If wine stores are really trying to reduce cognitive load and enable consumers to make easier purchasing decisions, I think that consumers would have an easier time buying wine if they were labeled by the characteristics that a consumer can best understand, how it tastes. Let's play this out in a wine-specific retail shop (because I imagine this wouldn't make as much sense in a grocery store). If a consumer comes in and knows nothing about wine, they will likely ask for a recommendation, at which point store organization doesn't matter much. If a consumer comes in and knows a little about wine, they likely know what color wine they like and what weight of wine they like. Isn't it harder for them to figure out what region & varietal maps to that tasting experience? I often find that I can remember a tasting experience even when I can't remember the attributes on the label. Finally, if a consumer comes in and knows a lot about wine, they shouldn't have trouble identifying where their wine would sit. Maybe this approach is most cumbersome for serious wine drinkers, but I imagine they are more patient and make up a smaller percentage of buyers.
So, why aren't wine stores organized like this?
- It's more cumbersome to the retailers?
- Retailers don't know enough about their wines to sort in this way?
- Consumers are used to one way of shopping and it would be impossible for them to change the way they shop?
- Consumers don't actually know what they like?
- Consumers know what they like but don't have the vocabulary to describe it?
- Consumers care most about the status associated with different wines and it's harder to discern this piece from the set up I suggested?
I'm curious what other people think about this idea!
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