The Boston Beer Company, Inc.
The Boston Beer Company, Inc.
75 Arlington Street
Boston, Massachusetts 02116
U.S.A.
Telephone: (617) 368-5000
Fax: (617) 368-5500
Web site:http://www.samadams.com
Public Company
Incorporated: 1984
Employees: 355 (2000)
Sales: $190.6 million (2000)
Stock Exchanges: New York
Ticker Symbol: SAM
NAIC: 312120 Breweries
As America’s leading microbrewer, The Boston Beer Company, Inc. has made Samuel Adams known for being more than a signatory of the Declaration of Independence or a rebellious participant in the Boston Tea Party. Boston Beer’s pivotal role in sparking the microbrewery boom of the 1990s has become the seed of business legend. The company is the seventh largest brewer in the United States and claims the leading position in the craft beer market. Although technically, Boston Beer’s success has propelled its production level over the top—the annual production of other microbreweries remains under 15,000 barrels—the company remains the yardstick by which industry success is measured.
Headquartered in Boston, Massachusetts, Boston Beer brews and markets about 18 seasonal and year-round beers, including its flagship Samuel Adams Boston Lager, an all-malt Pilsner-style beer based on a 100-year-old formulation. The company sells about 1.2 million barrels of beer nationwide, based out of its two breweries, and contracts with three breweries across the United States to produce beers using its ingredients and recipes. The company also sells HardCore-brand cider and its BoDean’s Twisted Tea malt beverage. Its beers have won many international awards and are available in international markets such as Australia, Canada, Finland, Germany, Hong Kong, Ireland, Japan, Sweden, and the United Kingdom.Original founder, Chairman James Koch owns about 33 percent of the company.
1984: Founded on Life Savings and Hard Work
Boston Beer Company was founded by C. James Koch (pronounced Cook), a Cincinnati native who moved to Boston to study at Harvard’s Law and Business schools. In the early 1980s, Koch (descended from five generations of brewmasters) noticed an increase in the sales of imported beers. In April 1984, with $100,000 of his own savings, $140,000 from supportive family and friends, and the sales savvy of Rhonda L. Kallman (his former secretary and, eventually, company marketing vice president), 33-year-old Koch quit his well-paying job as management consultant to Boston Consulting Group. Armed with a recipe formulated by his great-great-grandfather, St. Louis-based brewer Louis Koch, the young James Koch derived a beer that was more full-bodied than typical U.S. brews. Koch’s recipe adhered to rigorous German beer purity laws that demanded top-quality ingredients and long brewing and fermentation periods.
After cooking up the first few batches on his kitchen stove, Koch contracted with 30-year-veteran Pittsburgh Brewing Co. to manufacture his brown-bottled, premium lager in their modern plant. Door-to-door marketing of the new beer began in downtown Boston in 1985, netting Koch a customer base of 25 restaurants and bars. Shipments of Samuel Adams Boston Lager were under way by April. Ironically, Koch was unable to find a distributor willing to carry his product, so he was forced to buy a truck and do it himself.
Because of the brew’s high retail cost—$20 per case, against Heineken’s $17—these first sales were the hardest. Koch and Kallman used a personal approach by encouraging bartenders to sample their product and explaining why Samuel Adams was a higher-quality brew from a better company. Their dogged persistence eventually won over the New England market. By 1987 the company was poised to enter the finicky Manhattan market where, Koch contended in the Wall Street Journal, “New Yorkers are well behind other cities in accepting quality American beers.” He added, “But we’ve done so well elsewhere, we’re ready to invest the time and money in educating New York.” By 1988, Koch and Kallman had such a strong sales base that they were able to acquire $3 million from an investment banking firm for the purchase of an old brewery within Boston’s Jamaica Plain section. Although efforts to establish a full-scale brewing operation there were quickly nixed because of the prohibitive costs associated with outfitting a brewery, the location would serve as a research and development facility, as well as a tourist attraction.
1990-92: Boston Beer Goes National
Boston Beer soon saw its distribution networks grow to include Washington, D.C. and Chicago. In 1990, as part of its controlled, targeted expansion strategy, the company further expanded its market by reaching an agreement with Portland, Oregon-based Blitz-Weinhart Brewing to brew and distribute its product in the western United States. It also opened the Samuel Adams Brew House in Philadelphia, where the Samuel Adams flagship brand is still brewed. Distribution increased in 1992, when California’s Pacific Wine Co. agreed to distribute Boston Beer products on the West Coast. With distribution now encompassing the 48 contiguous states, Koch watched 1992 sales increase 63 percent to $48.2 million, resulting in net income of $1.6 million.
