You're staring at a wine aisle that's underperforming, and you're pretty sure the answer isn't another Pinot Grigio endcap. You're right — but the real answer might surprise you. It's not about what you're stocking. It's about who you're ignoring and why they walked past your wine section in the first place.
The Wine Market Council just released consumer data that puts a hard number on the problem: 35% of people who don't drink wine say it's because they don't like the taste. Not the price, not the intimidation factor — the taste. That single data point should change how you think about your shelves, your sampling table, and your growth strategy for the rest of this year. Because in a market where wine sales are sliding, cannabis beverages are gaining ground, and your core customer is aging out, the retailers who win will be the ones who use wine consumer data merchandising insights to convert skeptics — not just serve loyalists.
This post breaks down exactly what the Wine Market Council's latest research means for independent liquor retailers: what's shifting in the market, how to rethink your shelf layout, how to build a sampling program that actually converts, and a five-step action plan you can start this month. Let's get into it.
The Wine Market Council Just Handed You a Roadmap — Here's What the Data Says
Here's a number worth sitting with: 35% of non-wine-drinkers say they don't like the taste of wine.
Not the price. Not the pretension. Not the confusing labels. The taste.
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That stat comes from the Wine Market Council's consumer attitudes study — and before you shrug it off as just another survey, let's talk about why this one matters.
The 35% Taste Barrier: What It Actually Means
That 35% represents a massive, actionable opportunity. These aren't teetotalers. They're not anti-alcohol. They're people who tried wine at some point, decided it wasn't for them, and moved on. But taste isn't a permanent identity — it's a solvable merchandising and sampling problem. The right wine, presented the right way, at the right moment can change someone's mind.
And you need to be changing minds right now. Value-tier wine sales (bottles under $11 per 750ml) have taken double-digit hits recently . Cannabis beverages are carving out serious market share . Overall alcohol consumption is sliding as more Americans moderate their drinking. You cannot afford to leave conversions on the table.
Why This Study Carries More Weight Than Most
The Wine Market Council's consumer research isn't a one-off poll. This survey has been conducted regularly since 1997 , making it one of the longest-running and most comprehensive sources of wine consumer data available to retailers. When this study identifies a trend, it's backed by nearly three decades of context.
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So what do you do with this data? That's exactly what we're breaking down — what the findings mean for your shelves, your sampling strategy, and your bottom line.
The Wine Market Is Shifting Under Your Feet — And the Numbers Prove It
Before we get to tactics, let's make sure we're all looking at the same landscape. The taste barrier doesn't exist in a vacuum — it's colliding with three other market shifts that make it even more urgent to act.
Millennials Are Now Your Biggest Wine-Buying Cohort
Millennials now account for 31% of U.S. wine consumers, officially surpassing Baby Boomers as the largest wine-drinking cohort in the country. If your merchandising still targets Boomers by default — heavy Cab Sauv endcaps, old-school shelf talkers, loyalty to legacy brands — you're optimizing for a shrinking audience. The growth customer is younger, more exploratory, and harder to impress with a gold medal sticker.
White Wine Is Winning the Volume War
Here's one that surprises a lot of store owners: white wines have overtaken reds in U.S. still wine sales by volume — 48.5% vs. 45.1%, according to NielsenIQ data . Lighter, more approachable styles are what the market is actually buying. Your sampling strategy should reflect that reality, not the assumption that everyone wants a bold red.
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Cheap Wine Is Losing — Fast
Value-tier wines — bottles priced under $11 per 750ml — have seen double-digit volume declines . Price-driven promotions alone aren't moving the needle anymore. Consumers, especially younger ones, are trading up or trading out of wine entirely. When you pair that with the 35% taste barrier, you're looking at a merchandising problem, not just a marketing one.
Connect these three trends and you get a clear merchandising brief: your most likely new wine buyer is younger, prefers lighter styles, and is willing to spend more per bottle — if the experience justifies it. That's who your floor should be built for.
Now let's talk about how to actually build it.
