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Craft Beer Blog from The Beer of the Month Club

A craft beer blog written by the experts of The Microbrewed Beer of the Month Club

Tom and Kris Hoist the Stanley Cup at The Detroit Montreux Jazz Festival

July 25, 2014 by Kris Calef

Post 3-editedThis was one of those really bitchin’ festival memories. Tom McCarthy and I ran two booths at The Detroit Montreux Jazz Festival 3 or 4 years in a row. As sponsors, I met the mayor a couple times which was cool, but the highlight was kickin’ back in a local watering hole after a 12 hour day of pitching our clubs, only to see the Stanley Cup walk in the door at about midnight. No digital cameras back then so some dude snapped this photo of us and a guy we befriended named Willie who was a stage hand. We gave him our address and he actually sent the photo. How cool is that?

Prost!
Kris

#20yearsofbeer

Posted in: Beer Events, Interesting Beer Info, Notes from the Panel

Early Beer Panel Shots…Working hard for you baby!

July 21, 2014 by Kris Calef

Post 9 - Kris2

Over the years, we’ve had a lot of folks participate in beer panel. We’ve been doing it two or more times a month for 20 years now and have kissed a lot of frogs to bring you our final featured selections. These shots were taken at the now defunct Laguna Beach Brewing Company which was home to beer panel for roughly 15 years. Sad to report that the building is now a Tommy Bahama.

Prost!
Kris

#20yearsofbeer

Post 9 - Jack, DJ, and Eric

Post 9 - Jack-croppedPost 9 - DJ, Jack, Eric, and Bart-editedPost 9 - Bart-edited

Posted in: Beer Events, Interesting Beer Info, Notes from the Panel

Tossing Back a few Cold Ones at the 1996 GABF

July 16, 2014 by Kris Calef

Post 6-editedThe best part about doing a beer festival is chilling out with good friends after the day is done.  Over the years, I solicited pretty much every friend I know to help me work the booth. Many let me crash at their house, dedicated their entire weekend to helping me sign up new members, and never took anything in the way of compensation except beer, cigars, and food that was paid for by bartering cigars.  Several folks helped me year after year, working the same events. Pretty cool to have friends help you build your business. 

To the unpaid festival workers, I raise my glass and thank you from the bottom of my heart.

Prost!
Kris

#20yearsofbeer

Posted in: Beer Events, In the News, Notes from the Panel

Pints for Prostates Exclusive Beer Naming Contest for The Rare Beer Club™!

July 7, 2014 by Microbrewed Beer of the Month Club

Win a Free 6-Month Club Membership to The Rare Beer Club™ by naming the exclusive featured beer for Pints for Prostates!

P4P LogoWe here at The Rare Beer Club™ are collaborating with Fullsteam Brewery in Durham, NC to create this year’s Pints for Prostates/Rare Beer Club™ exclusive beer.  Pints for Prostates raises awareness among men about the importance of regular health screenings and PSA testing through the universal language of beer and has been working together with The Rare Beer Club™ and U.S. craft breweries for the last five years creating inventive and exciting beers to help communicate their mission statement.

The beer will be featured in the club in September, 2014, coinciding with National Prostate Cancer Awareness month and will be named exclusively by the public, as anyone can submit names for the beers on the official contest page. Be sure to check out our other naming contests here.

Fullsteam wants this special beer to truly celebrate their “plow-to-pint” mission, highlighting the diversity and beauty of North Carolina. To that end, they’ve crafted a Spruce Pine Gose, a piney, tart, and slightly salty beer, incorporating ingredients from the North Carolina mountains (spruce pine tips), Piedmont (winter wheat), and coast (Outer Banks sea salt).  Contestants are encouraged to visit the brewery’s website to view other beer names to note the current voice and naming conventions used by the brewery.

Entering the Contest

Although the new beer will only be available to members of The Rare Beer Club™, both members and non-members are invited to enter the contest, and submit up to three entry names for the new beer.  The contest officially begins on July 3rd, 2014.  Entrants will have until Friday, July 11th at 2 pm PST to submit up to three names.  Finalists will be chosen by The Rare Beer Club™, Pints for Prostates and Fullsteam at which time contestants, club members and the general public can vote for their favorite name.  The contest winner will be announced on Monday July 21st.

To receive these special beers, join the Rare Beer Club™ online or call 800-625-8238 and be sure to start your membership by September, 2014 or earlier.

About The Rare Beer Club™ and The Microbrewed Beer of the Month Club™:

The Microbrewed Beer of the Month Club™ offers four different options for consumers. From the very inception of our original domestic beer of the month club in 1994, we’ve focused on consistently providing three primary product characteristics: Quality, Variety & Freshness. And in that spirit, we now offer you four outstanding beer club options, each dedicated to those same principles. Our owner’s favorite club, The Rare Beer Club™, features the finest the world of beer has to offer in limited-release, celebratory, artisanal beers from some of Michael Jackson’s favorite breweries. Two different selections are presented each month in 750 ml bottles, often cork finished, and some individually tissue wrapped. Members experience bold U.S. and imported interpretations of Farmhouse Ales, Russian Imperial Stouts, Barley Wines, Belgian Abbey Ales, varied Imperial, Extreme, Strong Ale and Grand Cru offerings, oak-aged ales imparting bourbon and vanilla notes, and much more. Many selections are pushing the envelope of creativity, are not yet distributed in the U.S., and brewed such that they can be cellared and aged. More information is available at www.beermonthclub.com.

