Regional Identity and the Reputation of Willamette Valley Wines: A Multiple Stakeholder Assessment

Similar documents
Wines of Oregon. What we will cover today: 4/19/2019. From Blueberry Supreme to Voodoo Vintners

Supply & Demand for Lake County Wine Grapes. Christian Miller Lake County MOMENTUM April 13, 2015

Results from the First North Carolina Wine Industry Tracker Survey

The Economic Impact of Wine and Grapes in Lodi 2009

Marketing Seminar I Oregon Wine Symposium. Bulls eye! Developing Your Brand Identity and Targeted Distribution Strategy. Moderator

Reputation Tapping: Examining Consumer Response to Wine Appellation Information

Price Effects of Establishing a New Sub-AVA within Oregon s Willamette Valley AVA*

WILLAMETTE VALLEY AVA (northern)

2017 Media Kit. # Vees Drive Penticton, British Columbia Pentictonwineinfo.com

1) What proportion of the districts has written policies regarding vending or a la carte foods?

Running Head: MESSAGE ON A BOTTLE: THE WINE LABEL S INFLUENCE p. 1. Message on a bottle: the wine label s influence. Stephanie Marchant

Lange Estate Winery and Vineyards

EVANGELISM AND THE AMAZING SPREAD OF QUALITY REPUTATION OF ONTARIO WINEMAKING

TEXAS WINE INDUSTRY OVERVIEW. Texas

DUNDEE, OREGON. Grower First

Maria McCandless Guide to the Salud! Papers

WE ARE PINOT NOIR. TABLE OF CONTENTS. THE HISTORY THE PLACE AVAs & SOILS CONTACT

Shaping the Future: Production and Market Challenges

Oregon Wine Industry Sustainable Showcase. Gregory V. Jones

Conjunctive Labeling: What and Why? Mendocino County Conjunctive Labeling Educational Forum November 29, 2018

1. Continuing the development and validation of mobile sensors. 3. Identifying and establishing variable rate management field trials

Expressions of Interest:

AIRLIE WINERY SIT, SIP, STAY

Southern Oregon Wine Institute

THE ECONOMIC IMPACT OF BEER TOURISM IN KENT COUNTY, MICHIGAN

2018 Hill Texas Hill Country Wine Scholarship Recipients

THE ECONOMIC IMPACT OF MODEL WINERIES IN TEXAS. Industry Report

Vineyard Properties. Vimark. Premier property & estate on over 200 acres, planted to various varietals. Offered at: $2,250,000

Informing Wineries Tourism Decisions: Studies of Tasting Room Visitors and Wine Tourism Collaboration

Territorial branding. Dr. Steve Charters MW. Essence distilled, Excellence instilled

PRIEST RANCH WINES ESTATE FARMED WINES OF UNCOMMON QUALITY AND CHARACTER

Brand WineType Appelation AddlDesignation Vintage Award Chardonnay "The. Blair Estate Pinot Noir Arroyo Seco AVA Delfina's Vineyard 2014 Platinum

THE ECONOMIC IMPACT OF WINE AND WINE GRAPES ON THE STATE OF TEXAS 2015

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF WINE ECONOMISTS

reference index American viticultural areas of Oregon willamette valley AVAs - Geologic origins of their soils Sustainable Wine growing in oregon

2017 FINANCIAL REVIEW

Background & Literature Review The Research Main Results Conclusions & Managerial Implications

ISES INDUSTRY FORUM CSISG 2015 Q3 RESULTS. F&B and TOURISM INSTITUTE OF SERVICE EXCELLENCE SINGAPORE MANAGEMENT UNIVERSITY

World of Wine: From Grape to Glass

# 1 in exports of Chilean wine (exports 33.3% of bottled total).

ECONOMIC IMPACT OF WINE AND VINEYARDS IN NAPA COUNTY

Essence distilled, Excellence instilled

Napa Valley Vintners Teaching Winery Napa Valley College Marketing and Sales Plan February 14, 2018

YOUNGBERG HILL AND HOW IT GOT THAT WAY

Is Fair Trade Fair? ARKANSAS C3 TEACHERS HUB. 9-12th Grade Economics Inquiry. Supporting Questions

Inception. Participatory framing of the study. Data collection. Impact Assessment. Validation of results. Impact pathway hypothesis

Calistoga. Napa Valley AVA Sub district: Pope Valley

Research Proposal: Viticultural Terroir in Ashtabula County, Ohio

World of Wine: From Grape to Glass Syllabus

5. Supporting documents to be provided by the applicant IMPORTANT DISCLAIMER

Roosevelt Classic Club News, January Dear Roosevelt Wine Club Members,

Creating a Farm-to-Institution Food Program

Set! Designing Your Food Sovereignty. Assessment

is pleased to introduce the 2017 Scholarship Recipients

The 2006 Economic Impact of Nebraska Wineries and Grape Growers

CONJOINT RESEARCH FOR CONSUMER PERCEPTION OF WINE CLOSURE OPTIONS AND THEIR IMPACT ON PURCHASE INTEREST IN THE UNITED STATES AND AUSTRALIA