Since upscale U.S. beer drinkers’ tastes ran strongly to imports, marketing a new high-end brew required some creativity. As early as 1986, Koch earmarked a large portion of the company budget for marketing. He composed some quirky radio advertisements promoting the quality of his product. And he did some flag-waving, touting Samuel Adams as a Made-in-the-U.S.A. alternative to pricey foreign brews. But, more important, Koch recognized the value in focusing his efforts on a specific market segment, rather than the general beer-drinking public. In addition to catchy slogans like “Declare Your Independence from Foreign Beer,” his ads were also an impassioned attempt to educate listeners about beer in general and about what made Samuel Adams unique.
But Samuel Adams’s rise to the top had stronger foundations than the flurry of interest generated by a clever ad campaign. Boston Beer made a quality product. The company used only four age-old ingredients—hops, malt, yeast, and water—a time-honored four-vessel, all-malt process, and a secondary fermentation process called krausening to create a smoother brew. Use of relatively rare European-grown Hallertau Mittelfrueh, Spalt Spalt, Saaz, and Tettnang hops provided a distinctive aroma and spicy edge. Boston Beer watched its flagship brand win numerous awards at Denver’s annual Great American Beer Festival and more medals at the 1994 World Beer Championship than any other brew. Tellingly, Koch’s 1993 advertising campaign, which claimed his product as the best beer in the United States “four years running,” unleashed arguments and threats of litigation by rival microbrewers in an increasingly competitive beer industry. Similarly, ads claiming that Samuel Adams was the sole American beer imported into Germany ruffled feathers of more than one competitor who maintained a European market for their product. Ultimately, the hue and cry over Koch’s jealous advertising strengthened the name recognition of his company’s product as consumers went to the bar to find out what all the fuss was about.
Due to both clever ad strategies and quality products, Boston Beer watched its production increase from 294,000 barrels in 1992 to 714,000 by 1994. From 1992 to 1993 the company expanded its employee base from 87 to 110; and the following year 170 people worked to produce and promote Boston Beer products. These increases in production and staff were the result of increased sales; and the company’s sales staff, which numbered more than 90 people by the end of 1994, personally contacted customers whose collective beer tab earned the brewer a net income of more than $9 million. Well trained in brewing techniques—all company employees were required to spend a day brewing beer in Boston—company salespeople continually educated retailers about the quality of their products.
As sales and profits increased, so did the money the company allotted to advertising. Boston Beer sponsored bar beer nights that featured Samuel Adams giveaways including T-shirts and caps, distributed coasters, table cards, restaurant umbrellas, and menu boards. To increase public exposure, the company also donated their product to charity events. Samuel Adams was served at each of the social balls and dinners that accompanied President Clinton’s ascension to the presidency in 1993. By 1995, along with other microbreweries like Mistik Beverages, Boston Beer began to consider the benefits of a television advertising campaign to promote its product; television testing was still under way through 1996.
1995-1996: Going Public
Prompted by its forward momentum, Boston Beer made the decision to go public in 1995, offering 3.1 million shares in November. Of those, it held back 990,000 shares, directing these toward its loyal customers. These customers included not only the bar owners, shop owners, and wholesalers who distributed company products; every six-pack of Samuel Adams sold at retail came with a mail-in coupon for discounted shares in Boston Beer’s growing operation. More than 130,000 customers were quick to invest in a piece of their favorite brew. By the close of the year, the company reported net income of $5.9 million on revenues of $151.3 million. Production was a record 961,000 barrels divided among an increasing array of products that included Samuel Adams Brand Ale, Boston Lager, Cream Stout, Honey Porter, and Triple Bock, as well as such tempting seasonal variations as Cranberry Iambic and Winter Lager. In addition, the company produced and marketed beers under the Boston Lightship brand. The Oregon Original brands, brewed by the company-owned Oregon Ale and Beer Company, had also been introduced to most major markets by 1995.
Company Perspectives:
We will continue our uncompromising pursuit of perfect beer. We will add new and interesting beers, but only if we can brew a style better than any other brewery.
