
Side project? Craft Yoga!

I agree. Fewer DWG's on labels & monikers.pootz wrote: BTW: Love the marketing graphics/concept....ya got a little Magic Hat #9 retro-psychedelia thing going there...and the 'not quite pale ale' - 'Almost pale ale' thing is excellent. I think this break with status quo beer marketing and style experimentation in the local craft industry is over due and quite welcome
Hey Vet---Thanks for the comments...I guess I should change the ratebeer description at 18 IBUs.... I do take pride in making this beer as good as I can. I have ADD so being down to the less than 1% tweaking (which I am) is not normal for me - It is way more balanced than the first bottle edition....Vet_Fuel wrote:I am really impressed with this beer. It is well balanced and punches well above its 30 IBU weight. Keep up the good work, I think you're really nailed the recipe.
As a packaging graphics dude, I'd like to point out (to certain other ontario brewers especially) that the quality of printing on both the label and the carton is really good. Really good as in superb. The design may not win a PAC award, but it is eye catching and doesn't look like it was created by Mike-in-shipping's cousin, who has CorelDRAW and PowerPoint and a DVD full of crappy fonts.
Your packaging doesn't tell me how good the beer is inside, but it does tell me you care so much about your beer that even the presentation of it has been given real consideration (and money.)
Now please make us an oatmeal stout!
My advice would be primarily to simplify your design.peterchiodo wrote: Hey Vet---Thanks for the comments...I guess I should change the ratebeer description at 18 IBUs.... I do take pride in making this beer as good as I can. I have ADD so being down to the less than 1% tweaking (which I am) is not normal for me - It is way more balanced than the first bottle edition....
So you're a package dude.....The package took about as many permutations as the beer. It literally started as a sketch while my wife went to the grocery store. She took over from there added the words (I can barely speak let alone write coherently) and Bruce our kick-ass illustrator put the whole thing together (He actually is a friend of my sisters). We are the client from hell...revisions, revisions, and revisions.....The night before we burn the plates....more revisions.....
We are starting on the netherworld packaging....Any ideas?
An oatmeal stout, eh? I'm thinking....(evil laughter).
Yours in brewing,
Peter
Unclogger of the overflowing toilets
Flying Monkeys
I have to agree on most points. I don't mind the busy 6 pack. I like that you find new things each time. However a website is a big must IMO. It really connects the customer to the product in this day and age. I would also suggest getting some hats, shirts, sweaters, pint glasses etc. in production as well. I love to support products that I enjoy.Vet_Fuel wrote:peterchiodo wrote: Get your website up, put the URL on every panel and migrate most of the copy on the carton to the website. "If you like the art on this beer, visit flyingmonkeys.com (or whatever it is) and download it for your computer desktop!" Tell your story online, it is a much better way to connect with customers than hoping they spend a lot of time with a folding beer carton on their laps while quaffing your brew.
In marketing parlance, it really helps to enhance the brand experience, if you believe in that sort of thing.
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Just bear in mind that having a cool interactive site is one thing, running "e-commerce" via your website is a whole 'nother thing. Being able to buy your favorite brewery's swag is great but it requires inventory, real and digital infrastructure, and possibly big time cash flow, depending on how much you want to sell and whether you have relationships with manufacturers of the stuff you want to sell. It is not a turnkey operation. If you're not good at it, you can lose a ton of dough - all while you're trying to do the thing you're good at: making beer.Matty D wrote:[
I have to agree on most points. I don't mind the busy 6 pack. I like that you find new things each time. However a website is a big must IMO. It really connects the customer to the product in this day and age. I would also suggest getting some hats, shirts, sweaters, pint glasses etc. in production as well. I love to support products that I enjoy.
For example I enjoy many of the Mill Street offerings and they have a nice website. However they have no online store!! It frustrates me as a consumer because I waited for over a year to stop in to the brewpub to grab a pint glass and shirt. Its a small thing and really has nothing to do with the beer itself but it helps.
swag and micros dont mix IMO. glassware i can get behind but t-shirts.....NOVet_Fuel wrote:Just bear in mind that having a cool interactive site is one thing, running "e-commerce" via your website is a whole 'nother thing. Being able to buy your favorite brewery's swag is great but it requires inventory, real and digital infrastructure, and possibly big time cash flow, depending on how much you want to sell and whether you have relationships with manufacturers of the stuff you want to sell. It is not a turnkey operation. If you're not good at it, you can lose a ton of dough - all while you're trying to do the thing you're good at: making beer.Matty D wrote:[
I have to agree on most points. I don't mind the busy 6 pack. I like that you find new things each time. However a website is a big must IMO. It really connects the customer to the product in this day and age. I would also suggest getting some hats, shirts, sweaters, pint glasses etc. in production as well. I love to support products that I enjoy.
For example I enjoy many of the Mill Street offerings and they have a nice website. However they have no online store!! It frustrates me as a consumer because I waited for over a year to stop in to the brewpub to grab a pint glass and shirt. Its a small thing and really has nothing to do with the beer itself but it helps.
E-commerce can be a huge headache for a small brewer.
I'm not saying don't try it, but you can't do it by half measures. And for god's sake if you do, please don't make a t-shirt like that horrendous full-colour Hobgoblin monstrosity of a couple of Xmases ago. It made the previous design (silver ink on black) seem like a Coco Chanel original. It had easily half a pound of ink on it, rendering it useless even for washing your car.
So what your trying to say is how come Peter, have you not already got an E-commerce site up with an inventory, right?Vet_Fuel wrote:
Just bear in mind that having a cool interactive site is one thing, running "e-commerce" via your website is a whole 'nother thing. Being able to buy your favorite brewery's swag is great but it requires inventory, real and digital infrastructure, and possibly big time cash flow, depending on how much you want to sell and whether you have relationships with manufacturers of the stuff you want to sell. It is not a turnkey operation. If you're not good at it, you can lose a ton of dough - all while you're trying to do the thing you're good at: making beer.
E-commerce can be a huge headache for a small brewer.
I'm not saying don't try it, but you can't do it by half measures. And for god's sake if you do, please don't make a t-shirt like that horrendous full-colour Hobgoblin monstrosity of a couple of Xmases ago. It made the previous design (silver ink on black) seem like a Coco Chanel original. It had easily half a pound of ink on it, rendering it useless even for washing your car.
Sorry man, but I have to disagree with you. For small & indie companies with little or no marketing budget, shirts/hats/etc. are often their best form of advertising. They're much like indie bands in that regard.matt7215 wrote:swag and micros dont mix IMO. glassware i can get behind but t-shirts.....NO