JCAST. Department of Viticulture and Enology, B.S. in Enology

Monterey County Ranch Johnson Canyon Road Gonzales, CA Acres

OREGON WINE COUNTRY PLATES TOURISM PROMOTION DISTRIBUTION GUIDELINES

Regional Economic Development Agency for Sumadija and Pomoravlje

Presented by: Paul Tuan Lawrence Keung Cathine Lam Lanna Zhou Ho Sum Wong Kento Matayoshi Tiffany Cheung Tommy Zhou Kathy Nguyen Vincent Luo

NEW YORK CITY COLLEGE OF TECHNOLOGY, CUNY DEPARTMENT OF HOSPITALITY MANAGEMENT COURSE OUTLINE COURSE#: HMGT 2305 COURSE TITLE: DINING ROOM OPERATIONS

New Wine Grape Grower Workshop 2013

GI Protection in Europe

Please scan this QR code and Complete the Survey

RESEARCH UPDATE from Texas Wine Marketing Research Institute by Natalia Kolyesnikova, PhD Tim Dodd, PhD THANK YOU SPONSORS

Wine Futures: Pricing and Allocation as Levers against Quality Uncertainty

Introduction to the Practical Exam Stage 1

A NOTE FROM FRANCISCO NOGUEIRA THE OFFICE COFFEE CULTURE

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY OVERALL, WE FOUND THAT:

HMGT 2402 Wine & Beverage Management. Prof. Karen Goodlad Spring 2017 White Wines of France

OREGON WINE INDUSTRY LABOR SURVEY Jeff D. Peterson, Ph.D. Linfield College

Terroir: a concept to bring added value for producers and consumers. Alessandra Roversi

Comparison of FY15 and FY16 Foodservice Program Budgets

Vintroux Carols View Lane, Forestville. Truly Spectacular View Building Site & Ultra Premium Vineyard

KING ESTATE WAS FOUNDED IN 1991 ON PRINCIPLES THAT STILL GUIDE US OVER 25 YEARS LATER. STEWARDSHIP. FAMILY. TRADITION.

Summary Report Survey on Community Perceptions of Wine Businesses

BARRELS, BARREL ADJUNCTS, AND ALTERNATIVES

Food, landscape and tourism: Sorprendente Basilicata experience

A Walk Through our History

Madera Vintners Association Grant Program In Honor Of Dr. Vincent Petrucci and Professor Ken Fugelsang

The Impact of General Public Wine Education Courses on Consumer Perception

MBA 503 Final Project Guidelines and Rubric

LEVEL 1 CERTIFICATE PROGRAM CURRICULUM. COMPETENCIES Knowledge, Skills and Explanations of the BGA Barista Level 1 (CB1) Designation

1480 Tyee Road Umpqua, Oregon /15

Wine by Design Lisa Custer, PhD. Co-Experimenters: Chuck Bellante, Dr. Daniel McCarville, Dr. Douglas Montgomery

DOWNLOAD OR READ : VARIETAL WINES PDF EBOOK EPUB MOBI

UNPARALLED VINEYARD & WINERY OPPORTUNITY

Washington Vineyard Acreage Report: 2011

IT S TIME TO BRING MERLOT BACK

HSC Geography. Year 2016 Mark Pages 30 Published Feb 7, Geography Notes. By Annabelle (97.35 ATAR)

OREGON WINE BOARD MARKETING SYMPOSIUM PRESENTATION. February 24, 2015

Survival of the Fittest: The Impact of Eco-certification on the Performance of German Wineries Patrizia FANASCH

Sustaining Research on Wine Related Topics: A Wine Marketing Manuscript about Writing Wine Marketing Manuscripts

PRESS KIT 2017 Recognized wine portfolio

Mendocino County Conjunctive Labeling Forum

TexaS Wine Journal. Category Report Cabernet Sauvignon

Sample. TO: Prof. Hussain FROM: GROUP (Names of group members) DATE: October 09, 2003 RE: Final Project Proposal for Group Project

Academic Year 2014/2015 Assessment Report. Bachelor of Science in Viticulture, Department of Viticulture and Enology

Napa Green Certified Land Certification Mark Usage Standards

Transcription:

Linfield College DigitalCommons@Linfield 2012 Projects Keck Summer Collaborative Research Projects 7-25-2012 Regional Identity and the Reputation of Willamette Valley Wines: A Multiple Stakeholder Assessment Katherine Byers Linfield College Julia Prow Linfield College Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.linfield.edu/keck_2012 Part of the Agribusiness Commons, Marketing Commons, Public Relations and Advertising Commons, Sales and Merchandising Commons, and the Viticulture and Oenology Commons Recommended Citation Byers, Katherine and Prow, Julia, "Regional Identity and the Reputation of Willamette Valley Wines: A Multiple Stakeholder Assessment" (2012). 2012 Projects. Presentation. Submission 1. http://digitalcommons.linfield.edu/keck_2012/1 This Presentation is brought to you for free via open access, courtesy of DigitalCommons@Linfield. For more information, please contact digitalcommons@linfield.edu.