About Fullsteam Brewery

Fullsteam is a Durham, North Carolina production brewery and tavern inspired by the food and farm traditions of the South. Their mission is to pioneer the art of Distinctly Southern Beer, brewing traditional and experimental beers with a Southern sensibility, often incorporating local farmed goods, heirloom grains, and seasonal botanicals.  More information is available at http://www.fullsteam.ag/.

About Pints for Prostates

Pints for Prostates is a 501(c)3 a campaign that reaches men through the universal language of beer to encourage them to take charge of their health. The group was founded by prostate cancer survivor and beer writer Rick Lyke in 2008. The grassroots effort raises awareness among men about the importance of regular health screenings and PSA testing by making appearances at beer festivals, social networking and pro bono advertising. According to the National Cancer Institute, 240,890 new prostate cancer cases were diagnosed in the U.S. in 2011. More information is available at www.pintsforprostates.org. Pints for Prostates also has a presence on Facebook and Twitter (@pints4prostates).

Posted in: Beer Events, In the News, Notes from the Panel

Cheers to 20 Years of Great Beers!

July 7, 2014 by Kris Calef

20 years ago today, on July 7th, 1994, Greg Hall and I signed a partnership agreement to create Malt of the Earth™, the original name of The Microbrewed Beer of the Month Club. The agreement was signed in Greg’s garage which served as our corporate headquarters for the first 4 months of the company’s existence. Our “formal” announcement was indeed, not so formal!

Post 1 A-editedThe Garage and First Year

I still recall vividly plugging one ear while on the phone with breweries, attempting to muffle out the sound of Greg’s dogs that were penned up on the roof of the garage and often running around barking at everything from the mailman to a leaf falling off a nearby tree. We brewed our first (and last) batch of beer while formulating our strategic business plan. The plan was quite detailed as I recall, a bit akin to something you might find in an operations manual on a nuclear submarine. The beer on the other hand, was just okay and after taking our first shipment into the warehouse, we quickly reasoned that we’d be much better off drinking the beers we were lining up for the club.

We moved into our first warehouse and made full use of the space, hosting poker parties on tables constructed of cases of beer and pallets, smoking fine cigars and drinking the best craft beers in the country. We’d put out 40 boxes of cigars, order pizza and have one of the brewers from our beer panel bring in a keg of something special. We’d crack open a beer at our desk every now and then and Greg even smoked a cigar from time to time…Just because we could. Not bad work if you can get it. In that first year, we solicited friends and family shamelessly, answered any and all customer related calls, packed the beer, wrote the newsletters and began to attend festivals, signing up our customers face to face, one at a time.

Festivals, Festivals and More Festivals

The Festivals were a lot of work, but they were also heaps of fun. Very cool to talk to existing customers at festivals that we returned to year after year and get direct input. Many often shared how much they loved Murl, a newsletter column “written” by my sister Annie’s Australian sheep dog, Murl. She did the graphic design work on our newsletters for free back then, so when she suggested her dog get his own column, it seemed like a reasonable request. I didn’t have the heart to tell customers that I was actually Murl.

We hadn’t found much that seemed to work from our guerilla marketing playbook except for the festivals and the internet was still largely the Wild West with very few understanding much about ecommerce, so we did what we knew how to do…Festivals…and a lot of them, sometimes 3 or 4 in a weekend. Big beer festivals like the Lodo Beer Fest in Denver and Oregon Brewers Festival in Portland became our primary source of acquiring new customers. We’d pitch anyone with a pulse for 10-12 hours straight and then get up and do it again for another 3 or more days for some of the bigger events. We did Sturgis, Mardi Gras, Street Scene, City Stages, The Barrett-Jackson Classic Car Auto Auction, and countless Blues, Jazz, Beer, Wine and Food festivals for the next five years.


Hard Times and Rebirth

We hit hard times three years in when we mismanaged our cash flow and couldn’t pay our bills on product that had already been shipped. Greg’s first born was only 2 or 3 years old and our unstable income proved to be too much of a burden on his young family so we downsized from 5 to myself and one CSR who went on disability a few months later. The next few months and Christmas ‘97 were pretty much the all time low as I was doing everything myself and wondering what the hell I was doing giving up a promising career with IBM to sell beer.Lucky for me all I had to take care of was my Maine Coon cat, Rosie.

I was so emotionally invested in what Greg and I had done for the last 3 years that I just couldn’t bear to shut it down just yet so I sold all those personal memberships that we had worked so hard to acquire at festivals to a competitor to give us a little cash infusion and kept doing as many festivals as I could to keep the doors open until I figured out our next move. The good news is that we bought that competitor a few years later so we got a good chunk of our friends back! The next move turned out to be dumping our original website and launching two new sites, one for our beer club, the other for our cigar club which seemed a logical extension early on. The sites went up in 1998, right about the time Google was born and lucky for us, our new web developer knew what they were doing and we fared well in the search engines. That was about the time things started to look up. We launched The International Wine of the Month Club in December of 1998.

