wine

Five Questions With….Bryan McCaw

When I started my consulting business in January, 2009, one of my first clients was WineAlign. Created by Bryan McCaw, WineAlign is an online service that makes it easier to make smart buying decisions at the LCBO (the place where consumers in Ontario have to buy their wine and beer).

Bryan is a dyed-in-the-wool entrepreneur who has bootstrapped WineAlign and been patient and persistent in convincing the rest of the world that WineAlign is a better way to buy wine. In recent months, WineAlign has seen strong growth, suggesting it has started to see hockey stick-like growth. I asked Bryan to provide an update.

Since WA launched, what are some of the biggest start-ups lessons that you have learned?

That’s an interesting question. People assume that start-ups are different than regular businesses, but at the end of the day they are like any other business. The lessons that I have learned over my career are still applicable to WineAlign. Primarily they remain providing a high level of value, service and responsiveness to customers. Staying focused on priorities and applying resource effectively. Creating effective metrics to measure your progress and staying on top of them. Closely managing cash and cash flow, I’ve had to say no more than few times to nice to haves.

With respect to a start-up in the Internet domain, I have learned the following:
- There is no silver bullet for growth. Things don’t go viral. You don’t have 10,000 users on day two. You have to keep plugging away.
- Understanding your customer conversion rates and customer acquisitions costs are critical. If you know it takes $X to acquire a customer you can use that number to make a lot of decisions.
- Google has an amazing suite of free products: Analytics, AdWords, AdManager and Webmaster tools. Use them to manage your business.
- You will always have lots of feedback, as you mature the feedback, while important, is less important than at the beginning of the process. Learn to say no more often as the product matures.
- There are two great government programs available: SR&ED and the relatively new Ontario Interactive Digital Media Tax Credit.

If you had to go back and change anything, what would top your list?

Two things: Software startups are generally run by developers (I am a reformed one myself), who want to incorporate more and more features. These tend to address Wants not Needs and deliver little additional value to 90% of users. Once the core functionality is there, start spending more on marketing. However, when spending on marketing we have found that print ads in traditional media are a waste of money. People have to remember you and then type you in later. When the time is right, a PR program makes more sense.

Can you talk about how WA has powered its marketing efforts? What role does social media play?

We’ve taken a multi-prong approach. Google AdWords has been a great source of customers. Bing is now gaining traction and providing sign ups. By knowing our conversion costs we’ve been able to pay for leads from partners. We use promo codes to entice and track new signups. We also reward members who invite new users.

We’ve done some pretty unique things with Twitter using their search tools and API. We’ve been able reach out to thousands of people in Ontario and let them know about WineAlign. Responses to this out reach have been 99% positive. We have integrated the Facebook LIKE into our site and we automatically forward wine reviews to user’s Twitter streams.

What has subscriber growth been? Has it met your expectations?

Growth has been steady and well below my expectations. Before launch, I was confident that we would have 10,000 users in the first month. With the viral nature of the Internet and the ability to invite friends to a cool new service with a single click, we’d have thousands of users in days. Despite glowing accolades from users it took us 21 months to reach 10,000 users (about 2% of our target market). Growth remains steady at around 7% per month so the number of new users we are adding per month is significant and growing. In fact, we’ve added over a 1,000 users in the last 30 days and have over 11,000.

What’s next for WA? Can you talk about any new features in the pipeline?

We have recently completed support for wines that are NOT carried by the LCBO. This will open up a new world to wine consumers. Only a small portion of the wines available in Ontario are distributed through the LCBO. Mobile is the future. While only 7% of our users have used our mobile website we will be committing more resources to it. Natives apps, barcodes & images are in our future. We want to expand nationally and hope to add another province (or two) in the near future. Expect to see more meet-ups and exclusive events for our community members.

Not Crushed by Vaynerchuk’s “Crush It”

crush itGary Vaynerchuk has emerged as a social media superstar and, in the process, become a popular video-blogger, speaker, social media consultant and author, who snapped up a 10-book contract from Harper Collins.

Vaynerchuk’s first book – actually a novella at 142 pages – is Crush It!. While I admire Vaynerchuk’s energy and passion, Crush It! is, frankly, underwhelming.

It’s not oozing with new or compelling insight or ideas. Crush It!’s biggest shortcoming is its simplistic thesis – the Web is a huge opportunity, and that anyone who has passion, works really hard and generates lots of great content can be successful. It also helps if you spend nearly all your waking hours on the Web. If it was only that easy!

Crush It! strikes me as a pep talk/keynote as opposed to something that offers in-depth perspective or insight.

