A single liquor store in Florida — one location, no franchise, no corporate marketing team — has racked up over 100 million views on YouTube Shorts. [VERIFY: total view count] They're not using fancy cameras or hiring agencies. They're filming quick, personality-driven clips on a phone inside their store. And they're proof that short-form video is the single biggest untapped opportunity for liquor store owners right now.
Here's the thing: your customers are already watching Reels, TikToks, and Shorts every day. They're scrolling past polished brand ads and stopping for the stuff that feels real — a funny moment behind the counter, a staff pick they've never heard of, a bottle hitting the shelf that they've been hunting for months. The stores that show up in those feeds are the ones getting foot traffic. The ones that don't are invisible.
This guide breaks down exactly how to create short-form video content for your liquor store — from the content types that actually perform, to platform strategy, production basics, compliance rules, and a 30-day launch plan you can start this week. No fluff, no theory. Just what's working right now for real stores seeing real results.
Short-Form Video Isn't Optional Anymore — It's Where Your Customers Are
Let's skip the part where we try to convince you social media matters. You already know that. What you might not know is just how dramatically short-form video is reshaping liquor retail marketing — and how accessible the playbook really is.
The Numbers That Should Get Your Attention
Liquor Store 352 — a single retail location in Florida, not a chain — has accumulated over 100 million total views on its YouTube Shorts channel. [VERIFY] One store. 100 million views.
Their most-watched videos aren't cinematic masterpieces. An ID-checking video pulled in 415,000 views [VERIFY]. A hangover protocol video hit 221,000 views [VERIFY]. A short about the college liquor store experience? 67,000+ views [VERIFY]. All shot in-store with zero production budget.
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This isn't an outlier, either. Upwork job postings now show liquor stores budgeting for two short-form video posts per week as a standard content cadence [VERIFY]. When store owners are hiring for it, it's not a trend — it's an established marketing channel.
Why Liquor Stores Are Uniquely Built for This Format
Here's what most owners don't realize: you're already sitting on a content goldmine.
Think about what TikTok and Reels actually reward — visual appeal, personality, and quick hooks. Your store has all three. Colorful bottles lined up on shelves. Creative seasonal displays. Interesting limited-release products customers have never seen. Real interactions with regulars.
Accounts like @bigbearwine prove that even simple display showcase videos generate serious engagement. When you start brainstorming video ideas, the hard part isn't coming up with content — it's choosing which idea to film first.
The 7 Short-Form Video Content Types That Actually Work for Liquor Stores
Not all videos are created equal. These seven content types consistently deliver results in the liquor retail space, and they fall into three main categories.
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Entertainment-First Content: Humor, Relatability, and Personality
Entertainment-first content consistently outperforms product-only posts. It's not even close.
Liquor Store 352 built their massive audience not by showcasing bottles on shelves, but by leaning into humor and relatability. Mark Roy's witty wine tour video for New Hampshire Liquor and Wine Outlets [VERIFY: creator name and outlet] attracted massive attention for the same reason — charm and humor beat dry product showcases every time.
The lesson? People scroll past ads. They stop for entertainment.
Relatable, audience-specific content works too. Speaking directly to a specific group — weekend warriors, bourbon hunters, wine-curious millennials — makes viewers feel seen. That emotional connection is what turns a scroll into a stop, and a stop into a store visit.
Product-Focused Content: Recommendations, Restocks, and Recipes
This is where your social media starts driving actual revenue. Three formats stand out:
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- Staff bottle recommendations — Have your team pick their favorites and explain why. People buy from people they like, and short-form video lets your staff become the face of your brand.
- Restock alerts — Got allocated bourbon back in stock? Film the unboxing. Create urgency. Drive foot traffic.
- Cocktail recipe videos — These provide genuine value to the viewer AND showcase specific products you carry. A 30-second Old Fashioned tutorial is a natural path from content to purchase.
Recipe content is your lowest-hanging fruit if you're looking for easy video ideas.
Store Experience Content: Tours, Displays, and Behind-the-Scenes
First-person perspective store tours translate perfectly to short-form video. Walk through your aisles, point out hidden gems, and let viewers feel like they're already inside your store. Photos can't replicate that immersive feeling.
Display showcase videos are an underrated goldmine. @bigbearwine runs "display wars" content on TikTok that generates engagement from a dual audience — both consumers and fellow retail professionals who share and comment.
And looking ahead, virtual tasting events and live streams are emerging as key tactics in 2025, extending short-form video into interactive, real-time formats that deepen customer relationships.
