How Gary’s Wine & Marketplace Has Steadily Expanded

Pictured atop: Marketing Director Scott Suilivan, Corporate Gourmet Manager Alexis Thompson, Gary Fisch and Wine Director Brooke Sabel.

A business cannot survive and grow for three decades without challenges and innovations. Garys Wine & Marketplace in New Jersey has experienced plenty of both along its path to celebrating 30 years of business in 2017.

Garys is known in The Garden State for its knowledgeable staff, competitive pricing and a vast variety of gourmet products. Last year the business opened its fifth store. Located in Closter, NJ — nearer the New York line than any other Garys — the shop is 8,400 square fee, and carries more than 2,700 wine SKUs, 700 spirits, 800 beers and 150 fresh-cut cheeses. That inventory is par for the course for the larger Garys locations.

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The new store will create 20 new jobs. Adding those to the brands four other stores in northern New Jersey (Madison, Bernardsville, Wayne, Hillsborough) brings total staff to 165.

Weve been through a great growth period, says Gary Fisch, the eponymous company founder and owner. We came out of 2008-09, which was a very uncertain time for the retail sector, and experienced a number years of growth.

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Overall company revenues for 2017 are projected around $50 million. Yet, as Fisch admits, this represents relatively flat growth for his company. For the past four years, Garys has had similarly static revenue results. What Fisch attributes for this financial plateauing are issues that affect nearly every retailer in 2018.

“At Gary’s, we have beautiful stores, great pricing, great selection and well-trained staff who understand the product. At national chains you might get one or two of those, but you won’t get the full blend that we have. And that still excites me.” — Gary Fisch, founder and owner of Gary’s.

Modern Retail Challenges

Fisch sees a 1-2-3 punch of competition in the retail sector. New competitors have emerged on a local, national and global scale.

Amazon is affecting all retail, Fisch says. And national chains are getting bigger and bigger. Theyre gobbling up the allocations that were all trying to get. (Though, he adds, Garys allocations have remained steady).

Fisch also points to a new generation of young retailers with small local stores. While these shops may not pose the same level of threat as Amazon or Total Wine, they do represent additional competition. The consumer dollar can only go so far, Fisch says.

Recent changes in e-commerce also became a headache for Garys. The company continues to run a world-class website that expands sales across the nation. Anyone can click on a product on garyswine.com and get it shipped to their doorstop. Its an excellent source of extra income — so long as the shipments are legally allowed.

The problem is, Fed Ex and UPS recently became more restrictive about which states they will ship alcohol to. In the past, the delivery services were less strict about transporting these products across state lines.

In 2017, Fed Ex and UPS told retailers they would only deliver over state lines to the 14 states (and Washington D.C.) with laws that clearly permit interstate alcohol shipments. For instance, New York — a large customer base for Garyswine.com — is no longer allowed.

Its closed parts of our business, Fisch says. Our website sales performed poorly last year. You take away those dollars and you cannot replace them. Were fortunate that online was never a huge percentage of our business, but it still hurts.

I would argue that brick-and-mortar stores may not be as wonderful of an industry to be in as they were three years ago, Fisch says. I dont know what the future holds, but I worry that the next ten years may not be as good as the last ten years.

But he remains hopeful.

This is still a regulated, licensed industry, which allows savvy retailers to do well, Fisch says. At Garys, we have beautiful stores, great pricing, great selection and well-trained staff who understand the product. At national chains you might get one or two of those, but you wont get the full blend that we have. And that still excites me.

Education and Research

Like most retail executives, Fisch is all eyes and ears when he visits another store. One detail he always looks for is whether the staff are walking around and talking with customers. Sometimes he sees none, which motivates him even harder to have knowledgeable employees who engage with guests. Its a passion of his: I love interacting with guests, he says. I call it conversational selling.

In pursuit of this goal, Garys in August hired veteran sommelier and wine consultant Brooke Sabel. As the companys new wine director, she oversees the wine-buying team and the wine education program for staff and customers.

For me, education is all about the growth of Garys, Sabel says. That means sharing her wine geekiness with employees so that they can speak intimately with guests about remote regions and hyper-trendy styles. You want to be able to tell the story of the wine, because the story is what sells it, Sabel says.

She tastes staff constantly. If the consensus comes down against a wine, Garys will not stock it.

Sabel also stresses the importance of educating guests, particularly about boutique producers or obscure regions.

Its like test-driving a car, she says. The more people experience these wines, the easier it is for us to sell them. Its very easy for someone to dismiss something they know nothing about.

Sabel travels constantly in search of new wines and viticulture areas. What is she looking for? Passion in winemakers, for starters, and whatever represents the cutting-edge.

Right now she has an eye on Corsica, Croatia, Georgia, Eastern Europe in general, Brazil, Portugal, Virginia, Michigan, upstate New York and even the Garden State itself.

A lot of people think of New Jersey wine as eh, Sabel says. But I think it has a nice base of sweet wines. For example, she points to Alba Winery in Milford, NJ.

Several years ago she visited the producer and came away thinking they were just another New Jersey winery. But this past year she tasted a chardonnay of theirs that blew her away, along with other Alba wines (including pinot noir) that she gives high marks.

Dont dismiss whats in your own backyard, Sabel says.

