Riverbench used a 2-camera setup to livestream its virtual tasting on Facebook last week and then archive the video on YouTube |
This week,
Riverbench Vineyards launched a virtual tasting of the wines in their latest
wine club shipment, which went out to thousands of club members in early March.
The tasting was led by the winery’s Director of Hospitality, Danae Smith, and
was broadcast live on Facebook. Those who tuned in got insight into, and
tasting notes for, Riverbench’s 2018 Estate Chardonnay, 2016 Reserve Pinot Noir
and 2017 Blanc de Blancs Sparkling Wine, all grown from grapes on the label’s
Santa Maria Valley property. They also got to sip with others, of course, which
is always better than drinking alone.
A second
DSLR camera recorded the session, which allowed the team to upload the video to
YouTube.
“We didn’t
want to something just for tomorrow,” says Riverbench communications director
Wil Fernandez. “If we’re going to create content, let’s think long term, let’s
do something we’ll continue to do [even after the coronavirus scare] because it
just make sense.” Indeed, moving forward, Riverbench is planning on doing
virtual tastings in conjunction with all wine club shipments, which go out three
times a year.
Riverbench is hosting a virtual tasting of library wines on April 4th, a virtual vineyard tour on April 8th and a virtual Easter egg hunt on April 11th. Check out Riverbench's Facebook page.
Keeping wine
club membership engaged is key for a company like Riverbench, whose club
accounts for about a third of its business. The other two-thirds are almost
entirely driven by visitation to its two tasting rooms in Santa Maria and in
Santa Barbara’s Funk Zone, which remain shuttered. Third-party retail, a very
small portion of the business under usual circumstances, is being ramped up now
to offset the fallout, with distributors in states like Missouri and Kansas,
along with California, pushing Riverbench wine into grocery store chains like
Ralphs.
And to support employees in the short
term, the way business is done at Riverbench has also changed. Instead of
outsourcing wine club shipments, which can take weeks, tasting room employees
have taken on the task. And the winery’s phone number – 805-937-8340 – has been
turned into a wine tasting hotline, meant to encourage customers to call in
with orders, questions or “just to chat with someone else,” says Fernandez.
Calls are forwarded to the cell phones of different employees, who are working
from home now, each day, and average call times have gone from under two
minutes to more than 15.
Virtual tastings have become the flavor
of the day across the wine industry, with myriad wineries tapping their
customer base through Facebook, Instagram, Twitter and YouTube, among other
platforms. With the J. Wilkes Wines tasting room inside the Hotel Californian
closed to visitors, for example, winemaker Wes Hagen launched daily 5pm virtual
tasting and educational conversation on his Facebook page. And the
Wine Militia, an LA-based marketing company, this week launched daily virtual
tastings at 6pm on their Instagram account (@thewinemilitia), featuring a
different Santa Barbara County label each day; consumers are linked to online
shops to purchase featured wines ahead of time so they can sip along when they
tine in.
Online commerce, of course, is the
primary defense against the coronavirus consequence. Most every local winery is
offering incentives to get imbibers to shop online, in lieu of visiting their
tasting rooms in person. Shipping is either included or deeply discounted on
most orders. And then you’ve got creative hustlers like Jamie Slone, who, after
having to close his tasting room in Santa Barbara El Presidio neighborhood to
visitors, is hand-delivering wines for free to doorsteps from Goleta to Ventura; check out the Jamie Slone Wines website.
I
n Los Olivos, Tercero winemaker Larry Schaffer,
who can’t welcome visitors at his popular Los Olivos tasting room right now,
admits he’s concerned about the next few weeks. “Margins, in the short term,
will not be good,” he admits. But he sees opportunity during the coronavirus
crisis, too, especially in the way wineries like his, which are driven by
direct-to-consumer sales, are now able to focus on bolstering client
relationships. “I’m sending longer handwritten notes along with each shipment
right now,” he says, “and I’m not sending anything out until I’ve confirmed
addresses on my mailing list on a one-by-one basis.”
The Tercero Wines tasting rooms is ground zero for shipping orders |
Schaffer is gearing up for his own
virtual tasting soon, and he’s including shipping and offering a 20% discount
(30% for his wine club members) on all orders of six bottles or more, at
tercerowines.com.
###