvier consumers and beginner consumers alike.

Cheers to beer!

rob_hill_photoRob Hill, Certified Cicerone®
Author of Total Guide to Beer
New Programs Manager, Customer Experience
Total Wine & More
Twitter: @TWMBeer

A Holistic View of Craft Beer Retailing: Part Two of a Three Part Series

20 Wednesday Mar 2013

Posted by totalwineandmore in Beer

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Beer, Craft Beer, Wine

Check out Part 1, of this 3-part series, which discusses Beer Singles-By-Style, Consumers, Pilot Test, Beer Singles = Experimentation, and Fizzy Yellow Beer.

OrangeJuice_choicesTOO MANY CHOICES

Scientific studies show that when consumers are presented with too many choices, they often end up making poor choices or no choice at all, or they simply default to an old familiar choice. No experimentation or discovery takes place, even among the wide array of choices. That’s such a shame!

Brewer innovation is breeding lots of choices, but is that ultimately bad for craft beer if there are too many choices for customers?  An article discussing this subject and citing such studies appeared in The New Brewer magazine (a BA publication).

An innovative beer retailer doesn’t say, “Stop. No more Beer!” It is incumbent upon the retailer who offers consumers a lot of choices to help break down and categorize the products into meaningful groups. This provides customers approachable starting points and an opportunity to focus on smaller bites of the pie, within which decisions can be made.

A beer style group arrangement, done strategically in an environment conducive to it such as Total Wine, is an effective way to achieve this, as there are plentiful yet manageable choices within meaningful style groupings.

WOMEN BEER SHOPPERS

Women drinking craft beerConsumer studies also find that women make or influence ~80% of all purchases in the United States. Do women buy beer? YES, more than is generally realized, and Total Wine is paying attention to this. Unlike most men who shop for beer primarily only for themselves (admit it, guys!), women buy beer for others: their friends, boyfriend, husband, brothers, father, as gifts, for parties/social events, and yes, quite often for themselves. Most women prefer meaningful organization of items when they shop. Women know how to shop and they like organization. That is not sexist. It is simple fact. (A clearance bin mish-mash with killer-low prices may be an acceptable exception).

Total Wine store Team Members have many interactions assisting women shoppers who are buying beer for someone else. As with many male shoppers, the extent of knowledge for some of these women shoppers is that the person “likes IPAs” (they may not even know what IPA means. Kudos to them for admitting it and seeking help … men generally do not do that). When shown the style set and it is explained to them, “All of the IPAs are together on these 5 shelves,” often, their eyes light up as if they’ve been given the key to shopping success; they become comfortable and go about reading the shelf talkers, looking at labels, and selecting different bottles. They love it and feel confident and proud about being able to shop, make their selections and make the purchase.  Often times, women come in for one custom 6-pack, and they end up buying two! It has been our experience that women, by and large, really enjoy and appreciate the beer singles set in style groupings.

“WINE-IFYING” BEER

Roughly 35 years ago wine awareness and sales began to grow in the United States concurrent with word being spread that wine is a great accompaniment to food. There were wine dinners. Restaurants began expanding wine lists. There was a movement to educate Americans on wine, to teach that there is more than just “red”, “white”, and “blush” and that there existed more than just “macro” jug wine. Americans were being introduced to discovering different wine varietals, and they grew to know which one(s) they liked. People began feeling more empowered with wine knowledge, and wine – higher quality wine — started selling big. Through it, customers discovered wines from certain brands they liked, returning to buy more.

Rhetorical question: Was that bad for the wine industry?

Beer Dinner Beer vs. Wine Menu“Wine-ifying beer” has been used in a vilifying tone, yet in its most basic and positive form it means trying to educate more people on Craft beer. Who started it and who’s doing it? Answer: smart Craft breweries. How? For one thing, they’ve taken a page from the wine industry and sponsored and hosted beer dinners, during which they espouse beer having a place on the dinner table with or instead of wine. This means beer and food pairings, but not any beer; craft beer, like wine but unlike macro beer, is about different FLAVORS.

