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2016: the year that craft beer stalls

Dan Fox peers into his crystal tankard to see what 2016 holds for the beer industry.

A renowned marketing futurist (with whom this author worked for several years) used to make an important point about how she arrived at her highly accurate predictions. Said she:

“There is no data about the future, reliable or unreliable. And it’s impossible to get any. So, in the absence of data, one is left with one’s imagination, creativity, history, hunch, nerve endings, gut, whatever you want to call it.”

The best future forecasters look for clues and hints, rather than reading graphs and extrapolating. The seductive comfort of data, with its inherent backward-looking perspective, conspires against insightful glimpses into the future, as my colleague argued. She compared divining the winds of change to an animal’s ability to sense coming weather.

Our prediction that 2016 will see the stalling of overall growth for the craft-beer segment senses change in consumer sentiment and behaviours. It’s based on a bit of data, but correlated with our take on several kinetic market developments, mini-trends, and hints of change.

In no particular order, here are some recent observations that, taken together, prompt our prediction…

Less that craft’s slowing; more where it’s slowing

Lagunitas is best-known for its IPA, which is the biggest-selling brand of India Pale Ale in the US (Photo: flickr)

The bit of data: Craft growth has slowed dramatically and at a quickening pace in a critical channel, namely on-premise bars and restaurants. These are ideal venues for craft brands with their higher prices where their labels can be displayed to impress friends and fellow patrons, and where price sensitivity is at its lowest.

• When brands slow in their highest-potential channels, it’s like a canary dropping in the coal mine.

BigCraft selling out

Since the segment’s earliest days, craft-beer barons have railed against “big corporation” ownership. They impugned BigBeer and claimed its size was inconsistent with the higher standards of artisan brewing. Actions always speak louder than words. The sale/merger/partnering of some of craft beer’s most successful breweries tells drinkers “corporate” and “quality” are not inconsistent after all.

But there’s more to it than that. The timing of the decision to sell (or partner) brands like Lagunitas, Ballast Point, Firestone Walker, Elysian, Saint Archer, Golden Road, BluePoint, and Boulevard in the past year or so is noteworthy. Why have the insiders decided now’s the time to opt for the very corporate lash-ups they once disdained?

• Sellers always aim to sell as close to the top as they can. To some of the most successful craft-brewery leaders, then, tomorrow must not look quite as bright as today.

BigBeer making corrections

While BigBeer for years has relied on “fun” ads, rarely promoting the differences in its products, craft brands have long focused their messaging on distinctiveness: the quality and flavor of their beers. This important strategic advantage for the craft guys is in the process of narrowing.

A year ago, Budweiser’s marketing strategy changed from “entertainment” to a product-distinctiveness focus. Selling replaced cuddling (as in puppies). Anecdotal evidence suggests the brand’s business responded favorably, and immediately. Also, largely uncommented upon until recently, Coors Banquet has been employing a successful product-distinctiveness strategy for nearly a decade. The brand has posted nine consecutive years of growth. We’ll have to wait and see how provocative the facts are, but Coors Light, Bud Light, and Heineken have all announced they intend to serve up product-based facts in new advertising yet to debut.

• BigBeer’s product-distinctiveness messaging can only erode this once-exclusive advantage enjoyed by craft breweries.

What’s actually growing?

The hottest new craft brand isn’t an IPA or a stout. It’s a root beer. Large-brewery-brewed and the brainchild of a shadowy new-product consultancy, “Not Your Father’s Root Beer” is neither craft nor beer. Its stunning success–a single brand larger than hundreds of craft brewery businesses put together–promoting itself as a small-brewery product actually blurs and weakens the definition of craft.

• Believing the growth of faddish soda-pop flavors is “craft beer” growth is nonsense.

Too many slow (and no) movers

No consumer market can sustain an ever-expanding variety of offerings. Beer shelves are literally clogged with craft brands, too many of which are only marginal sellers. Anecdotal evidence exists that some retailers stock multiple craft offerings selling just a six-pack a month each.

• A constantly expanding number of choices and zero-sum flavor-churning may delight the geek minority, but it will annoy and ultimately frustrate many more shoppers.

