Before I attended SES San Jose, I went to Napa Valley for a couple days to do some wine tasting and check out their many vineyards. While I was there, I was pleasantly surprised to see that a few wineries were starting to use social media for marketing and branding. I also noticed that the wineries that were tapped into social media marketing seemed to be the nicest and had the best customer service.

I didn’t do much research before heading to Napa, so my strategy involved driving down the road while my boyfriend pulled up Yelp reviews of nearby wineries on his iPhone (this resulted in a lot of sudden blurts of “Turnrighthere!” and me going “Aaghghhhhh” as I abruptly yanked the steering wheel to make the turn in time). When we’d come across a winery with decent reviews, we’d stop. It proved to be a very web 2.0-y way to do wine tasting, as we relied entirely on user reviews to determine where we’d go.

I thought I’d highlight the three most memorable wineries from our trip. These wineries all had the same things in common:

  1. They provided excellent and friendly customer service
  2. They were very casual, warm and inviting
  3. They were somewhat social media savvy and were utilizing SMM to some degree

I’m not sure whether the friendlier businesses are more likely to adopt social media marketing or if it’s vice versa (they’re friendlier because they’re marketing socially and need to “be nice”), but either way I definitely noticed a strong correlation. In comparison, at one winery I went to the employee bitched about how she doesn’t understand Twitter and complained about Twitter and Facebook to other tasters while steadfastly ignoring me and my empty wine glass. Hmm, not understanding the appeal of social media while simultaneously providing poor customer service? Methinks you just answered your own question!

Anyway, here are 3 examples of wineries that utilized social media for marketing, branding and customer service.

St. Supery Vineyards

We stopped at St. Supery after checking out their mostly positive Yelp reviews and were really impressed with their wine and their friendly employees. I bought a couple bottles and signed up for their wine club. (Yo Chris, can I expense that? I am blogging about it, after all… ;P)

Twitter Presence

Before our trip Jason had come across the Twitter profile of Rick Bakas, who is the Director of Social Media for St. Supery Vineyards. Rick has mentioned via Twitter that if you tweet at him and mention that you’re going to be visiting St. Supery, he’ll give you a complimentary private tour.

rick-bakas-twitter

Rick has nearly 30,000 followers, which allows him to leverage his large audience and retweet information from St. Supery’s Twitter account and get the messaging out to more than the winery’s 2,300 followers. The winery itself does a good job with their Twitter account, having uploaded a pretty background image and tweeting a wide range of things (wine updates, information about their winery, great food pairings, responding to followers and engaging with their audience, etc).

Facebook Presence

St. Supery has a nice Facebook page set up and has so far attracted nearly 2,000 fans. They update the page with recipes and wine pairings, videos, and invitations to their fans to come visit them. On their page is a note that says “Visit our tasting room and mention you saw us on FB or Twitter. We’ll give you and a guest a complimentary tasting.”

st.-supery-facebook-page

Hagafen Cellars

We actually came across Hagafen after reading a Yelp review for a nearby winery that suggested people go to Hagafen instead because it’s much better and friendlier (ouch; you can’t ask for better publicity than that). We checked out the winery and were blown away by the hospitality and casual yet warm environment. They gave us lots of tastings and even let us taste a couple wines that weren’t on the list, and they were one of only a few wineries that refunded the tasting fees when we bought some bottles of wine. We were also given a couple of complimentary wine glasses as a thank you for stopping by.

As for their social media presence, well, I’ll let this picture speak for itself:

Hagafen-social-media-remind

Free wifi AND they embrace social media marketing? I think I’m in heaven! Their Yelp reviews are mostly positive, and they definitely pay attention to their Yelp profile as they constantly update it with announcements and deals:

hagafen-yelp-deal

Twitter Presence

Hagafen has a Twitter profile, and although they currently only have about 50 followers, it’s nice to see them diving into a new marketing medium and updating constantly. They offer free tastings to their Twitter followers and post updates about the winery and share news and publicity. I’d like to see a more personalized Twitter background and some more engagement with their followers, and maybe some less commercial tweets mixed in among their promotions, but I get that they’re still learning and applaud them for making an attempt.

hagafen-twitter-profile

Facebook Presence

Like their Twitter profile, Hagafen’s Facebook page exists but is a bit anemic. They have nearly 50 fans and have updated the page with images and company information, but there’s certainly some room for improvement. Still, considering they don’t have a Director of Social Media like St. Supery to oversee their social media marketing, I’d say that they’re off to a good start for a mom and pop, small family-owned winery.

hagafen-facebook-profile

Castello di Amorosa

When looking for possible wine tours, we came across a website that listed Castello di Amorosa as a must-see so we booked a wine tour because castles of any variety (stone, brick, bouncy, etc) are awesome. The website did not disappoint:

Castello-di-Amorosa

The wine tour was highly entertaining and the castle is pretty incredible. It took 14 years to construct and was completed a few years ago. Our tour guide, Joe, was very amusing and cheesily charming.

Twitter Presence

Castello has a Twitter profile, but it’s the weakest of the three by far. They’re not following anyone and have only 20 followers, and so far they’ve only updated their profile with tweeted pics of the castle.

castello-twitter-profile

With such a beautiful property and interesting backstory, I’m sure they have plenty of great things to tweet about and share, so I think their Twitter profile has huge potential for success.

Facebook Presence

Swing and a miss here; I wasn’t able to find a Facebook page set up. It certainly wouldn’t hurt to set one up, so hopefully they’ll put one together in the near future.

Yelp Presence

Castello’s main strength is their Yelp page — at the end of the tour, after having charmed and entertained us for the past couple hours, Joe the tour guide encouraged us all to go on Yelp and review the tour and the winery. He said that the vineyard’s owner, Dario Sattui, reads the Yelp reviews every day. I loved how Joe gave a positive customer service experience and leveraged the great mood he helped create by asking us to review the winery on Yelp. Clearly this tactic is paying off — the winery has twice the reviews of other wineries we checked out and has retained a solid 4-star rating. Also, the fact that the owner checks the reviews on a regular basis goes to show that Castello understands the power and importance of user generated content and reputation management.

Like Hagafen, they also update their Yelp profile with specials and deals:

castello-on-yelp

Closing Thoughts

I probably visited about a dozen or so wineries, but the above three stood out to me because they thought outside the realm of the traditional wine tasting experience and incorporated new marketing strategies. Not only is this appealing to younger generations who are being raised on the Internet, web 2.0 and social media, it also indicates the strong relationship between social media marketing and customer service/friendliness. These three wineries were by far the nicest and friendliest, and they also were the three with the strongest grasp of social media marketing. Although their strategies aren’t perfect and they still have quite a bit to learn, I think they’re doing a great job of standing out among the competition and using the Internet to grow their fanbase and strengthen their branding. And that, folks, is how you experience wine tasting in Napa Valley the social media way.