Overall, Sabel looks for that wow factor when seeking new wines for Garys. When I taste a wine and it makes me stop and smile, thats how I know.

If the consensus in a staff tasting comes down against a wine, Gary’s will not stock it.

Modern Marketing

In the past five years, Garys marketing has evolved. Instead of older methods of promotion, the company now invests in savvy digital advertisements.

Scott Sullivan, Garys marketing & communications specialist, says the business focuses on online promotions and telling the brand story — especially through digital video and social media.

We recently came out with a campaign about how the staff here is well-trained, friendly and available for guests, Sullivan says. Were focusing less and less on showcasing what products we actually have here, and more on other elements guests are going to experience at Garys.

In the past few years Garys has run a lot of marketing for the red-hot rosé category, highlighting that Its Always Rosé Season. The result: sales of this wine increased 20% in 2017 to $1.2 million, after reaching $1 million in 2016.

Elsewhere, Garys has invested in pay-per-click campaigns through Google. These present people with ads to buy wine from the business website.

Thats a bit automated, which is great from a retail-marketing perspective, because a lot of retailers dont have time to monitor that aspect of their business, Sullivan says. Its allowed us to expand our national reach.

In the next five years, Sullivan foresees more marketing that promotes the selection, customer service and education at Garys. Digitally that could be an app that allows guests to buy products and have the purchase already waiting for them when they show up, or seeing whats in stock on the website in real time.

Craft Beer and Spirits

While Garys is best known for its wine selection, the chain also sells a great deal of beer and spirits. Each category represents about 12% of the overall business.

Fisch worries that the craft beer business has become very soft. The sheer variety of whats available presents challenges. Not everything thats new or different will catch on with customers. And beer stock that sits on shelves quickly loses its fresh flavors.

Big buyers like us need to be smart about it, Fisch says. We cant just buy anything thats new in craft beer. We need to manage it better.

Fisch finds the spirits category extremely exciting. Recently he traveled to Louisville to explore through and buy up bourbons and American whiskeys. Garys hosts in-store spirits tastings once per week for customers (the highest frequency allowed by New Jersey law), and tastes staff whenever the spirits sales reps stop in.

Fischs passion for talking with guests paid off recently when he acted on their requests for more Japanese whisky. Sometimes we all talk too much and listen too little, he explains. Listening to the people in my store, Japanese whisky kept coming up.

Food and Gifts

Garys Wine & Marketplace stocks plenty of foods and gift items to warrant its full name. Alex Wein, Corporate Gourmet Manager and Buyer, oversees both departments.

The focus in food is on gourmet cheese. Garys constantly changes up its cheese mix, while maintaining fresh product and competitive prices. Otherwise, customers may buy these cheeses at their super market. Customers tell me all the time that they feel bad purchasing elsewhere, because were actually cheaper and fresher, Wein says.

The focus in food is on gourmet cheese. Gary’s constantly changes up its cheese mix, while maintaining fresh product and competitive prices.

To stock fresh products and maintain a diverse portfolio, Wein works with importers directly from Europe, rather than a national distributor. Shell book shipments many months in advance and pick them up from air or boat deliveries.

Fresh-cut cheese sells so well at Garys that the stores will go through a full wheel of Parmesan every week.

Garys receives fresh-baked bread daily from two in-state bakeries (Balthazar and Calandras) every day. Garys first partnered with Calandras two years ago. I love that theyre a family business, and their quality is consistent, Wein says. Youll now also find Calandras marinara sauce and olive oil in Garys gift baskets.

When it comes to giftware, Garys carries a balance between basics and higher-end items. Guests can buy an inexpensive corkscrew, or a nicer model that could make a Fathers Day gift.

Weins greatest challenge these last five years has been hiring. Her department has received insufficiently low numbers of qualified applicants. Wien believes the issue stems from potential employees thinking they lack proper experience for the non-alcohol side of the business. Working with gourmet cheese may be particularly intimidating for the uninformed.

To counter those concerns, Wein says Garys will gladly train passionate applicants in food and gifts. She points to her employee Andrew Deakin, team lead at the Bernardsville store, who joined the business with no knowledge of gourmet cheese. Now, after staff training and learning on the job, hes the team leader for the food and gifts departments at two locations.

Wein also sees this issue with applications as a chance for growth. One thing Ive learned from working for Gary for the last 10 years is to turn a challenge into an opportunity, she says. This gives me the ability to show my leadership. I can get out there into our stores, out of my office and away from my computer, and get behind the counter with my employees.

Moving forward, Wein wants to see her departments have a greater presence online. And, sooner than later, she wants to start a cheese-of-the-month club. She foresees pairing the program as an add-on purchase with Garys wine-of-the-month club.

Beyond that, she predicts more of the same for her employer.

In the next five years well continue to place importance on selection, customer service and education, Wein says. Im looking forward to 2018 and beyond, because I think well continue to grow and find new ways to get better.

Fisch agrees. I am optimistic, cautiously, about the next five years, he says. If we continue to do what weve done in the past, then I think we can grow smartly. Not rapidly, because thats not the type of business we are — but smartly.

Kyle Swartz is managing editor of Beverage Dynamics magazine. Reach him at kswartz@epgmediallc.com or on Twitter @kswartzz. Read his recent piece Dogfish Head’s Sam Calagione on Craft Beer’s Struggles and Future Growth.

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