Regional Identity and the Reputation of Willamette Valley Wines: A Multiple Stakeholder Assessment Kathie Byers & Julia Prow July 25 th, 2012

The art & science of wine tasting

Agenda Project Overview Some Definitions History of the Willamette Valley Wine Industry Project Steps

Project Overview Purpose of the research: to assess the reputation of Willamette Valley wines Emphasis is on the relationship between the regional identity of the Willamette Valley and the reputation of its wines Perceptions of a variety of individuals and groups of interest

Some Definitions Reputation: collective assessments of a corporation or industry. Assessed by stakeholders: persons or groups with a stake, or direct interest or involvement in the activities or outcomes of a firm or industry Based on perceptions with the following components: Affective (feeling) Cognitive (thinking) Behavioral intention (doing) May be positive or negative. Based on Barnett, Jermier, & Lafferty, 2006; Formbrun, 1996; Oberts & Dowling, 2002; and Walker, 2010.

Some Definitions IDENTITY: What internal stakeholders perceive REPUTATION: A collective assessment of stakeholders IMAGE: What companies want others to perceive Positive reputation is associated with outcomes such as Increased market value Profitability Investor satisfaction and loyalty Ability to charge premium prices Based on Black, Carnes & Richardson, 2000; Helm, 2007; Jones, Jones, & Little, 2000; and Vergin & Qoronfleh, 1998.

Some Definitions Regional identity: character of a geographical area; enduring, central features that distinguish the area from others Willamette Valley wines: wines from Oregon s largest American Viticultural Area (AVA) 200 wineries with over 12,000 acres of wine grapes Six sub-appellations: Chehalem Mountains, Dundee Hills, Eola-Amity Hills, McMinnville, Ribbon Ridge, Yamhill-Carlton Based on Atkin & Johnson, 2010; and www.oregonwineboard.com.

History of the Willamette Valley Wine Industry Beginning in 1961 the first wine pioneers came to Oregon Richard Sommer Hillcrest Vineyard David Lett Eyrie Vineyards Charles Coury Charles Coury Winery Dick Erath Erath Vineyards Believed it was possible to successfully grow wine grapes in Oregon, despite discouragement from their colleagues at University of California Davis Based on www.oregonwineboard.com

History of the Willamette Valley Wine Industry Wine pioneers planted first Pinot Noir & Chardonnay, Riesling in 1965; Became official AVA in 1984 Beginnings were rough, but the families were hard workers holding additional jobs to support their wine endeavors Truly believed Oregon would one day become an important wine-growing region Sense of collaboration and fraternity Based on www.oregonwineboard.com; and Oregon Wine: Grapes of Place

Clip from OPB's Oregon Experience: Oregon Wine: Grapes of Place

History of the Willamette Valley Wine Industry: Primary Varietals Pinot Noir Troublesome and finicky to grow Flavor can be fruity, or earthy/woodsy Pinot Gris Believed to come from Pinot Noir grape Fruity aromas Chardonnay Full-bodied; fruity, sometimes earthy aromas Most chardonnays receive oak treatment Riesling Noble variety: light and crisp Never treated with oak

History of the Willamette Valley Wine Industry: Indicators of Reputation In 1979, David Lett s Pinot Noir placed in top ten at the Gault-Millau French Wine Olympiades Since then, Oregon has won numerous international awards International Pinot Noir Celebration held for 25 years in the Willamette Valley Willamette Valley now recognized as one of the premier wine producing areas in the world Quality, terroir, and sustainability (e.g., LIVE, Demeter biodynamic, Oregon Certified Sustainable winery) are factors commonly associated with the WV and the reputation of WV wine

Project Steps Phase I: Literature Review and Pre-Interview Conversations Reviewed literature and archival information in three main areas: Corporate and industry reputation Wine business History of Willamette Valley wine industry Spoke with knowledgeable individuals such as Oregon Wine Board executives, vineyard and winery owners Rounded out our view of the industry Helped to define client needs for the research Identified a set of experts to interview

Project Steps Phase II: Interviews Purpose: to gather information about regional identity and reputation to guide construction of survey instrument Interviewees to include winery owners Interview areas 1) Regional identity associated with WV wines 2) Process of building and maintaining reputation of WV wine industry 3) Key affective, cognitive, and behavioral components of perceptions of WV wines 4) What attracts stakeholders to WV wines 5) Impact of winery activities to help or hinder reputation

Project Steps Phase III: Survey Purpose: to assess key aspects of the reputation of WV wines from multiple stakeholder perspectives Online questionnaire of certain stakeholders (e.g., consumers and distributors) and faceto-face questioning of others (e.g., retailers, sommeliers, restaurant owners) Likely to be limited to Portland-area stakeholders for this pilot project

Questions?