Field?Field beer is a ******* GABF category? Bwahahaha. Cue the Fonz on water skis gif.
Just some shopIs this a thing? Or just something some shop offered?
Apaprently for beers with ingredients grown in fields. Oh wait, that's all beer. It must be beer with stupid **** in it.Field?
I looked this up-- coconuts count because, um...ok.Apaprently for beers with ingredients grown in fields. Oh wait, that's all beer. It must be beer with stupid **** in it.
Says chili beers should go in the chili beer category, and then uses a chili beer as an example of the style.
Shops across the country do that year round. They hoard special releases for the "on season" of beer buying.I don't understand why all the beer shops around Denver stock away and save special releases for GABF week...what, you want to cater to the once a year crowd instead of the people who shop there every week? I just don't get the reasoning behind that.
Shops across the country do that year round. They hoard special releases for the "on season" of beer buying.
You thought Denver would be any different?
For high end, specialty beer purchases, of course there is. Holidays, major influx of visitors, etc.I don't understand what this means. What is the "on season" of beer buying? Does that imply that there is an off season?
Now the shitlords have a reason for reselling it at $300.$60 for BCBS Rare. I can't even.
I was thinking that it's still worth trying to win the lottery for it, since you can resell one of your 3 bottles on my beer cellar and make money off of the whole thing.Now the shitlords have a reason for reselling it at $300.
It also comes with a wooden box, that has to be worth at least $20 bucks
GABF should be renamed GABCJ.
*patiently waits for goose island to brew a pumpkin bourbon county brand stout w/ all spice*
Neckbeards suddenly embrace a strong, longstanding secret desire to wear yoga pants and Uggs.
For high end, specialty beer purchases, of course there is. Holidays, major influx of visitors, etc.
Denver gets a massive influx of visitors thanks to GABF. Shops would be silly not hold back "special releases" in preperation for this once year, sudden influx of neckbeards clamoring for the beer they've read about, but have never tried. .
The end of the year holiday seasons applies the same principles.
Why would they be silly to not hold them back? That makes zero sense. Would those beers not sell otherwise? Of course they would. So why does it make sense to sell them to someone who is going to the store once, pick up the special release, and not shop there again compared to selling it to a local/regular who will buy that same special release AND then come back and buy the regular beer that stores rely on selling to make money and stay open? Your point might make sense if the beers wouldn't sell otherwise, but they do. Nothing you've written explains why it makes sense to cater to once a year buyers over regular shoppers.
It's so the ****-hype train can blow its horn louder while everyone is around to watch. Everyone goes back to bumfuckwherever and says 'OMG guys, Deeenver has such awesome beer'... Otherwise they will just go home, look around, and say 'meh, That place has some good stuff but it isn't that much different than here'
Basically the whole 'if a tree falls in the neckbeard forest and no one is there to hear it - does anyone give a ****?'
It takes effort to create and hype illusions people. Political science 101.
Visitors are more likely to purchase more expensive singles (that $40 bottle that's been sitting on your local shop's shelf for three months? An out-of-towner is going to buy it) after having been drawn in by a special release. People who are traveling for beer are more likely to review a shop online, more likely to recommend it to other visitors, and generally your locals are going to continue coming in regardless of whether you hold releases until a specific time. Plus, it gets you local press, which can increase your existing customer base.
My store held back some Lambic and put them out on the shelf on first day of SFBeer week. I walked in as first customer and bought them all.Why would they be silly to not hold them back? That makes zero sense. Would those beers not sell otherwise? Of course they would. So why does it make sense to sell them to someone who is going to the store once, pick up the special release, and not shop there again compared to selling it to a local/regular who will buy that same special release AND then come back and buy the regular beer that stores rely on selling to make money and stay open? Your point might make sense if the beers wouldn't sell otherwise, but they do. Nothing you've written explains why it makes sense to cater to once a year buyers over regular shoppers.
It's not really that, I think. Denver obviously sees a huge influx of tourists this time of year who are specifically looking for beer. If they hold back their special stuff, that's creating the thought "I definitely need to go back to (enter bottle shop name here) when I go to GABF again next year, cause they had hella great beers!" (person saying this theoretical statement is clearly from Northern CA).I guess the part I'm missing is why a bottle shop in Denver cares what someone in another state thinks about Denver's beer selection
It's not really that, I think. Denver obviously sees a huge influx of tourists this time of year who are specifically looking for beer. If they hold back their special stuff, that's creating the thought "I definitely need to go back to (enter bottle shop name here) when I go to GABF again next year, cause they had hella great beers!" (person saying this theoretical statement is clearly from Northern CA).
It's marketing, plain and simple.
I understand that thought process. But why do that with the person who will come back once a year, as in your example, versus a local who can buy that same beer and say "I definitely need to go back next week, and the week after that, and every week after that to buy my staples and look for more limited stuff." I get that it's marketing, it's just not a marketing strategy that makes sense to me compared to the alternative.