But....If you read any business book 101, you will find that the mead 'industry' is creating it's own demand by pounding the pavement. It is EXTREMELY difficult (read expensive) to educate a market about a new product. That is why most (Even micro sized) wineries do not create mead, they don't have the time to educate the market.
However, I am not a baker, or an auto-mechanic, so mead making is what I do even if it means climbing the steepest slope on the hill.
As to whether we have customers, I'll be lucky to sell 10 cases a month in 10-15 stores (while we do tastings and other events at those same stores). We create our own niche and demand (sounds like Brad is still doing this too, to the benefit of ALL of us in the business and the hobby!)
My question was finance related but I didn't explain why I asked it so I'll create a situation to explain. Lets start with a calendar and exclude equipment and building expenses:
January
Batch #1
$1200 spent in honey/fruit.
February
Batch #1 goes into secondary
March
Batch #2
$1200 spent on honey/fruit
April
Batch #2 goes into secondary
May
Batch #3
$1200 spent on honey/fruit
June
Batch #3 goes into secondary
Batch #1 into bottles
$1500 spent on bottling materials
July
Batch #4
$1200 Spent on honey/fruit
August
Batch #4 goes into secondary
Batch #2 into bottles
$1500 spent on bottling materials
September
Batch #5
$1200 in honey/fruit
October
Batch #5 goes into secondary
Batch #3 into bottles
$1500 spent on bottling materials
November
Batch #6
$1200 spent on honey/fruit
December
Batch #6 goes into secondary
Batch #4 into bottles
$1500 spent on bottling materials
And so on for the following year.
In August the first batch would be six months old and hopefully ready for sale. At that point there would be some income that would offset the cost of production. So to get to August before any money comes in $8000ish (plus equipment) would be needed.
Now here is where the demand part comes in. I'll have to redo my math to double check but that would be 750bottles/batch. Now wouldn't it be great to have that sold quickly to sustain the cycle and not have to dip into savings? This is were my questions about demand come in and it's probably not something someone can really answer. You have to analyze your own market and take a gamble. I imagine the life of a meadmaker is 10% making mead and 90% hitting the pavement and hustling.
I think starting small and increasing production as the market for your product grows goes would be the way to go. Bigger is more efficient but 1.) It's not an option for some 2.) why go big when you may not sell enough to fund new batches? Bigger batches =more money in honey/bottles. Yeah they'll eventually get sold (and better with age) but it's a lot of money tied up in equipment and mead sitting on the floor. Make what you can sell and upgrade as you grow.
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