Blog Visitors and Vineyard Visits.

I want to change the way winemakers think about participation in social media. I want them to stop treating twitter and facebook like some alien ritual that just goes against the grain of their character. I need them to start thinking about social media the same way they think about every other kind of social interaction.

If you drop in on an independent winemaker, they will generally greet you and offer a tasting of their wines. I’m pretty sure this is standard expectation. When somebody calls you because they read about your wine somewhere, you are expected to do a tasting with them. And you don’t just quietly pour. Most winemakers who acknowledge this expectation to a tasting will also take the time to talk about who they are, why they make wine, and so on. If I’m way off base, let me know in the comments. But I’m pretty sure this is standard fare. If one or two people drop by the winery while the winemaker is there, a large majority of winemakers will take some time with those visitors.

How much time? Even if a single person comes by, I’ll often spend over an hour with them showing the winery, the vines, and talking about winemaking. Even the speedy “gift shop tour” where I just taste bottled wines with them will generally take a good half hour. And I think most independent winemakers are happy to spend this time. 30 minutes for one dude.

Having a little facebook fan page that you update a few times a week will also take about 30 minutes here and there. But a well-groomed fan page will receive hundreds of visitors per week. You see where I’m going with this?

analytics
This O’Vineyards website, which consists of a few photos and some sporadic thoughts from the winemaker probably takes me a solid four hours per week. It received 1461 unique visitors in the last 30 days. So for about 16 hours of work, I got to communicate my message to 1400+ people.

Now a significant difference is that these web visitors aren’t necessarily buying wine. The normal expectation is that when you spend 30 minutes with “avertis” wine lovers who swing by the vineyard, they will buy some wine and make it “worth your time”.

But it doesn’t make sense to give up 30 minutes just for a few small 6-bottle sales. Our time is worth more than that! The real benefit of those people who take the time to visit us is that they go home and tell everybody else how wonderful their visit was. It’s good old fashioned social networking. Sans internet.

Some winemakers are shocked at the amount of time and energy I put into the Love That Languedoc wine blog (and to an extent this website). I sometimes spend whole days traveling and filming. And even the off days, I frequently spend 1-2 hours reading other cool stuff on the Internet to be on top of the buzz. It’s a huge time commitment. So why do it?

Because people want me to and it’s pretty fun.

We all have a chance to get thousands of people to visit our websites and facebook pages and twitter accounts and everything else. That’s an amazing opportunity. If I called a winemaker in the region and told him I had a group of 150 people who want to visit tomorrow, that winemaker should naturally want to make some time for them. The Internet is no different. 150 visitors deserve your time. Hell, 10 visitors deserve your time.

So stop saying that the Internet is not for you! Get typing. A few minutes per day just sharing your thoughts and developments around the vineyard might get you a steady flow of visitors. And that has a lot of value.

Agree or disagree? Please feel free (obliged to?) comment!

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  1. caryl Says:

    Very interesting, Ryan. I am sure you are right, but …. Our hands are full enough as it is. If we’re supposed to be winegrowers, why are we spending so much time on the road/at the airport/on the internet – and now you want us to do a Facebook page as well ?? We also have vineyards to run, grapes to grow and wine to make, not to mention those real-live visitors to share all the above with. Quite honestly, most small family-run vineyards haven’t the manpower, the desire or the ability – but most crucially, haven’t the time to spend so much of it on the internet. OK, you’ve convinced me and we’ll give it a go — one day, when we have 30 minutes to spare !

  2. mroconnell Says:

    Oh I’m glad you’re convinced. But with a quasi-blog and a twitter you’re already in the 99th percentile. Keep it up, Caryl. And take that airline time to write posts that you will just type up later ;D

  3. Iris Says:

    and working in the vineyard leaves a lot of time, to think about nice stories to tell, believe me, Caryl;-)! And a small pocket-camera is easy to take with you, to take hold of what you would like to show to your customer-friends – it may say more about bio-diversity, states of your grapes or any other detail, than a lot of words and is the right thing, to keep your facebook account or a tweet-photo account easily going.

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