We’ve learned beers of certain styles tend to go well with certain foods/dishes. For beer dinners brewers select from their portfolio specific beers of specific styles or flavor characteristics to go with the various courses of the meal. AND, to ensure beer shows well vs. wine in the pairing, brewers feature select “guest beers” from friend-competitor craft breweries in order to get the style needed to make the ideal pairing (perhaps they don’t brew it, or don’t have the right match). They feature competitor craft beers?! “Rising tide lifts all ships.” Yet the cream rises to the top.

Additional nods to wine by craft beer can even be found on beer labels with words such as “harvest”, “estate”, “Grand Cru”, “vintage”, clever iterations of “terroir” and “chateau”, and others that are clearly co-opted from wine lexicon.  Sommelier would have likely been co-opted for beer service expertise had Cicerone® not been introduced.

THE RESTAURANT/BAR and RETAIL STORE EXPERIENCE

Pizzeria Paradiso menu, Washington, D.C.

Pizzeria Paradiso menu, Washington, D.C.

The top beer establishments near Total Wine’s home office in metro Washington, D.C. have great food and world class beer lists. These expansive lists, with up to 500 bottles plus draughts and casks, present the beers by beer style groupings, not by brand. Progressive Beer Directors list beers this way for multiple reasons, including:

1. Customers need a way to break down the expansive list into meaningful, approachable segments. An alpha list by brewery isn’t effective since most customers are relatively new to craft beer. The list may thrill the geeky-ist of beer geeks, but it must be useable by the other 80%-90% of customers who aren’t so beer savvy.

2. Customers can find a style/flavor range and self-select a flight of beers, or choose beers from multiple styles for a flight.

3. Good craft beer pairs well with food, but for specific foods it isn’t just any beer (we learned this from brewery-sponsored beer dinners).

4. It provides service personnel a starting point to assist customers: “What flavors do you like?” “What are you eating?” Servers can then make recommendations referencing the style groupings, helping customers narrow down the selections. The huge list of beers becomes scalable for customers, who can be a part of the process by choosing themselves and not having to rely on the server to choose.

Allowing customers to focus on general flavor profiles adds an educational component to it as well. It’s about what’s desirable to the palate based on the occasion and/or what’s being ordered to eat.

An approach that is appropriate for on-premise retailers with extensive beer portfolios selling beer by bottle and draught is also appropriate for off-premise specialty retailers with extensive beer portfolios selling beer by the bottle. The customer’s advantage at Total Wine is we offer beer to them both ways — by brand and by style; with our 6-packs by brand and singles by style offering a cross reference library of beer.

BEER EDUCATION

women_and_beerConsumer beer knowledge is key to craft beer growth, and we believe breweries, distributors and retailers all have a stake in educating consumers on beer. Beer education is a serious endeavor at Total Wine & More; we offer beer education and tasting classes in our 50+ stores that have classrooms, and we wrote and published a comprehensive 200 page educational beer book, called Total Guide to Beer, that’s available for FREE in our stores (and digitally for free via iTunes at http://bit.ly/iTunesTotalGuideToBeer).

Total Guide to Beer 2013 EditionThis book is full of informative beer style information and lots more including beer history, ingredients, brewing process, food pairings, glassware, tasting process, serving temperature recommendations, and more. With 800,000 copies in print and over 10,000 downloads, this was a large $$Dollar investment by Total Wine for consumer beer education. We did it because we know that customers who know more about beer will be more likely to try craft beer.

Teaching consumers about beer styles is important and the book groups the 90+ individual beer styles described into the meaningful style categories customers find in our craft beer singles arrangement in our stores: Lagers, Wheat Ale, Blonde & Golden Ale, Pale Ale & IPA, Amber/Red Ale, Strong Ale & Barley Wine, Brown Ale, Porter, Stout, American Belgian-styles, and Specialty/Hybrid/other.

Craft brewer innovation is complemented by beer style and flavor groupings on store shelves and restaurant beer lists. In fact they can lead customers to more quickly discover the breadth of style interpretation and innovation across breweries. A parallel can be drawn to the annual Great American Beer Festival and World Beer Cup awards, where beers are judged within style, and as brewers create new beers, new styles are identified and the beers are judged within them. Brands compete in these professionally judged contests and in our stores on the merits of their liquid beer, and the cash-holding consumer is always the ultimate judge.

