Some wholesaler stuff
I've been hearing a lot of -- well, a lot of crap from anti-privatization interests (which pretty much means PLCB bureaucrats, UFCW members, Democrat legislators, a couple social conservative Republican legislators, and...no, actually, that's about it) about how the wholesaling's going to be terrible under privatization (and if HB11 stays the way it is, it may well be, but that can -- and better! -- change before it's voted on), and how big stores are going to crush mom and pops and leave us with no choice (like we have a lot now). 
This ignores, of course, what actually happens in states where private liquor sales are the norm -- like New Jersey, New York, Massachusetts -- and all kinds of stores thrive and the selection's just fine; real good, in fact, at many stores. Not all, but you don't have a great selection of groceries at every store that sells groceries, right? There's selection, there's specialization, there's price, and there's convenience to be considered. 
Anyway, I was thinking about this when I saw this interview with Michael Binstein in Shanken News Daily [full disclosure: my major client, Malt Advocate, is owned by M.Shanken Communications...for what that's worth], the owner of the big Binny's chain of booze stores in Illinois. They have 25 stores, and the selection is tremendous; love going there when I'm in Chicagoland. 
I saw some pertinent stuff that I wanted to share.  Please notice: Binstein is bullish about expanding, not keeping a cap on his number of stores. He sees competition, and meets it (without the help of the state police). And he sees opportunity for wholesalers who want to work hard, and for small retailers. This is a smart guy, who knows the market, and is successful in it. Probably ought to give what he's saying some consideration.
This is not the whole interview.
SND: In the last four years, you’ve  expanded from 19 stores to  25 stores, mostly through acquisition during  a very difficult economy.  Has your investment paid off?  Binstein: The  honest answer is that the investment is paying  off. Time is the  ultimate test, and one needs a certain amount of  humility. But there’s  not a single acquisition, store opening or  expansion of our model that I  would take back.
SND: How big a player are you in the greater Chicago market?     Binstein: I’m told we’re the largest independent in the Midwest, and certainly the largest independent in Illinois.
SND: Who do you consider to be your biggest competitor in your market?  Binstein: This  is going to sound like a cliché, but I think  anyone and everyone who  holds a liquor license is competition, and there  are tens of thousands  of people who do. Convenience should not be  underestimated. We may have  the selection, we may have the best price,  but with gasoline nearing  $5 a gallon, people have to make tough  decisions. Every player at every  trade channel has a contribution to  make. So there’s not a competitor  that I minimize.
SND: Do you have any plans to expand to other states?  Binstein: We’re  keeping an open mind. We certainly have  looked, and there are  opportunities. But there are so many places within  our market, so many  communities and areas where we still think we could  open a store. I  think we’d like to finish Illinois before moving on.
  SND: How are your relations currently with major suppliers?
  Binstein: They  can get very ideological—if not  theological—about pricing. I think a  bottle of wine, or liquor or beer,  is like all commodities. It’s no  different from selling soybeans, corn  or wheat. It has a price, and  it’s based on supply and demand, and it  ebbs and flows in every market.  Just as the corn, soybean or wheat  broker or farmer can’t get too  ideological or theological about what a  bushel should cost, the same  goes for our business. One of the oxymorons  in our business is  something called price integrity, when suppliers  believe something  should cost $20 or $30 and they don’t really care what  the customer  thinks it should cost. I think that’s a very myopic,  unprogressive way  of looking at business. This is not a very popular  thing to say.
  SND: How about wholesalers?
  Binstein: There  are bad retailers and there are bad  wholesalers. There are lazy  retailers and there are lazy wholesalers.  I’ll leave it at that, but I  will say that I think wholesalers have an  opportunity, a very unique  opportunity, to make themselves even more  indispensable in this era of  consolidation, because suppliers are  looking for foster parents.  Suppliers are no longer the primary  caretakers of a brand. They may  actually possess the birth certificate  for the brand, but they need  other people to nurture, raise and educate  the brand. The suppliers  have gotten away from brand-building, and now  it falls more and more to  the wholesaler and retailer to build those  brands and fill that void.
   SND: Are  there still opportunities for small entrepreneurs in  beverage alcohol  retailing? Can a small, single-unit store survive and  thrive in today’s  climate?
  Binstein: Absolutely. There’s never an  opportunity to  overcharge and under-deliver. As long as we’re not using  code language  to ask the question, “Is it still okay to work at  outrageous margins and  not give people the selection they deserve?”  There should have never  been that opportunity, and there isn’t that  opportunity now. There’s  room for the Davids and the Goliaths. And they  both need each other.
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
are you as dumb as you look with a camera on your head. the move to privatize is simply to put money in the hands of certain people. and has nothing to do with the good of all the people.
ReplyDeletewashington state was bought. and costco plan to put 20 items or so in there stores 20 items you kidding. this for a vendor who sell to washington state. thats not progress. modernize the stores because that is the way of the future. and as a reporter you should look at both sides and let the readers come to there own conclusions.
ReplyDeleteTony, please keep posting, you are doing good for the cause of privatization.
ReplyDeleteLook, you say Washington State was bought...I got news for you: the wholesalers were trying to buy the vote in the other direction (and spent almost $13 million to Costco's $20 million). They were trying to buy it too; they just got out-bid. Costco's not going to put "20 items" in their stores; if you believe your "vendor who sell to washington state" on that, either you're stoned, or you're misunderstanding him. Have you ever BEEN to a Costco? This is like the people who were telling us that when Wegmans got the license to sell beer it would be all Bud Light. Well...it ain't. Wegmans has a fantastic beer selection. These places are profit-driven, and there's a lot of money to be made on premium stuff; that's where the market's headed right now.
You're also suffering under an illusion: I'm not a reporter, this isn't a newspaper. It's a blog, and it's clearly aimed at one side (as much as the UFCW's site is aimed at the other). That said, I do try to look at both sides, but not ones that are made-up BS fantasy. "20 items or so," forsooth! If that happens, I'll personally travel to Washington and buy one of each, wrap 'em up in a basket with a bow and give it to you.
If you want "the way of the future," it sure ain't the 75-year-old failed experiment of Control.