A great portion of craft’s momentum really is local

Credit: Brewers Association

The recent news that the number of breweries in the U.S. reached an all-time high–above 4,000–was proof to some that the craft segment was still on fire. Yet most of these new craft brands will never sell beer very far from their home brewery. Forever small and local, the character of their business is more brewpub than brand-marketer.

• Without wider distribution, most new local breweries add little to craft growth.

 

 

 

 

A note from the seedy side

Recently, the “dive bar” has risen in media mentions and consumer consciousness. It’s not a major trend yet, by any means, but one interesting aspect of these low-brow, retro, blue-collar taverns is the homage they pay to everyman sorts of beer brands: Hamms, Old Style, Ranier, Pabst, and yes, Miller, Bud, and Coors. Could this be the first whiff of a craft-beer counter trend?

• Nothing stays “cool” forever.

Into the future…

To be clear, there will be individual craft-beer brands that flourish and continue to post solid growth. At over 10% of the industry, the craft segment is large and well-established. It will certainly not disappear. But neither will it double in size as some of its starry-eyed enthusiasts predict. They’re busy extending lines on their graphs, so to them, the future will look just like the past.

But as we all know, it never turns out that way.

3 responses to “2016: the year that craft beer stalls”

  1. bj says:

    As stated it’s only a prediction, but the signs are already there in terms of CRAFT, Carlos Brito’s move on SAB & the shaking down of SAB assets put ABInbev in pole position to do what they do best, produce bulk beer to an undiscerning market with all attendant cost reductions that achieves, they are targetting countries/continents where the need for the beer experience is less crucailly defined than in mature markets, the only oddity is that they have retained P. Urquell, maybe to give an ‘In’ to the always hoped acquisition of Budvar.
    Carlos may keep snapping up a US CRAFT Brewer or three or four or mopre, but for everyone they hit more spring up to fuel the demand which is now unquenchable for beers made for flavour & satisfaction, the demise of heavy industries in mature markets has seen off the need for ‘thirst slakers’ downed at the nearest bar to the factory gate, CRAFT brewers like CRAFT distillers are all about innovation & small scale production, Carlos cant get the head around such matters, thinking OK we’ll just take’em out – you cant kill a market like that any more.
    Fraid my view is somewhat the opposite of your analyst, after all when they get it wrong it’s just on to the next…………………………………mine’s a pint please CRAFT please!

    1. Hey Beer Dan says:

      The point of the article is that OVERALL craft growth will stall.

      As to ABI, remember that their cost to brew and distribute–including these expenses on their craft brands–is WAY below what it costs the crafties. If the steep craft retail prices (often more than double what Budweiser or Bud Light sell for) yield craft brewers a margin of “n,” ABI will reap, say, 1.5n on their craft brands. That .5 differential can be applied to reduce retail prices, more aggressively promote, or incentivize distributors. All of these will increase the pressures on craft brewers, particularly the smaller and least efficient among them. This is why so many craft brewers are standing in line to sell to ABI and other BigBeer. They know their internal financial demands, and they can see their best play is to get out now.

      Not to worry, there will always be plenty of craft options out there. For every one that folds, another will take its place. ABI is probably only aiming to get what they consider their “fair share” of craft volume. If I was a betting man, I’d be wagering they’ll do just that.

  2. bj mayo says:

    As stated it’s only a prediction, but the signs are already there in terms of CRAFT, Carlos Brito’s move on SAB & the shaking down of SAB assets put ABInbev in pole position to do what they do best, produce bulk beer to an undiscerning market with all attendant cost reductions that achieves, they are targetting countries/continents where the need for the beer experience is less crucially defined than in mature markets, the only oddity is that they have retained P. Urquell, maybe to give an ‘In’ to the always hoped acquisition of Budvar.
    Carlos may keep snapping up a US CRAFT Brewer or three or four or mopre, but for everyone they hit more spring up to fuel the demand which is now unquenchable for beers made for flavour & satisfaction, the demise of heavy industries in mature markets has seen off the need for ‘thirst slakers’ downed at the nearest bar to the factory gate, CRAFT brewers like CRAFT distillers are all about innovation & small scale production, Carlos cant get the head around such matters, thinking OK we’ll just take’em out – you cant kill a market like that any more.
    Fraid my view is somewhat the opposite of your analyst, after all when they get it wrong it’s just on to the next…………………………………mine’s a pint please CRAFT please!

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