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Date: | Mon, 27 Mar 2006 19:34:21 EST |
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To Tim Tucker and then to the rest of the crowd:
A sincere thanks for your posting , it's exactly the response I was hoping
for.
"And ain't it the truth!"
I'm a new guy on the beekeeping block but with an education many years ago
in chemistry and having spent years in manufacturing and also marketing those
products.
There's this age old question in industry. Do we produce the product and
then try to sell it, or do we go out and get the orders and then fill them.
Honey is an industry.
I recognized that those involved with honey had the same dilema. I was new
at beekeeping but thoroughly understand the problem. It's MARKETING. Niche
marketing, branding,etc.etc.
Everybody says the same thing about organic honey , so, take advantage and
join their marketing bandwagon and give them a run for the money.When in Rome
do as the Romans do.
I put in a small tasting room just like a winery.
I like to call it an Estate Apiary.
People who arrive get to sample the product and choose according to their
taste. Up to four flavours on tap. The flavours have names on nice clean
looking labels to set them apart in the customers minds.
We discuss flavour differences, sweetness, acidity, viscosity etc. as they
compare one with the other and then choose.
This season, they will be able to experience what is termed in wine tasting
a Vertical
A progression of flavours from a designated hive representing the season as
it was brought in in each super.
Tim summed it up well in his last paragraph.
Walter
-- Visit www.honeybeeworld.com/bee-l for rules, FAQ and other info ---
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