
pfooti wrote:Wow, there's some really good responses in this thread, and I appreciate all the ideas and feedback.
The general plan I'm looking at is something along these lines: CA is a self-distribute state, so I can sell directly to consumers without having to deal with distributers, which would make the entire idea fail. San Francisco is also a pretty hefty foodie area, and there's a surprising number of not-quite-hipsters around. I say not-quite, because they've got a lot of hipster-esque attributes, but they're also a lot cooler than the hipsters I knew on the east coast. Meaning: there's possibly a place for a niche brewer who makes high-quality beer on rotation, clever brews with seasonal ingredients, and operates on a more-or-less subscription model. Plenty of people subscribe to wineries, including a fair number of people who really cannot afford to do so.
At a roughly 5 hL scale with a few storage tanks, my reading of the brewing literature indicates that it is reasonable to run this level of business either solo or with a partner. If you can retail your product for $5-10 / liter, between subscriptions, case sales, and $5/pint pours in the "tasting pub", there looks to be enough revenue to support a 1-2 person brewery. Brewing seems very capital intensive, and very rewarding to larger-scale operations (with higher revenue, you can get an automated bottling line, for example, instead of the much slower 2-4 bottle fillers that require a lot of operator time). That's assuming, of course, it's possible to acquire space and permits to operate a bare-bones tasting pub a few nights a week and sell beer from the brewery the rest of the week.
Of course, at this point everything is super-hypothetical. I've got a job that's pretty decent and is definitely lasting for a while. It's a time-bomb job, and I know I'll not be able to keep it longer than three years, so I'm mostly kicking around ideas for what I want to be when I grow up. As if I'll ever grow up.
There's also clearly the biggest hurdle: product. I can run the numbers and interview people (and if I'm working on a real business plan, I can write off trips to the bar as market research, right?) all day, but if I can't consistently brew quality beer then it's all an exercise in futility. I feel like my base recipes are pretty solid and I've gotten good at consistently repeating (and planning on modifications that seem to go as planned) at the 5 gallon level. That's probably worlds different from the 5 hL level, and I'm probably deluded in thinking I could scale to that level easily.
What I should probably do is seek out an internship (paid or unpaid) during the summer at a brewery or brewpub nearby. I've got summers off (yay, teaching) already. That'd be a pretty big first step, and probably makes sense regardless. Easier to establish whether or not I'm cut out for making this hobby a vocation if I try it on someone else's system first.

Return to General Beer Related
Users browsing this forum: No registered users