BEIJING, April 28 (Xinhuanet) -- Looking to battle
back against New World winemakers that have lured wine lovers and gained market
share with hip marketing campaigns, quality assurances and label information
about what's inside the bottle, tradition-bound French winemakers are
considering screw tops.
Screw tops, boxed wines, colorful easy-to-understand
labels and sophisticated marketing ! innovations pioneered by countries like
Australia and South Africa ! are making inroads in tradition-bound France.
"We didn't see the danger coming from the New World !
where competition came with a completely new approach to wine making," said
Renaud Gaillard, deputy head of the French Federation of Wine and Spirits
Exporters. "Finally we understood we had to change not only production but also
the way the product is presented. We had to make the buying process easier."
The screw-top revolution was inspired as much by
practical considerations as by consumer preference. Increased demand on cork
suppliers has forced manufacturers to harvest immature cork, which some suspect
causes oxidization.
While some argue that wines requiring more oxygen as
they age require an old-fashioned cork, many winemakers are turning to more
reliable seals for all but their heaviest reds.
Back in 2001, a bleak report on the state of the
French wine industry written for the Agriculture Ministry urged winemakers to
lose the snobbish attitude and be more attentive to consumers. The 80-page
document included a five-point lesson in marketing for beginners: product,
price, promotion, packaging and place.
Bottles are starting to look different. Some
old-fashioned labels with grainy pictures of wine chateaux are going out,
replaced with bright colors, brand names and innovations once unheard of such as
printing directly onto the bottle.
Small producers are combining to market their wines.
The pink butterfly embedded in the bottle of Fruite Catalan has helped make
Vignerons Catalans en Roussillon ! three groups of producers who together
created the brand ! an export hit. Their wine also is winning awards at home.
(Agencies)