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As Naked Wines CEO Rowan Gormley puts it…”Some businesses just couldn’t exist without social media.”

Certainly Naked Wines is one of those. It’s a refreshingly disruptive idea for the online wine business, creating a community empowered value chain from the vineyard to consumer. The results are large discounts, next day convenience and a true partnership with the winemakers.

Most social commerce solutions today are global brands or e-businesses layering in a social component, usually through Facebook to add traffic to an established business model. Interesting, but a bolt-on and rarely social at their core. Naked is decidedly different.

Naked Wines DNA is social by design

Naked Wines uses social media as an intrinsic design element to create something new and unique to the needs of wine buyers. There are Facebook fans and Twitter followers aplenty, but this is not an add-on to the big social networks. It’s an open web community with a referral-based economy and customer funded investments in their own supply chain of mostly artisanal vineyards. Socialization is tied to the commerce model itself, not an extension of Facebook ‘Likes’.

What wine consumers want, and what Naked Wines seems to have tapped into, is a community that is based on personal referrals, a social relationship with the producers themselves, resulting in significant discounts and a sense of control. They’ve skirted the legacy wine distribution and ratings system hierarchy by creating their own customer-driven system.

Most online wine clubs are based on discounts and remainder sales. Naked Wines is different. It starts with the concept of community that bridges both consumer and winemaker. The community chooses the wines, invests in the winemakers and sets the discount sales price. All with a bias towards the artisanal winemaker.

It started with a decision do something completely different

Per Rowan, CEO of Naked Wines, back in 2008, a group of 12 friends left Virgin Wines in the UK to do something brand new in the wine business. They had three guiding principals which are still the keys to decision-making today:

  1. Create a virtuous circle, where customers helped winemakers who in return helped the customers
  2. Be “Naked”–Be completely transparent (beyond the point of comfort) to the customers and the winemakers.
  3. Have the fastest cheapest delivery in the UK (£4.99 for next day)

The Naked Wines concept

The service is remarkably simple as a general concept.

Invest in independent wine makers and get preferential treatment. Commit to buy early and get better prices. Then wrap these two age-old concepts in a social community, with complete transparency and you start to get Naked’s social commerce model.

How it works

Angels are ‘investors’ and the core of the model. It’s a really simple process. They ‘invest’ only £20 a month. In exchange, they get a 33% discount off list price plus next day delivery. Angels also choose the wines that get sold—through tastings, something seen or heard about and as part of a ratings group.

Kind of like a democratic inventory control by club members and very close to a pure referral-based model. You don’t have to be an Angel to purchase from Naked, but discounts are not as steep.

Angels today invest between £600k and £800k a month. This supports the winemakers that sell wine through Naked. The funds are multipurpose–from a salary for the winemaker to purchasing grapes and barrels to covering the winery and dry goods costs. The Angel fund is the currency for the model and acts as a community bank for the entire chain of supply and demand.

Wine economics are messy and ripe for a change

Approximately 30% of the cost of a bottle is for making the wine. As much for taxes and the remaining big chunk for marketing and distribution. By pre-buying the wine before production, 25% to 65% of the cost is removed. This is where the margin for the business and the discounts or the customers comes from.

The winemaker is bankrolled to produce the wine, guaranteed a per bottle price, profitable at a lower cost and motivated to socialize with the buyers on the site to stimulate sales. At it’s best, wine is made and sold at a profit with little or no risk.

A smart twist is that the winemaker can sell the same product through traditional markets. The higher price by comparison with Naked’s price, further accentuates the value of Naked’s community model. Clever marketing at its best.

Community basics

Naked Wines website intertwines community and commerce. Social referral systems and reviews, ‘those who liked that, liked this’, access to the winemakers, and an open discussion on quality, likes and appraisals. Where else do you see a return policy that says…if you don’t like it, just return it. And if you have less than five bottles of the order left, just give it away at no charge. Wallmart this isn’t!

Marketing to date has been almost entirely “STL” or Share the Love. No cost viral loops through word-of-mouth, Facebook and Twitter.

Check out their online community. I would join for certain if I lived in the UK.

Some business metrics

Rowan shared some general numbers with me. Since launch, just less than two years they’ve recruited 100,000 new customers in the UK. They are on track to do about 1.7 million orders bringing in £9m sales in 2010. Their goal is triple in size in three years. Really impressive stats.

Many web apps would be happy to simply have 100,000 active users, not to mention paying customers in that time frame.

I really like this model. Bold. Unique. Socially powered at its core. Born out of a love of wine, a belief in the small winemaker and a leap to give the community control. A simple idea but not trivial to pull off. It’s never easy to take a big principal and make it executionally natural and easy-to-use. Naked Wines is on to something here and the economics speak for themselves.

Wrapping up

Naked’s business model becomes more efficient and more profitable as it scales. To meet their goal of tripling in size means supercharging the viral loop. Funding advertising I bet as well. And increasing the pool of vineyards and Angels multiple fold.

The challenge for Naked will be getting larger and still being community driven. Scale is the unchartered territory of all community commerce plays and no-one knows how big a community can get and still function. But they certainly have lots of room to grow.

My completely unverified crystal ball says that niche geographical communities or a franchise model with central warehouses and next day deliveries are coming in other areas and countries. There is no shortage of areas that would relish having community-driven commerce around artisanal wines.

If I’m right…and who knows…I hope that NYC is next.

I love big ideas that deliver value, disrupt the status quo and put power and choice in the hands of the consumer. And I really love the idea of ordering discounted wines from artisanal vineyards recommended by friends that show up with no fuss on my doorstep, the next day.