Not surprisingly, Boston Beer’s success spawned a host of imitators. In fact, throughout the early 1990s, approximately 55 new breweries were established each year. Of these, the company perceived a real threat in the similarly named Boston Beer Works. Although Boston Beer would sue the coattail brewery, it lost the suit in 1994.
Much of the success of Boston Beer was its ability to foster and stay on top of a niche market for the second-most popular beverage in the world (the first being tea). Unlike other microbrewers—skilled craftspeople who pride themselves on small-batch production and local distribution, often eschewing the “business” side of the business by leaving advertising to word of mouth—Boston Beer was ambitious. A tiger in the industry, it went for the jugular, directly challenging high-priced imports like Heineken, St. Pauli Girl, and Beck’s. Strategically avoiding head-to-head combat with domestic giants like Miller Brewery, Anheuser-Busch, and Budweiser, whose highly financed promotional “lifestyle” campaigns featured frogs, dogs, and buxom, bikini-clad beach babes, Boston Beer aimed for a share of the import market. Instead of gearing its product toward twentysomething middle-class males, Samuel Adams targeted connoisseurs, beer aficionados with an eye for quality and a taste for an exceptional product. Advertising the weaknesses of imported beers, namely, that foreign brews headed for the United States have fewer premium ingredients, a “lighter” taste, and are less fresh because of long shipping times (like other perishable foodstuffs, beer “goes sour” and loses its flavor and quality after as little as four months), the company prided itself on the quality of ingredients and brewing skill it brought to its products. By directly tackling the premium imports, Boston Beer created a new marketing niche, domestically brewed premium beer, and assumed a leadership position within the growing specialty beer market.
In addition to encouraging other beer-brewing entrepreneurs, the major U.S. breweries did not respond to the advances made by Boston-based upstart Koch by lying down. Watching a segment of a relentlessly sluggish beer market mushroom almost overnight would tantalize any businessperson. Beer giants Anheuser-Busch, Coors, and the Philip Morris-owned Miller Brewery used their leverage to try to restrict the supply of raw materials and national distribution network of the entire microbrewery industry, a $400 million market divided among almost 500 brewers by 1994. Their efforts forced many craft brewers to confine their distribution within regional markets, with a select few becoming the targets of takeovers as the giants maneuvered for a piece of the growing microbrew pie.
The “if you can’t beat ‘em, join ‘em” strategy proved to be increasingly popular. Adopting an increasing array of small-scale guises, such as Miller’s nonexistent Plank Road Brewery (Miller’s original name in 1855), the major breweries attempted to cash in on the micro movement by introducing a battery of so-called “craft” beers into the high-end marketplace. Aesthetically appealing labels proclaiming brands like Red Dog, Killian, Blue Moon, Elk Mountain, Eisbock, Leinenkugel, Red Wolf House, and Augsburger filled retail beer shelves and popped up in point-of-sale tavern displays. Even importers responded to the competition by distributing “micros” of their own, such as Heineken’s Tarwebok and Labatt’s Moretti La Rossa.
In its position as microbrewery industry leader, Boston Beer encouraged cultivation of the brewmeister’s art. In 1995 it organized the first annual World Homebrew Championships, a summer gathering of 60 judges entrusted with the task of choosing the best among brews from around the world. Three category winners were announced in 1996 and their brews successfully marketed by the company under the names Long-Shot American Pale Ale, LongShot Hazelnut Brown Ale, and LongShot Black Lager. Meanwhile, Koch continued to indulge in the brewer’s art, deriving new brews for the discerning palate. During 1995 he introduced three new products—Scotch Ale, Cherry Wheat Ale, and Old Fezziwig Ale—increasing the company’s product line to 14. Triple Bock, first introduced in 1994, is a dark, sherry-like barley beer that is aged in oak casks. An acquired taste, it is a sipping beer that boasts a 17 percent alcohol level. Boston Beer’s spicy Cherry Wheat Ale, introduced as a seasonal brew, became an annual product due to customer demand. The second World Homebrew Contest generated a second series of LongShot beers, which were available in limited quantities in select markets, but in 1997, the contest itself was put on hiatus.
Key Dates:
- 1983:
- C. James Koch starts The Boston Beer Company with Rhonda L. Kallman.
- 1985:
- Koch and Kallman sell the first cases of Samuel Adams Boston Lager.
- 1986:
- The White House receives its first Samuel Adams delivery.
