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Still Building - The Business of Craft Spirits

Still Building - The Business of Craft Spirits

Auteur(s): Samuel D. Long
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Corning Company is revolutionizing the craft spirits industry by solving major distribution challenges that prevent small, independent distilleries from reaching consumers. Their innovative platform serves as a vital bridge connecting craft brands with consumers, retailers, and distributors through an approach rooted in their remarkable 140-year history as America's largest pre-Prohibition whiskey producer.

© 2025 Still Building - The Business of Craft Spirits
Gestion et leadership Économie
Épisodes
  • How Spirits Became Brands And Built Culture
    Oct 26 2025

    Fraud, folklore, and a blue bottle: we map the unlikely journey from anonymous barrels to belief-driven brands—and what that means for what you pour tonight. We start where spirits had no logos, no labels, and trust lived with your local merchant. As railroads stretched supply chains and scandals spread, the sealed bottle became a promise of purity, and trademarks gave that promise legal teeth. Names like Old Forester and Johnnie Walker built a new kind of consistency, even turning bottle shapes into signals you could read at a glance.

    The story accelerates after Prohibition’s upheaval. Survivors wrapped themselves in heritage and respectability, while global players courted sophistication and escape. With postwar mass media, spirits marketing sold status as much as flavor—Smirnoff recast vodka as clean and modern, and Absolut transformed packaging into pop art. That same corporate polish, though, sparked pushback. Premiumization rose on the demand for provenance, age statements, and scarcity. Design became a form of proof: Bombay Sapphire’s blue glass, Maker’s Mark’s wax, Patrón’s hefty silhouette—all cues that turned packaging, story, and ritual into one experience.

    Today’s center of gravity is belief. Transparency beats myth; consumers want to know who made the liquid, where it came from, and why the brand deserves a place in their lives. We unpack contract distilling without the euphemisms, and highlight how labels like Uncle Nearest stitch cultural accountability into product and purpose. Four mandates emerge for modern builders and curious drinkers alike: earn trust with real sourcing, use design to signal values, tell a relevant story, and deliver experiences that community can verify. We close by peering ahead to AI-powered personalization, direct-to-consumer storytelling, and ultra-premium RTDs—all pointing to one truth: the next great spirits brand won’t just tell a story; it will build a community around a shared value.

    If this deep dive reshaped how you see your bar cart, follow the show, share it with a friend who loves a good label, and leave a review with the bottle that best lives its values.

    More information about Corning & Company is available at https://www.corningandcompany.com

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    13 min
  • Inside the Paradox: Why More Craft Distilleries Share Less of the Market
    Oct 7 2025

    The shelf looks like a renaissance—rows of elegant bottles, local labels, and stories that sparkle—but the numbers tell a tougher truth. We unpack why craft distilleries keep multiplying while their overall share of the U.S. spirits market shrinks, and how a tiny top tier within “craft” captures a disproportionate slice of volume. From wage spikes and glass shortages to barrel scarcity and cash flow strain, we trace how rising costs collide with a crowded field that can’t simply hike prices without losing precious placements.

    We also open the black box of distribution. The three-tier system, born to fight monopoly power after Prohibition, now funnels small brands through consolidated gatekeepers with steep margins, long contracts, and franchise laws that make switching partners a slog. Meanwhile, wine ships DTC to most of the country while spirits are stuck in single digits, despite strong consumer demand for direct buying. Compliance adds friction too, as the TTB’s one-size-fits-all paperwork burden treats tiny producers like industrial giants.

    There’s hope in the playbook of the adaptors. We spotlight a nimble brand reviving a regional name, finishing sourced whiskey in local wine barrels to stand out without massive capital outlays, and stitching together modern channels: self-distribution where legal, tech platforms that bridge to national wholesalers, and retailer-fulfilled e-commerce that navigates state lines. The marketing shift is trade-first—targeted buyer lists, useful product info, and direct access that beats waiting for an overextended distributor rep.

    The takeaway is clear: great liquid is table stakes. Growth now depends on operational agility—finance, supply chain, compliance, and channel strategy—paired with policy that fits the 21st century. If you care about variety, local craftsmanship, and fair access to market, this is a conversation worth your time. If you learned something new, follow the show, leave a review, and share this episode with a friend who loves a good pour. What reform would you champion first?

    More information about Corning & Company is available at https://www.corningandcompany.com

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    19 min
  • Bottle Battlefield: How Tiny Distillers Fight Goliath Distributors
    Aug 13 2025

    The small-batch spirits revolution has captivated American drinkers, but behind the beautiful bottles and artisanal methods lies a complex reality for the smallest independent producers. These micro-distilleries—making fewer than 5,300 cases annually—operate in a business landscape fundamentally different from their larger counterparts.

    What makes these craft producers unique is their hyper-localized distribution model. A staggering 93% of their sales happen either directly at their distillery (47.7%) or through wholesale channels within their home state (45.4%). This localization creates passionate brand loyalists but also exposes producers to significant market vulnerabilities. Despite strong consumer interest in authentic, handcrafted spirits, these small producers face nearly insurmountable barriers to broader distribution.

    The challenges are structural and pervasive. On-premise accounts require established distributor relationships that small brands typically lack. Retail shelf space, the "real estate" of the spirits world, heavily favors national brands with existing relationships and volume. Most devastating is the e-commerce landscape—direct-to-consumer shipping for spirits is legally permitted in only seven states plus DC, effectively blocking national online sales potential. Without strategic partnerships and specialized services that handle logistics, compliance, and sales infrastructure, these small producers remain trapped in their local markets regardless of product quality.

    Looking toward the future, success for these craft distillers may not be measured by national ubiquity but by creating meaningful, deep connections within specific communities. The question becomes provocative: is the future of craft spirits less about getting everywhere and more about being incredibly meaningful somewhere? For enthusiasts seeking authentic spirits experiences, this hyperlocal approach might actually enhance rather than limit the magic of craft distilling.

    More information about Corning & Company is available at https://www.corningandcompany.com

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    11 min
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