Fine wine is not big wine, says Mondavi| Print |Industry NewsWritten by Graham Holter
Thursday, 29 April 2010 Major corporations are not capable of success in the fine wine
market, according to Michael Mondavi.Mondavi, a scion of the Californian wine dynasty who
now runs Folio Wines, told the Fine Wine 2010 conference in Ribera del Duero that only
independent or family businesses had the passion to succeed at this level."When big
corporations enter, those brands lose their passion, those brands lose their style. The
chief financial officer starts making winemaking decisions," he said."I had the
partial luxury of running a publicly-owned company [Robert Mondavi] for 11 years. The
ability to ask the question ´how do I make better wines - what´s the right thing to do?´
evaporates."You start talking to the chief financial officer and ask the question
´how do I improve earnings?´, not `how do I make better wines?´, `how do I improve the
return on
assets?´, not `how do I establish a better quality vineyard for 10 or 20 years from
now?´."The questions that CEOs are forced to ask are quite different to the questions
that independent proprietors take in running their own businesses."Wines in the
consumer product arena are ideal for corporate ownership but when you move from that style
of wine to fine wine it´s passion and dedication that´s needed."Mondavi also
criticised the role of retailers."One thing that frustrated me at Robert Mondavi was
when I sold Woodbridge in 2004 we were selling in excess of 10 million cases a year,"
he said. "In calling on the customers in the 1970s we sold the wines by talking about
the quality of the wine and delivering quality."When we were selling wine in the
2000s we would go to the buyer of the supermarket chain. They didn´t care about tasting
the wine, they didn´t care about the style of the wine. They wanted to see if the
packaging looked good, what was the
deal."Fine Wine 2010 is a summit of leading authorities from the wine world, taking
place this week in Spain.