- 1988:
- Boston Beer starts brewing in its Jamaica Plain brewery in Boston.
- 1990:
- The company begins brewing at the Blitz-Weinhard Brewing Company, in Portland, Oregon.
- 1993:
- Koch’s aggressive advertising campaign causes competitors to threaten litigation.
- 1995:
- Boston Beer goes public.
- 1996:
- American Airlines selects Samuel Adams Boston Lager as its in-flight beer for first- and business-class passengers on transcontinental flights.
- 1997:
- The company buys an historic Cincinnati brewery.
- 1998:
- Boston Beer signs a distribution agreement for Japan.
- 2000:
- The company launches BoDean’s Twisted Tea, a malt- and tea-based beverage.
- 2001:
- President Martin Roper is named CEO, succeeding Koch, who remains chairman.
- 2002:
- The company launches Samuel Adams Light, a new lower-calories and lower-alcohol beverage.
Despite its ranking as one of the top ten brewers in the United States, Boston Brewery prided itself on being a small fish in an ocean containing a few large sharks; in the mid-1990s, the combined sales of the entire U.S. microbrewery industry accounted for less revenue than the total sales of Michelob Light in any one year. In a market dominated by a handful of giants, tenth-ranked Boston Brewery is, in the words of Koch, “like being the 12th largest car company.” Anheuser-Busch’s production had reached the millionth barrel by the first week of the year, Koch explained to writer Greg W. Prince in the December 1994 issue of Beverage World. “When I tell people we’re one five-hundredth of the beer business … [they] are surprised at how small we really are.”
1996-1997: The Market Slides, from Peak to Soggy
Although Boston Beer’s third-quarter 1996 results once again showed record results, the 294,000 barrels sold were fewer than the company had expected for its product line, sending mini-shockwaves throughout the microbrewery industry. Other small-scale brewers, many of which were fledgling operations, wondered if the wave they had been riding had crested. Even as the overall beer market continued to stagnate because of the increasing influence of health-conscious consumers, the market for upscale craft beers remained on an ascent—albeit one not quite as steep—because these same consumers expressed a clear preference for quality malt liquor products when they chose to indulge. On the strength of third-quarter net sales of $46.1 million, the company went ahead with the planned purchase of Cincinnati’s historic Hudepohl-Schoenling Brewing Co., its Midwest contract brewery. Also in 1997, HardCore Cider Company, an affiliate of Boston Beer, launched HardCore Crisp Hard Cider and HardCore Apple Cranberry Cider in 11 cities nationwide.
Throughout 1996, beer sales began to level off across the board, with both micros and large brewers alike posting more moderate increases in sales. Feeling an especially acute pinch due to lackluster Budweiser earnings, Anheuser-Busch fronted a group complaint to the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (BATF) leveled against Boston Beer, Pete’s Brewing Co. (makers of Pete’s Wicked Ale), and fellow top-gun brewer Miller. Accusing the two micros of false advertising in their reported claims to brew “in small batches” instead of through large-scale contracted breweries, Busch and associates also demanded that Miller’s parentage of both Icehouse and Red Dog be legitimized on the label rather than cloaked by its fictitious alter-ego, the Plank Road Brewery.
In retaliation, in March 1996 Boston Beer petitioned the BATF to request “full disclosure” on all beer labels. This would end the widespread use of encoded freshness dates and require point-of-product origin to be clearly identified. Boston Beer had been among only a handful of brewers to print encoded freshness dates on their products, so that consumers could evaluate their products, a practice it initiated in 1989. The brewer also accepted product returns after expiration dates had been reached. Boston Beer’s move to raise industry accountability to its own standards quickly received the nod from Consumer Reports, which praised both the company’s packaging and product by voting Samuel Adams the best in the United States in its 1996 craft-brewed ale taste test.
Furthermore, in April 1997, an advertising-industry watchdog resolved a dispute between Anheuser-Busch and Boston Beer. The Budweiser brewer protested the Samuel Adams claim that their beer comes from New England, when it is also produced by contract brewers in the Midwest. The National Advertising Division, an arm of the Council of Better Business Bureaus, decided that Busch’s ads, questioning the brand’s New England heritage and high price, were not accurate.
