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Bringing innovation back to value wine w/ Dom Engels, Bronco

XChateau Wine Podcast by Robert Vernick

Aug 12, 202552:01Arts

As one of the major players in value wine, owning Charles Shaw (aka “Two Buck Chuck”), Bronco Wine Co.’s new CEO, Dom Engels, believes that the wine industry needs more innovation and focus on creating new entry points f...

About This Episode

Bringing innovation back to value wine w/ Dom Engels, Bronco is an episode from XChateau Wine Podcast by Robert Vernick. As one of the major players in value wine, owning Charles Shaw (aka “Two Buck Chuck”), Bronco Wine Co.’s new CEO, Dom E...

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Episode Details

Published Aug 12, 2025, 52:01 long, audio available.

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What is Bringing innovation back to value wine w/ Dom Engels, Bronco about?

As one of the major players in value wine, owning Charles Shaw (aka “Two Buck Chuck”), Bronco Wine Co.’s new CEO, Dom Engels, believes that the wine industry needs more innovation and focus on creating new entry points for younger consumers. From packaging to labels, Dom discusses how he’s navigating Bronco through the turbulence of a shrinking market for value wine from both the cost and innovation side. Detailed Show Notes: Bronco - Top 15 winery, owner of Charles Shaw (aka “Two Buck Chuck”) Has its own CA distribution House of >200 brands Large winery in Modesto, bottling in Napa, a boutique winery in Santa Rosa Owns ~40k acres, ~30k acres vineyards, but farming <10k today Owns Bivio, a logistics company Charles Shaw No created by Bronco, acquired by Fred Franzia (co-founder of Bronco) Was a successful, premium, luxury Napa brand, 1st vintage 1978 Went bankrupt in the 90s, Bronco bought the trademark in 1999 1st product in 2022 - $1.99 for good quality wine Low pricing enabled by low margins and Fred Franzia’s “genius” in bulk wine trading Partnership w/ Trader Joe’s through shared belief in creating accessibility and substantial cultural overlap Believes the industry needs more good entry-level wines to get younger generations a start in wine The ethnic makeup of younger people is not the same as that of older generations “Not your father’s Cadillac” - young tend to rebel against what their parents did 11,400 wineries in the US create a diffuse set of interests, a lack of clear messaging (e.g., craftsmanship, agriculture) to separate wine from alcohol Accessibility could be driven by the right packages (including formats) and labels; good labels drive trial, good liquid drives repeat sales Significant marketing spend is difficult due to low margins Industry covers the right price points (e.g., Charles Shaw $3.49 in CA), but needs other elements, not a lot of great innovation or marketing at low price points (some pockets of innovation, e.g., XXL focus on high ABV) Need more transparency - ingredients, nutrition, ownership, provenance - Bronco is adding more back stories to brands Enhancing social interactions is important; e.g., Jack Daniels’ ad that getting together with other people is healthy too New Bronco company motto, “better times at every table,” similar to Pernod Ricard’s “conviviality” Believes dislocation of restaurant price vs retail is a core driver of wine industry decline, $14 IPA and $25 cocktails make people drink less Navigating lower volumes requires being more efficient, sees opportunity in winemaking (most capacity utilization at wineries now <50%), distribution (reduce inventory), and retail Likely too many brands in the US and too much shelf space in retail Mothballing a lot of vineyards due to oversupply Can’t bring back in 1 year, but can in 2-3 Cut buds down so vines don’t produce fruit Still requires some maintenance costs Vineyards in less optimal areas are to be pulled first, and he does not believe there will be an overcorrection Competing in value vs international Can’t compete on labor Need to compete on quality, provenance, and taste Even tariffs won’t solve the cost gap EU subsidies help democratize wine Tariff impacts Some input cost increases (e.g., China for glass) A good thing overall for the US industry, which will lead to more US wine being consumed Likely no structural change Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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Which podcast is Bringing innovation back to value wine w/ Dom Engels, Bronco from?

Bringing innovation back to value wine w/ Dom Engels, Bronco is an episode from XChateau Wine Podcast by Robert Vernick.

How long is this episode?

This episode is 52:01 long.

When was this episode published?

This episode was published on Aug 12, 2025.

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Are there related episodes from XChateau Wine Podcast?

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Where can I listen to Bringing innovation back to value wine w/ Dom Engels, Bronco?

You can listen to Bringing innovation back to value wine w/ Dom Engels, Bronco on this page when the episode audio is available from the podcast feed.

Which podcast is this episode from?

Bringing innovation back to value wine w/ Dom Engels, Bronco is from XChateau Wine Podcast by Robert Vernick.

What are the episode details?

Published Aug 12, 2025 and 52:01 long