Be honest, at what point do breweries get "too big" and suspect?

Discussion in 'Beer Talk' started by 31Sam13, Mar 10, 2015.

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  1. 31Sam13

    31Sam13 Initiate (0) Sep 29, 2014 New Hampshire

    There is always a thing around seemingly pure consumer movements ( music and craft beer are two great examples ) where there is some sellout point, which means different things to different people. What point is that? Examples. Who is growing like crazy but keeping quality and innovation the top priority? I will go out on a limb and say Lagunitas is one...
     
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  2. surfcaster

    surfcaster Initiate (0) Apr 20, 2013 North Carolina
    Trader

    SN has my vote.

    New brewery, great beer, still making a lot of styles.

    Always doing it right.
     
  3. Jirin

    Jirin Initiate (0) Apr 28, 2013 Massachusetts

    You're not a sellout until the quality declines.
     
  4. Himself

    Himself Initiate (0) May 20, 2014 Massachusetts

    What I was going to say.
     
  5. RutgersBeerGuy

    RutgersBeerGuy Savant (1,059) Jan 16, 2007 New Jersey

    I think you're going to see responses that reveal a lot more about consumer psychology than anything that has to do with any actual discernible change in the product in the glass.
     
  6. Shroud0fdoom

    Shroud0fdoom Initiate (0) Oct 31, 2013 Maryland

    Victory. Yet, still has quality as the main objective.
     
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  7. lillitnn92

    lillitnn92 Initiate (0) Aug 22, 2009 Virginia

    Anything over a two barrel system. :wink:
     
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  8. UrbanCaveman

    UrbanCaveman Pooh-Bah (1,866) Sep 30, 2014 Ohio
    Pooh-Bah Trader

    Two barrels? Filthy profiteering, that is. Focused only on making a buck.

    Anything over a five gallon system. Otherwise, you're making it to sell some of it and tainting the whole batch with greed!
     
  9. jco3

    jco3 Initiate (0) May 4, 2012 New Hampshire

    When the owner doesn't know the name of the person who empties his office trashcan
     
  10. zid

    zid Grand Pooh-Bah (3,132) Feb 15, 2010 New York
    BA4LYFE Society Pooh-Bah Trader

    Well, quality and price can have a relationship. If the quality of a beer declines, but the price declines proportionally further - resulting in a better cost/quality ratio than what was in place before... is that necessarily a bad thing?
     
  11. 31Sam13

    31Sam13 Initiate (0) Sep 29, 2014 New Hampshire

    Of huge interest to me...
     
  12. Tripel_Threat

    Tripel_Threat Grand Pooh-Bah (4,302) Jun 29, 2014 Michigan
    Pooh-Bah Trader

    They only get "too big" when they start cutting costs by using inferior ingredients. If a brewery is worldwide and still offers quality product, they aren't "too big"
     
  13. Beer_Loving_Brandon

    Beer_Loving_Brandon Initiate (0) Jan 5, 2015 Mississippi

    As soon as they are no longer privately held ventures.

    As soon as they go public, the makers start answering to a board of directors that steadily dilutes/cheapens/destroys a specialty product in order to make it appeal to more people. In other words, the bottom line becomes the priority, not quality or purity. It happens a lot.

    Greed has destroyed many great companies and products.
     
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  14. Tripel_Threat

    Tripel_Threat Grand Pooh-Bah (4,302) Jun 29, 2014 Michigan
    Pooh-Bah Trader

    At that point, it's a question of value versus quality. Pretty common situation for consumers to face. Good point.
     
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  15. FinchSCF

    FinchSCF Initiate (0) Aug 22, 2013 Michigan

    Agreeing with earlier posts, Sierra Nevada and Lagunitas come strongly to mind as breweries that have stayed away from what we consider "big beer". I'd actually even argue for Sam Adams in some respects. I think that they are jaded and live in the past, but I think a lot of people take easy shots at them solely for their size.
     
  16. Flashy

    Flashy Pooh-Bah (1,767) Oct 22, 2003 Vermont
    Pooh-Bah

    Yeah, like at Mercedes Benz.
     
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  17. jrnyc

    jrnyc Grand Pooh-Bah (3,012) Mar 21, 2010 New York
    Pooh-Bah Trader

    And the almighty dollar. Corporations have no soul, there one and only objective is to make money for the shareholders.
     
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  18. Geuzedad

    Geuzedad Initiate (0) Nov 14, 2010 Arizona

    When Pliney sits on store shelves in every state in America collecting dust and everybody says "Pliney? Meh!" Then Russian River will be in that category. But we all know that will never happen. So they get my vote.
     
  19. B-Ho

    B-Ho Aspirant (233) Feb 16, 2015 Minnesota

    Once they have nationally televised commercials. Two HUGE names that come to mind: Sam Adams and Leinenkugel. It seems Sam Adams just puts stuff out to get it out. I've never considered them "great quality" but now its just a joke. And Leinie's should just rename themselves to Shandy Shanty. I actually didn't mind drinking Leinie's before, Honeyweiss was the best in college, but once they put themselves out there on the boob-tube I quickly lost interest.
     
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  20. marquis

    marquis Pooh-Bah (2,313) Nov 20, 2005 England
    Pooh-Bah

    Why all this emphasis on so-called "innovation" ? Apart from the fact that there's actually very little new under the sun , what's wrong with breweries which simply brew great beer again and again ? I see so much new stuff from breweries which doesn't appeal any more than what they brewed before and get the impression that it's done to be different. But different doesn't mean better so stop reinventing the wheel and stick to what's best.
     
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