Check out Part 3 of this 3-part series which discusses Getting Beer Styles Right, The Novices and the Savvy (Geeks), Win-Win-Win-Win, and Finally.

rob_hill_photoRob Hill, Certified Cicerone®
Author of Total Guide to Beer
New Programs Manager, Customer Experience
Total Wine & More
Twitter: @TWMBeer

A Holistic View of Craft Beer Retailing: Part One of a Three Part Series

19 Tuesday Mar 2013

Posted by totalwineandmore in Beer

≈ 3 Comments

As a specialty retailer with large stores, Total Wine & More provides consumers of beer, wine and spirits* a shopping experience that is unique from grocery, wholesale club, and convenience stores. This has been our owners’ goal since they started in the beverage industry in the 1980s operating a large beer store. With beer retailing beginnings and their 1991 launch of Total Wine Ɨ, we can truly say that we’ve been selling craft beer since before craft beer was even called craft beer.

Beer Color SpectrumBeers from today’s elder statesmen craft brands that started during the ‘80s, such as Sierra Nevada and Samuel Adams, were sold from our shelves when they were upstart operations. Wow, were these brands unique from the beer mainstream back then! And today’s hot craft brands that launched during the ‘90s, such as Dogfish Head, have been on our shelves since day-1 of their bottle distribution. Craft beer has been in our stores through all of the category’s ups and downs, and as we’ve grown we’ve brought our ever-expanding craft beer aisles with us to each store and state.

CONSUMERS

We’ve learned a lot about beer over the decades, along the way making craft beer accessible to a wide spectrum of consumers; from novice beginners to geeky enthusiasts. We’ve learned a lot from customers, including not only their desire for us to provide great prices on the largest beer selection we can muster, but also to introduce beer displays that help make exploring, discovering and learning about the vast world of beer a more approachable proposition.

Overhead - Craft_Beers_GreenTotal Wine has always sold craft beer in single bottles of all sizes, along with packs and cases. Our American craft single bottles are now arranged on the shelves in beer style groupings, in addition to:

— American craft 4-/6-packs arranged alphabetically by brewery brand
— Import 4-/6-packs alphabetically by brewery brand within country of origin
— Import single bottles set alphabetically by brewery brand within country or world region of origin

Our expansive store set of 4-/6-pack and single beers in of itself makes for a different beer shopping experience than most anywhere else, offering customers different ways to shop beer.

We carry a LOT of products, for sure, and there’s no one specific way to merchandise wine, beer or spirits that will please ALL consumers. It’s not possible to do it the way everyone thinks about these categories. Yet, there are display approaches which can result in a more fruitful, and even educational, shopping experience for a greater majority of customers.

PILOT TEST

Our craft singles style groupings first proved successful with consumers during our pilot test in 2008. Success was based on the interesting and pleasing overall consumer reaction we experienced after the re-set. We found:

  1. Our sales of single bottles increased across the three test stores, ranging from 15% to 29% consistently through the year-long test. (That’s huge).
  2. Customers were buying MORE single beers than with the old alpha-by-brand set. They were not only buying deeper (taking home MORE of some of the already-popular beers), but they were also buying wider (selecting MORE individual beers, some of which hadn’t seen this level of movement).

This meant our customers were more engaged with the bottle offerings; they were discovering more beers that they apparently weren’t seeing or perhaps were ignoring with the old alpha-by-brand set. The style group set opened their eyes to new and more bottle offerings; and some customers were experimenting more by trying some of those previously undiscovered, new-to-them brands.

Craft Beer By Style Singles AisleBEER SINGLES = EXPERIMENTATION. Beer packs = grab your favorite(s).

In our beer singles aisle customers are, and we encourage them to be, in experimentation mode. We want them to build a custom 6-pack of different beers of their choosing. And we want them to come back another day and do that again, staying engaged in the world of craft beer, discovering styles and brands. Alternately, the craft 6-pack aisle is convenient for all customers who have a favorite beer/s in mind and are shopping for packs of that/those brand(s).  6-packs are displayed alphabetically-by-brand for this purpose.

Total Wine’s store size, vast selection and low pricing collectively offer an environment conducive for customers to spend more time in experimentation mode making beer discoveries. It is a different mindset for most customers while in our stores vs. grocery, club and convenience stores. That’s part of the Total Wine experience.