A Family Affair

My mother, Kathleen Calef, joined the company shortly thereafter and we put her strong marketing background to work improving our marketing materials, website copy and pretty much anything that touched our customers. She launched our cheese, chocolate and flower clubs in 2002 and created our Whatever Whenever Program which later became Design Your Own Club, allowing our customers to combine our six clubs in any way to create personalized memberships. I’ve been fortunate to have been able to work closely with my mother, father and sister over the years. How cool is that?

A Natural Evolution to an Ecommerce Business

Over the years, we stopped doing festivals as they were just too much work and not the best use of our time. As the internet and search engine popularity grew, so did we and the focus became on diversifying our marketing mix so we weren’t so heavily reliant on the engines. Like every other business in America, we took a big hit in 2008 and 2009 when the economy tanked, but were able to maintain profitability without letting anyone go by heavy cost control efforts. I feel pretty good about that to this day as my team’s as loyal as they come and we take care of each other.

Takin’ it to the Next Level

We invested heavily back into the company two years ago, re-launching our websites and rebranding the company to MonthlyClubs.com™ in the process. It was without a doubt, the most work I’d done since we opened our doors, but at the end of the day, I couldn’t have been more pleased or more proud of what we accomplished. Funny how that works. Shortly after they went live, the sites were was awarded as one of Internet Retailer magazine’s Hot 100 E-Retailers of 2013, a pretty prestigious annual award where editors at Internet Retailer magazine choose what they feel to be the best, most innovative websites in the world. Sweet.

You Still With Me?

There’s so much more to tell, but I figure if you’ve made it this far, you’re either an employee, family member or friend and you’ll hear more when we celebrate the anniversary properly at the party. If you’re one of our longtime customers or just someone interested in our story…Thank you for your time and thank you for your business. We’re nothing without you.

I’m so proud of what we’ve accomplished in the last 20 years. I’ve got a rock solid team, top to bottom, solid fulfillment and marketing partners, and a loyal customer base, many who have been members well over ten years, a few that were signed up by me at festivals nearly 20 years ago. What more could a guy ask for?

Prost!
Kris Sig

 

 

 

#20yearsofbeer

Post 1 B-cropped

Posted in: Beer Events, In the News, Interesting Beer Info, Notes from the Panel

20 Yr Beer Naming Contest Winner Announced!

April 14, 2014 by Kris Calef

The beer naming contest is over. The dust settled and we in fact have three Grand Prize three winners!

The Bruery:   Smokey & The Bois submitted by Carlin C.
CigarCity:      El Monstruo Lúpulo submitted by Tim D.
Shmaltz:       Mazelhops! submitted by James T.

There were no duplicate entries for the winners of The Bruery and Cigar City beers and although there were no exact duplicates for Mazelhops!, and the winner was the first to enter any variation of that name, we’re going to award four contest entrants that had very similar submissions to Mazelhops! with a free month of the club of their choice. Well done Brielle G., Adam M., Elizabeth J., and Jeff B.!

There were so many great submissions that we’d also like to call out a few of our favorites as honorable mentions.

Bruery- 3in

The Bruery

Pino Cedro
Zesta Punta Double IPA
Pomelo Paraíso
Bosque Sabroso
Cedro Abeto
Spanish Jade IPA
Pomelo Paraíso
Cedro y Cidra

 

CigarCity-3inCigarCity

Ménage-A-Bois
Trois du Bois
Bois Brûlé, Fume
Fumée de Chocolat
Smokin’ Black Bois
Black Bois Fume
Barils de Fumée

 

Shmaltz

Shmaltz- 3in

L’CHAIM PA
Chutzpah IPA
Oy Vey IPA
Rabbis Revenge
L’Chaim! Oy P A
Beer Mitzah
Yenta’s Elixir
Hop Mitzvah

 

Thank you all so much for being a part of our 20 year anniversary celebration.

Cheers,
Kris

Posted in: Beer Events, In the News, Notes from the Panel

20th Anniversary Beer Naming Contest Finalists

April 9, 2014 by Kris Calef

Finalist NamesThanks so much for being a part of our 20 Anniversary Beer naming contest. We received just under 2,000 name submissions making it pretty tough to narrow it down to the top 3 finalists for each of the three beers.

Contest Details
You may cast only one vote for each of the three beers, but if you’re one of the finalists, you’re certainly welcome to encourage your friends and family to vote as well. All votes must be in no later than Monday, April 14th at 10 am PDT. The winners will be announced later that day and will be contacted directly to claim their 6-month memberships.

Duplicate Name Submissions: If any of the final names chosen were submitted by more than one contestant, the 6-month club membership will be awarded to the entrant that submitted the name first.

Cast your votes at www.beermonthclub.com/beer-naming-contest-20-years. If you want to read descriptions of each beer, please see our blog post on the contest.

Check out current naming contests here.

Cheers!
Kris

Posted in: Beer Events, In the News, Notes from the Panel

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