Around this time, Boston Beer also began efforts to bring its brew home to Boston, purchasing an abandoned brewery that it slated for renovation and planned for operation by January 1997. Meanwhile, the regional distribution of company-contracted brewing sites—which included Pittsburgh Brewing Co., upstate New York’s F.X. Matt Brewing Co. and Genesee Brewing Co., Cincinnati’s Hudepohl-Schoenling Brewing Co., and the Stroh-owned Blitz-Weinhart—continued to ensure the freshness of its products to its large customer base outside the greater Boston area. However, Boston Beer pulled out of its contract with Pittsburgh Brewing Co. after 1988, and in July 2001, Boston Beer and Hudepohl-Schoenling Brewing Company announced that they were not renewing their contract brewing agreement. But in Feb. 1999, Pabst Brewing Company assured Boston Beer that it would continue Boston’s brewing contract with Stroh upon completion of the proposed sale of Stroh brands and brewing assets to Pabst.
Boston Beer also entered into a working relationship with Seagram Beverage Company. Under the terms of the agreement, in exchange for ownership of both trademark and trade name and future royalties on sales, the company agreed to aid the liquor giant in 1997 with the development and marketing, of its new Devil Mountain craft beer line. Commanding a sales force of 115 people by 1996, Boston Beer began to introduce its product line internationally in Germany, Ireland, Japan, and Hong Kong. In May 1996 the company signed an agreement with England’s Whitbread PLC to aid the United Kingdom’s fourth largest brewery in the development of a craft brew that catered to British tastes. The company also literally took to the skies, as Samuel Adams became American Airlines’ in-flight beer on transcontinental flights beginning in mid-1996. Although pleased to have acquired an international profile, the company’s efforts remained concentrated upon its domestic market. Its goals continued to be educating the consumer and developing a taste for a top-quality beer while maintaining profitability.
1998-2002: Fighting Flat Sales
In 1997, the tide began to turn for the industry. Boston Beer was still experiencing growth but not the 30 to 40 percent increases the company had seen over the past five years. And smaller brewers were consolidating. In February 1998, Koch predicted on CNN that the next few years would be difficult for the smaller craft brewers. Although the healthiest of microbreweries, even Boston Beer was seeing sales and earnings fall. Looking at the saturated high-end beer market, industry analysts predicted that Boston Beer would survive because it was the only microbrewer with a national franchise. Also in 1998, as the company celebrated its 10-year anniversary since Boston Beer Company started brewing in its Jamaica Plain brewery, it introduced Samuel Adams Boston IPA, a traditional British India Pale Ale.
On January 28, 1999, addressing the bust that had hit the industry for the past two years, with Boston Beer’s stock at less than half its $20 initial public offering (IPO) price, Steven Syre wrote in the Boston Globe, “Boston Beer has taken no disastrous wrong turns or missed any great opportunities on the way to this predicament. It is stuck in a consumer category that lost some of its cachet and may be fighting an uphill demographic battle.” The market for specialty beers in the 1990s had expanded to include not only yuppie businesspeople but twentysomething drinkers as well. These younger drinkers had gained their more sophisticated taste for malt liquors on the strength of the craft beer renaissance, a phenomenon directly attributable to Koch and Boston Beer. Industry analysts attributed Boston Beer’s flat performance to competition from highend imports such as Heineken and Corona. “Imports stole their thunder,” trade newsletter editor Benj Steinman told the Boston Globe in the aforementioned article. “The core user base was never that large. So once they weren’t expanding the experimental customer base it was tough to grow. A lot of their growth had come from trial customers.” That year, Boston Beer expanded its sports marketing tie-ins, such as a March basketball promotion with ESPN.
The company posted an 8 percent volume increase in the first quarter of 2000. A contributing factor was the early 2000 launch of BoDean’s Twisted Tea, a malt- and tea-based beverage. Also that year, Boston Beer and craft brewer Sleeman Breweries of Canada joined forces; Sleeman would represent the flagship Samuel Adams brand in Canada, and Boston Beer would conduct market research in the States to uncover possible markets for Sleeman brand products. In 2000, the company also undertook an effort to assure freshness by buying back all out-of-code Samuel Adams for the month of March, an expenditure of about $2 million. (The distributor usually absorbs this cost.) Everything was recycled—the glass, the packaging, and even the beer, which was fermented into ethanol, an environmentally friendly additive for gasoline.