A recent Brewers Association (BA) blog piece referencing a study published by Consumer Edge Insight  states:

“Offering a larger selection of beer also encourages more brand experimentation and re-connecting with brands used in the past, with 36% of consumers saying they are more likely to choose a brand they haven’t tried before and 19% saying they are more likely to order a brand they have not drunk in a long time.”

This study of on-premise beer retail seems to corroborate our ’08 pilot findings. We’ve always offered a large selection of beer, however we found that our new beer style grouping of single beers was contributing even more toward encouraging consumers to choose a brand they hadn’t tried before and/or go back to a brand they had not purchased in a while. Some were discovering new beers (styles) from brands they used to drink.

Fizzy Yellow BeerFIZZY YELLOW BEER

Another recent BA article nails the essence of craft beer where it states, “The beauty of American craft beer is the innovation.” Total Wine & More’s craft beer selection echoes the oft-heard craft beer mantra, “No more fizzy yellow beer!”  While we do also sell big macro beers, we’d love it if all customers would forego their same old fizzy yellow beer and give craft beer a try. It’s another reason we’ve explored alternatives from the same old fizzy yellow way of beer merchandising.

Innovation is also needed at the beer distributor and retail store levels. Brewers and distributors are asking retailers for more shelf space, and we’re giving a LOT more space to craft beer, EXPANDING our craft beer portfolio weekly! With finite space, and offering customers more choices, we must innovate.

Stacks of New Budweiser CansIt is interesting to reflect: Bud/Miller/Coors have long had their industry “beer wars” where winning is by having the most store shelf space for their branded wall of beer. Many believe their primary focus toward consumers has seemingly been on slick packaging, rather than the contents of the packaging. The approach: win consumer hearts and minds (or sophomoric sensibilities) to their brand via TV commercials. For example, it’s probable that all a “loyal” Bud drinker will do in a store is walk right past the Miller and Coors to get to the wall of Bud. Then, once standing before that wall of Bud, all one can see is Bud, and all one is ever going to buy is — Bud.  With only these three major macro beer brands and minor variations in the package contents, this merchandising approach works. You see that brand wall in the store and there’s nothing new in front of your eyes from another brand or style saying, “Check me out. Give me a try.” “I have flavor.” Your world of beer is pretty fizzy and yellow; just the way it’s intended!

Is this to YOUR benefit as a consumer?
Isn’t this what craft brewers have been fighting against?

From our 30 years in the craft beer business we know this is not what craft is about. It’s about breaking out of that mold and EXPERIMENTING and DISCOVERING. It seems craft brewers agree (we’ve heard them say publicly) the craft beer world would be boring if it were only their brand available. They say they want customers to try craft beer even if it isn’t theirs at first, for they are confident that eventually customers will also try theirs.

At Total Wine & More we’ve set our stores up to help customers do exactly this.

Our display helps to direct the consumer’s focus to the CONTENTS of the bottles and cans where the true differences exist between craft and macro. Attractive, creative packaging is certainly important as is the brewery story, but where packaging and story may get consumers to try the beer once, it is the liquid inside that either will or will not get them to keep that brand in mind (in a positive way) and come back to it.

We know this about our beer customers: whether they are beginners or experienced enthusiasts, they can quickly “sniff out” (taste) the quality beers from those that are, well, not so quality. Through all of their experimentation, beer consumers will come back to and land on those craft brands that stand out to them. Brand affinity is built, and they’ll buy 4- & 6-packs of those brands.

The savvy craft brewers know this: 1. brew great beer and, 2. customers will find them, and 3. they’ll come back and they’ll stay, even while they’re experimenting! “A rising tide lifts all ships.”

Check out Part Two of this 3-part series, which discusses Too Many Choices, Women Beer Shoppers, “Wine-ifying” Beer, the Restaurant/Bar and Retail Store Experience, and Beer Education.

rob_hill_photoRob Hill, Certified Cicerone®
Author of Total Guide to Beer
New Programs Manager, Customer Experience
Total Wine & More
Twitter: @TWMBeer

*spirits where allowed by law
Ɨ Today Total Wine & More is the largest privately held, independent retailer of wine, beer and spirits in the United States.

