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Consider this part of your marketing budget. The profitability should come as building customer loyalty.
Just held our first public cupping at one of our accounts this last week. We went over all the SCAA details but did the cupping with one sample of each coffee tasted in front of the person, and strayed from the standards a bit. Did 3 samples total, and everyone was able to do a sampling of their own, their own samples, own breaking, etc.
We broke from the norm and made it a bit more sanitary simply because we thought that was a nicer presentation, but it definitely took a little more time to set up.
This particular account just won a poll for "best coffee" in our community, so it was a very appropriate place for us to lead the cupping, and it definitely seemed to foster some great relationships between the owners and their customers.
Afterwards, $5 of the $10 cost for the event that evening was used towards coffee purchases, and I think they sold about 5 pounds of the coffee we arrived with for the evening.
One word of caution - we do this professionally as "coffee people", but I would maybe not do too many events, maybe not even a weekly event UNLESS your metro area is very populated and you always have ready participants. It is nice to leave a little mystery to the average coffee drinker as to what it is we coffee people do behind the scenes, but that's simply my opinion. I like presenting the romance of coffee, but leaving it a little mysterious, too :)
So you had people pre-register and pay in advance for an event? How was your turn out. We're not in a major metropolitan area but we do stay consistently busy till close.
Troy Lucas said:Just held our first public cupping at one of our accounts this last week. We went over all the SCAA details but did the cupping with one sample of each coffee tasted in front of the person, and strayed from the standards a bit. Did 3 samples total, and everyone was able to do a sampling of their own, their own samples, own breaking, etc.
We broke from the norm and made it a bit more sanitary simply because we thought that was a nicer presentation, but it definitely took a little more time to set up.
This particular account just won a poll for "best coffee" in our community, so it was a very appropriate place for us to lead the cupping, and it definitely seemed to foster some great relationships between the owners and their customers.
Afterwards, $5 of the $10 cost for the event that evening was used towards coffee purchases, and I think they sold about 5 pounds of the coffee we arrived with for the evening.
One word of caution - we do this professionally as "coffee people", but I would maybe not do too many events, maybe not even a weekly event UNLESS your metro area is very populated and you always have ready participants. It is nice to leave a little mystery to the average coffee drinker as to what it is we coffee people do behind the scenes, but that's simply my opinion. I like presenting the romance of coffee, but leaving it a little mysterious, too :)
Nick,
I agree with Ryan Wilbur in what he stated:
"I think that teaching a customer to cup coffee is a bit arbitrary as opposed to just a general side-by-side tasting... More so, where could we be if instead of getting hung up on public cuppings we went crazy for teaching people how to make amazing coffee with slow brew methods?"
I think as we, at LRC, progress in helping our clients develop their customer base and fan loyalty, we will likely be progressing to the "art of brewing" versus the "discombobulated process that is quasi-coffee-cupping with untrained professionals."
Great discussion that developed at Coffeed.com.
Troy
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