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NakedWines.com - Disrupting the Wine Industry?
內容大綱
In late spring 2013, Nakedwines.com (NWC) founder and CEO Rowan Gormley brought his team together to prioritize initiatives and formulate a strategy. Five years earlier, Gormley and other Virgin Wines' veterans founded NWC in the United Kingdom, with significant backing from a German family wine company. Naked Wines' business model involved raising money directly from subscribers via the Internet, using these revenues to fund winemakers around the world, who in turn created new brands, which were consigned to NWC and then sold directly via the Internet to subscribers ("Angels") at a discount and to non-subscribers at a premium. Some industry observers considered NWC's business model "disruptive" with respect to how wine was traditionally marketed and sold, i.e. via distributors and retailers. Others opined that NWC was little more than a traditional wine club that used crowdfunding and social media technologies. NWC expanded to Australia and the United States in 2012, at which time NWC leased a Napa office and a Kenwood (Sonoma), California winery for wine production, storage, shipment, and wine tastings. NWC's Angels, who represented 95 percent of NWC's customers, had exclusive access to a mobile application to rate and purchase wines. By spring 2013, NWC had reached breakeven, signed up over 100,000 Angels, and forecasted reaching 200,000 Angels and $96 million in sales by year's end. While NWC's management was pondering which of the initiatives deserved the highest priority (acquiring new customers, retaining customers, or rethinking the mobile app strategy), the most pressing issues involved capacity and capital to grow. The case is intended as a lead-off case for a strategic management course, but also works well in information technology courses.