That said, Crush It! is probably aimed at the mainstream market as opposed to people already immersed in the Web and social media. In addition to the enthusiastic tone, it provides basic information about the tools and how to use them, which is helpful if you’re not particularly Web savvy but, nevertheless, interested in the Web.

Vaynerchuk has lofty ambitions (his ultimate goal is being able to purchase his beloved and playoff-bound New York Jets) so Crush It! could be a good vehicle to move him into the mainstream. For its part, Harper Collins is clearly counting on Vaynerchuk’s popularity and the fact he’s becoming a leading figure in the wine industry – a product that mainstream consumers can easily relate to – to sell a lot of books.

One final thought about Crush It! is how it’s just one of many, many social media books on the market. I’ve got at least six books on my desk from Mitch Joel, Dan Zarella, Darren Barefoot and Dharmsh Shah. Unless you’ve written a book that really does crush it, attracting readers is going to be a huge challenge.

Gary Vaynerchuk’s World Tour Lands in T.O.

IMG_1438Wine entrepreneur Gary Vaynerchuk and his beloved New York Jets were both in Toronto yesterday – two high-profile U.S. entities looking to spread the word: Vaynerchuk about wine and entrepreneurial-ism, and the Jets as part of the world’s most lucrative sports league, the NFL. Vaynerchuk lived up to the hype with an insightful and entertaining presentation at DemoCamp 24, while the Jets and Buffalo Bills put on a lackluster game before a less-than-packed Rogers Centre.

Vaynerchuk, who’s in the midst of a 40-city tour to promote his book “Crush It”, clearly has the gift for the gab, and has been speaking enough over the past couple of years to make it look fairly effortless. His rough around the edges style makes helps him come across as sincere, forthright and someone who most entrepreneurs can probably relate to. Keep in mind, Gary V. is also a consummate salesman, who’s always selling something – be it his new book, social media consulting services, online wine store, and, of course, his personal brand.

While Vaynerchuk has emerged as a social media “superstar” in the past couple of years, he’s far from an overnight success story. He’s been doing business on the Internet since 1997, and grown his family’s wine business, WineLibrary.com, by 20-fold into a $60-million entity.

One thing that Vaynerchuk has going for him in spades is confidence. The guy believes he’s not only the best but that he will not be outworked. “I’m very comfortable in my skin and massively comfortable in my effort,” he said, adding that “I honestly believe no one is better than me, although I don’t try to be a dick about it”. It’s an approach that Vaynerchuk gets away with, although you do have to wonder if more fame will overshadow his everyman persona that seems to keep his cockiness in check.

A particularly interesting comment was that Vaynerchuk’s emergence as a social media star didn’t materialize until online video emerged as a platform that anyone could capitalize on. This let Vaynerchuk launch his video wine reviews, which took the market like a storm. “You have to find your platform to tell your story. I had to let blogging go, which was very frustrating,” he said.

In addition to a 10-book deal with HarperCollins and his daily wine reviews, Vaynerchuk has become a social media consultant whose clients include the National Hockey League. As for what’s next, Vaynerchuk’s dream is buying the New York Jets – a lofty goal but one you wouldn’t want to dismiss as a pipe-dream given Vaynerchuk’s drive.

WineAlign Uncorks Major Milestone

When I started my consulting business last January, one of my first clients was WineAlign.com. It was a start-up created by Bryan McCaw, who wanted to build a service so wine buyers in Ontario could make better and more informed buying decisions at the wine store.

Bryan created WineAlign because he has a passion for wine, and saw a perfect opportunity to launch a service to serve the needs of other people who also love wine. Despite the economic downturn, Bryan decided to bootstrap the business – a classic entrepreneurial decision that, frankly, Canada desperately needs to see more of.

Like many start-ups, WineAlign has been forced to fine-tune the service, try different marketing approaches and refresh its look and feel. At times, I think Bryan has been puzzled why consumers hadn’t flocked to a service that’s so useful – something I totally agree with given WineAlign works really well.

Slowly but surely, however, WineAlign is starting to see signs of significant traction. The company announced yesterday that it now has 5,000 registered users – a major accomplishment that reflects all the hard work that Bryan and his team have done this year.

Now, 5,000 registered users may not seem like a large number but it represents a critical mass who clearly like WineAlign. And, as important, it gives WineAlign a base upon which it can see exponential growth. No one wants to go to a restaurant with no customers even if the food is great, so the fact WineAlign has lots of users should make it easy for lots more people to check out the service.

Here’s a toast to Bryan and the continued growth of WineAlign. Its success reflects Bryan’s vision, perseverance and entrepreneurial passion.

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