St. Patrick’s Day: Options Besides Green Beer

15 Friday Mar 2013

Posted by in St. Patrick's Day

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Beer, Cocktails, Irish Whiskey, St. Paddy's Day

St. Patrick’s Day is a celebration of the Patron Saint of Ireland. It is celebrated on March 17th each year as that is the day he was said to have died in 461 AD. St. Patrick’s Day was traditionally a religious holiday, but it has become a cultural and nationalistic holiday in the past few centuries as well.

Shamrocks are associated with the holiday because tradition states that St. Patrick used them to explain the Christian Trinity to the people he was trying to convert. And people started to put shamrocks (clover) in their lapels during the holiday. The color originally associated with St. Patrick was actually blue, but the use of the green shamrock along with the green landscape that gives Ireland its Emerald Isle nickname helped change the tradition to the current green color. And that is why you see green costumes, green lighted buildings, green rivers, and yes, even green beer during this celebration.

guinness_shamrockThis year, let’s skip the green beer and choose some different beverages to celebrate. What better option is there than the world famous Irish beer Guinness, with its creamy texture and rich flavors? Guinness is a beer with centuries of history. Mmmm. Delicious. Other Irish beer brands include Harp Lager and Smithwick’s Irish Red Ale. Want another take on the whole “green” custom? Try some environmentally green beers from certified organic breweries such as Bison Brewing’s Organic Chocolate Stout or Peak Organic IPA.

Maybe you are more of a spirits type person. Well, Irish Whiskey is a great option for you. Two delicious brands that might catch your attention are Jameson and Finnegan’s. Sip these whiskeys on the rocks or use them to make Irish Coffee or other cocktails such as a Jameson Ginger & Lime. Irish whiskey is also used in Fennelly’s Irish Cream, a wonderful treat for any time of year.

green_martiniFinally, if you just can’t escape having a green drink, there are still plenty of options for you that don’t require food coloring. Many drinks use ingredients that will make your drink green naturally, the best of both worlds. How about a Green Apple Martini using sour apple liqueur or Irish Eyes that uses creme de menthe? How about a milkshake type drink like the Grasshopper Ice Cream Cocktail using green creme de menthe or even jello shots? Ingrid Hoffmann’s Pineapple Mojito Gelatin Shots look like a pretty delicious upscale version!

We’d love to hear how you decided to celebrate St. Patrick’s Day. Did you try anything different this year? Let us know.

Celebrating International Women’s Day with our Beer Buying Team

08 Friday Mar 2013

Posted by totalwineandmore in Beer

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Beer, Craft Beer, International Women's Day

InternationalWomensDayLogoBelieve it or not, the beer buying team at Total Wine & More is an all-female group of beer enthusiasts! But please don’t judge their lack of beer bellies and stereotypical brewers’ beards. These ladies go out of their way to learn the ins-and-outs of what’s new in the craft beer industry. Whether they’re meeting with suppliers, scanning beer blogs and magazines or sampling the latest IPAs, Julie and Hilary work hard to bring the most popular beers and best prices to Total Wine’s shelves.

March 8 is International Women’s Day. It is a day for women around the globe to recognize how far they’ve come in the equal rights movement and celebrate their accomplishments. To honor the occasion, we would like to feature our women beer buyers in a post about some of their favorite brews.

Julie_beer_buyerJulie is the Senior Beer Buyer at Total Wine & More and has been working at the company for over five years. Julie’s favorite beer would have to be Laughing Dog’s Sneaky Pete. The beer is an American Double/Imperial IPA that is sold in 4 packs and 22oz bottles. It is a hoppy, citrusy beer bursting with notes of grapefruit and just a touch of sweet malts for balance. Julie has a sentimental attachment to the beer as she actually met Sneaky Pete himself!

hilary_beer_buyerHilary is the Sr. Buying Specialist on the beer team and has been working at the company for over two years. Not a huge fan of super hoppy beers, Hilary’s favorite styles include pilsners, witbiers and hefeweizens. Her favorite beer would have to be Abita’s Strawberry Harvest Lager, a spring/summer seasonal with a crisp, sweet taste. It is full of fruity flavors and has a finish reminiscent of strawberry shortcake.

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