In January 2001, Martin Roper was named CEO, replacing Koch, who retained the title of chairman. In the second quarter of that year, the company saw an increase in gross profit margin, which it attributed to factors such as increased pricing and changes to the product mix. In July that year, the company kicked off test-marketing for a Samuel Adams Light product in Providence, Rhode Island, and Portland, Maine, with the tagline, “Taste the revolution.” On July 24, 2001, beer newsletter editor Steinman told the Boston Globe’s Chris Reidy, “There’s a bit of a disconnect, but it’s sort of a necessity” for full-bodied Samuel Adams to pursue the light beer category; it’s sensible given the lower-calorie/lower-alcohol sector’s potential for growth.
By January 2002, after test-market success, Samuel Adams Light arrived in New England bars and restaurants, and would land in stores that March. The new brew set a record in the Reduced Calorie Lager Category in December 2001 at Chicago’s World Beer Championships. “We’ve worked for years to develop a recipe that offers the flavor and drinkability that beer lovers want,” Koch said, describing the beer’s two-row malt and Noble hops. “The world’s best ingredients give Sam Light a flavor and complexity never before found in light beer.” The hops used in the brew, which weighs in at 128 calories, 4.2 percent alcohol by volume, are among the world’s most expensive and are grown in the Spalt region of Germany. The newest addition to the Samuel Adams portfolio gives Boston Beer a channel for growth in an otherwise soft market.
Principal Divisions
Oregon Original (India Pale Ale); Samuel Adams (Boston Ale, Boston Lager, Cherry Wheat, Cream Stout, Golden Pilsner, I.P.A., Pale Ale, Triple Bock); Samuel Adams (Double Bock, Octoberfest, Spring Ale, Summer Ale, Winter Lager); HardCore (Golden Cider, Hard Crisp Cider); Twisted Tea.
Principal Competitors
Anheuser-Busch; Gambrinus; Heineken; Pyramid Breweries; Redhook Ale.
Further Reading
Asimov, Eric, “Beer from Boston Brewery Makes Its Way to New York,” Wall Street Journal, June 24, 1987.
“Boston Beer Appoints CEO to Replace Koch,” Boston Globe, February 2, 2001, C4.
“Boston Beer Sees the Light,” Beverage Aisle, September 2001, p.8.
“Busch to Bottle Up Ads Targeting Rival,” Newsday, April 1, 1997, p. A43.
Hill, Sam and Rifkin, Glenn, Radical Marketing: From Harvard to Harley, Lessons from Ten That Broke the Rules and Made It Big, New York: HarperBusiness, 2000, 304 p.
Holson, Laura M., “Private Sector; The Shows Must Go On,” New York Times, August 12, 2001, Money and Business p. 2.
Karolefski, John, “Boston Brewin’,” BrandMarketing (Supplement to Supermarket News), April 7, 1997, p.l.
Krass. Peter, ed. Industry Leaders Speak Their Minds: The Conference Board Challenge to Business, John Wiley & Sons, 2000.
Mamis, Robert A., “Market Maker,” Inc., December 1995.
McCarthy, Michael, “Oops!” USA Today, August 28, 2001, p.3B.
McCune, Jenny C., “Finding Your Niche,” Small Business Reports, January 1994.
Melcher, Richard A., “Those New Brews Have the Blues,” Business Week, March 9, 1998, p. 40.
Morris, Valerie, “Brewer of Samuel Adams Beer,” CNN, Transcript #97081502FN-L17, August 15, 1997.
Prince, Greg W., “Solid Ground.” Beverage Aisle, June 15, 2001, p. 52.
——, “Little Giants,” Beverage World, December 1994.
Reidy, Chris, “Anheuser-Busch Agrees to Modify Ads Targeting Sam Adams,” Boston Globe, April 1, 1997, p. C2.
——. “Boston Beer Chooses New Advertising Agency,” Boston Globe, August 4, 1998, p. C9.
——, “Boston Beer Company Tests Product in Maine,” Boston Globe, July 24, 2001.
Rosenberg, Ronald, “IPO, Entrepreneur Hopes to Brew Interest on ‘Net,” Boston Globe, March 18, 1998. p. D4.
Syre, Steven, “Fighting Flat Sales,” Boston Globe, January 28, 1999. p. Dl.
Thierry, Lauren, “CEO of Boston Beer,” CNN, Transcript #98022618FN-L03, February 26, 1998.
Turcsik, Richard, “Boston Beer, ESPN Team Up,” BrandMarketing, March 1999, p. 8.
—Pamela L. Shelton
—update: Michelle Feder