buying wine on a sunday uk

A welcome change of direction for this important UK retailer? Justin Howard-Sneyd at the Laithwaites store of the UK�s most successful wine retailers is Laithwaites. in 1969 by Tony Laithwaite and his wife Barbara (who still own the company), their big break came in 1973 when they launched the SundayThe business grew and grew, and Laithwaite developed a shrewd understanding of direct mail, the means by which the company grew, assisted also by the patronage of Hugh Johnson. wine love, I must admit to having been a Laithwaites sceptic. I admire their mastery of marketing and direct mail, I have largely been unconvinced by their wines.We go direct to the producer to unearth small parcels of special wine and by cutting out the middleman we save youWe send in a consultant winemaker, buy clean but cheap wines, dress them up to look like more expensive wines (almost all the wines are exclusive private labels), and then list them at a

I�m an open-minded fellow, and so I happily agreed to meet with Justin Howard-Sneyd, 9 months into his new job as Global Wine Director, and Becca Reeves, six months into her new job as buyer, along with head of PR, Kate Diggle, to hear about changes takingWe gathered at the new flagship store in Vinopolis, near London Bridge. has changed a lot in the last three years,� says Justin. it needed to, because Direct Wines (the company that owns Laithwaites, as well as Averys and Virgin Wines) had been going through a sticky patch. Some investment decisions hadn�t paid off: a big new warehouse resulted in logistics troubles which meant thatAnd the wines weren�t as good as they should have been: the company was stretching the business model just a(In 2008 Laithwaites posted a loss of �5.5 things have been changing under new CEO Simon McMurtrie. McMurtrie was brought in as a consultant to help Laithwaites spread to other countries, but Tony Laithwaite was so impressed he hired

Justin describes McMurtrie as �an incrediblySimon is not afraid to do what he wants at pace � it�s very refreshing.� shook up things a bit, and made some personnel changes. Justin, as well as Becca, and the quality of the buying has�It�s turning us into a credible wine merchant as well as a mail order company,� says Justin. �There are still a few wines in our range that I�m not super-proud of, but they will be going.� He adds, �I�m ever more excited by the potential, knowing we are going in the right direction.� surprised when I heard Justin had left Waitrose to move toBut the advantage of a direct-to-customer business like this is that there is a proper channel of communication with theIt�s possible to tell them stories about the wines they buy, and suggest that they try new things in a way that simply isn�t possible in a supermarket where the only interface with the customer is the wine bottle sitting on the shelf.

important reason I made the shift was the ability to connect with�The most important thing is the trust of our customers: we have a great relationship.�There are close to 1 million customers who have bought wine in the last year, and of these half are regulars. regulars is strong and steady, but there is a portion of the customer base who buy just one or two cases and then stop, and they are replaced by 200 000 new customers who are recruited each year. Wines and Averys, also part of the Direct Wines empire, are run autonomously: the buying, marketing and logistics are all separate. Virgin Wines is being rolled out to Australia and the USA soon. is currently growing abroad. 70% of business is in the UK, but now some 25% is in the USA. They acquired Lionstone in Illinois in June 2006, which has helped them get a strong foothold in the notoriously tricky US market, with its three tier distribution system. with The Wall Street Journal has been successful, and now

Laithwaites operate in 37 US states with a turnover of $100 million. The remaining 5% of business is in Australia, Hong Kong, Germany and the UK, half to two-thirds of business is continuity: people who take a case a quarter, with a cost of �75�79 a time. have introduced a �99 �Discover Better� case, which has proven extremely popular and went 35% over forecast. primarily a mail-order business, the website now accounts for 35% of sales (although most people will have seen the wines advertised in a print publication), and there are 11 shops, mainly spread across the southeast in quiet suburban locations. They act as a showcase of the mission in retailing is to lift wine from being just a product,��When someone reads a really good book, they have aLaithwaites are in a position to do this with tasted a small selection of wines from their range, and despite my initial scepticism, came away impressed. It seems that things are

There�s quite a way to go, but a start Pequena 2008 Douro, Portugal Made by Jorge Borges at Quinta do Passadouro. bright with cherry fruit backed up by a savoury, mineral edge andSimple and fruity but with Douro typicity and a hint of seriousness: I really like this wine, and it�s great Casali Lambrusco Grasparossa 2009 Italy This is a top quality sparkling red Lambrusco, weighing in at 11.5% alcohol, and with sweet cherry and plum fruit backed up by good acidity, as well as some fizziness. Brilliant fun and actually quite food friendly, finishing dry. das Bou�as Loureiro 2009 Vinho Verde, Portugal Fruity and appealing with some mineral freshness on the nose. Bright, crisp mineral palate with good fruit precision and some pearA nice fresh wine. Lang Riesling QbA 2009 Rheingau, Germany Attractive fruity, lemony nose. The palate is crisp, fresh and bright with citrus fruit and a nice long finish. A hint of sweetness

rounds things off nicely. Cabernet/Castel�o 2008 Terras do Sado, Portugal Made by Jaime Quenderas at Ermelinda Freitas. cherryish and bright with lovely sweet, pure, focused fruit. a deliciously pure, fruity wine of real appeal. Barbera Montepulciano 2008 VdT, Italy An unusual blend but it works brilliantly. fruit with a delicious spicy intensity to it. Ripe but savoury and mouthfilling, this is a bit of a bargain. A blend of fruit from91/100 (�7.99 Laithwaites, currently on offer The Back Road Carignan 2008 Swartland, South Africa Bright, sweet, fresh dark cherry, plum and blackberry fruitThe palate is sweet and fruity with lovely density and niceOak is present, but it�s not overdone. Hills Pinot Noir 2009 Adelaide Hills, AustraliaVery open sweet cherry and berry fruit nose with a subtle leafy edge. The palate is generous, ripe and plummy with a lovely sappy edge. This is quite elegant, and at this priceGrown-up Pinot Noir at a great price.