Questions for Leonardw

Log in

SmokingPipes.com Updates

Watch for Updates Twice a Week

PipesMagazine Approved Sponsor

PipesMagazine Approved Sponsor

PipesMagazine Approved Sponsor

PipesMagazine Approved Sponsor

PipesMagazine Approved Sponsor

Status
Not open for further replies.

Steddy

Lifer
Sep 18, 2021
1,438
24,660
Western North Carolina
That's the crux of it. Nobody cares what you think about the details or logic of the deal.

I'll repeat this for those of you having difficulty with this concept, NOBODY CARES ABOUT WHAT YOU THINK about the details or logic of the deal.

It's a done deal. So respond to reality instead of bitching about it.
Um, should we follow your lead and bitch about people bitching instead of just bitching about the closure of Sutliff ? Sutliff is closing shop. People are going to bitch. You are making the choice to bitch about the bitching.
 

Beers 'N Briars

Starting to Get Obsessed
Feb 5, 2021
153
679
Yakima, Washington
The STG facility in Denmark has similar equipment, so I'm not sure if they'll move the Mac Baren one or not.

One thing to keep in mind... blends produced at Mac Baren's facility in Denmark don't necessarily go away altogether, even if they may be discontinued in a certain market (such as the U.S.)
I was curious about the fate of Newminster products. I get that they aren’t on the list so they must be leaving the US market, but will they continue to be produced for the EU? Or are they going away entirely?
 
  • Like
Reactions: wyfbane

leonardw

Starting to Get Obsessed
Dec 30, 2011
190
684
🎼"One of these things is not like the other..." 🎼 Lol
I just... I just don't get it (See my previous question... Summed Up: "Why not downsize rather than drop thermonuclear bomb?")
I understand. Some of my responses come off as contradictory, partially because I do have to be somewhat cautious in my responses (publicly traded company, all that).

Here's a bit of a contradiction: The U.S. pipe tobacco market is still very profitable, AND the overall market has been declining in terms of volume for more than 60 years. As a result, manufacturers keep either closing their doors, or selling themselves off.

There are now very, very few companies on the planet capable of taking raw leaf and turning it into finished pipe tobacco. Another seeming contraction: Volumes keep declining, but there is now really only one company capable of keeping up with the global demand that remains.

Loosing that capability would be bad. More brands would be lost. Out-of-stocks would be rampant. Pricing would skyrocket.

One of the ways I make sure that capability remains is to ensure that pipe tobacco in the U.S. remains profitable for STG. In doing so I had to make some really unpleasant decisions.

The real contradiction: How does discontinuing profitable brands lead to increased profitability for STG? Factories, personnel, portfolio complexity and more all play a role. In any manufacturing situation, you do better making more of the products that more people want. What is the right number of brands and blends to balance our desire for variety with the realities of manufacturing? 25? 50? 150? 1,000?

I can't show the you the math, but yes, a large part of this is about making the math work. And by making the math work, I make sure we don't lose any more brands or blends.
 

sablebrush52

The Bard Of Barlings
Jun 15, 2013
21,152
51,110
Southern Oregon
jrs457.wixsite.com
Um, should we follow your lead and bitch about people bitching instead of just bitching about the closure of Sutliff ? Sutliff is closing shop. People are going to bitch. You are making the choice to bitch about the bitching.
Read more closely. I am suggesting that people respond to reality, which, given the quote that I took from Cosmic's post as the crux of the matter, is to buy the hell out of what you're going to miss.

If people want to go "wah, wah, wah" as some sort of therapy rock on but it changes nothing, so buy what you'll miss while it's still around to buy.
 

NookersTheCat

Starting to Get Obsessed
Sep 10, 2020
180
524
I know that I have bought more than 100 pounds since the MB sale to STG. Now that I have tripled my cellar it will be interesting to see what new purchases will tempt me.
Exactly. I mean, I'm not at 100 but I've probably gotten like 25 in just the last month or so since I found out. In addition to what I already had and compared to what little they say is gonna be left I really don't see myself buying much of anything anymore other than a few C&D small batches here and there and maybe some stuff/what's left from places like Boswell/Country Squire/Peretti.

But I can pretty confidently say that other than some more TK-6 which is my go-to (cause god only knows if they decide to rethink their Lane line again should the wind change) I doubt there will ever be another STG product I purchase. Not out of a "boycott" or sour grapes but just sheer lack of necessity.
And actually I find Boswell's Bear blend to be pretty much TK-6 anyway yet now with more consistency.
 

leonardw

Starting to Get Obsessed
Dec 30, 2011
190
684
I was curious about the fate of Newminster products. I get that they aren’t on the list so they must be leaving the US market, but will they continue to be produced for the EU? Or are they going away entirely?
This requires a bit of a history lesson that starts with Peter Stokkebye. STG had always produced the Stokkebye blends in DK, and sometime around the early 2000s (maybe earlier) STG purchased the brand.

Prior to 2011, the Peter Stokkebye brand was distributed in the U.S. by a company called Villiger-Stokkebye. When STG purchased Lane Limited from Reynolds in 2011, we now had a U.S. presence, so distribution shifted from Villiger-Stokkebye to Lane. Villiger-Stokkebye is now just Villiger.

In 2011 Villiger went to Mac Baren and asked them to attempt to recreate the Stokkebye blends. Hence the Newminster brand was born. It was always an attempt duplicate the Stokkeybe portfolio and only intended for the U.S. market.
 

sardonicus87

Lifer
Jun 28, 2022
1,430
14,387
37
Lower Alabama
With how much you’ve cut from the American market and the fact you shut down Sutliff and aren’t interested in small batch blends which is very vogue in the American pipe market these days, can’t you see how American pipe smokers feel they are an after thought and aren’t a concern for STG?
Correction:
It APPEARS very "in vogue" on forums and YouTube videos and pipe shows from an echo chamber that represents what is apparently only 2-4% of the overall American market.

It bears repeating (for the umpteenth time): your own backyard may not even be representative of the average back yard, nor as big as you think it is, especially when you're only looking at your own backyard, or you aren't even aware of just how many backyards exist or where they exist.
 
Last edited:

Steddy

Lifer
Sep 18, 2021
1,438
24,660
Western North Carolina
Read more closely. I am suggesting that people respond to reality, which, given the quote that I took from Cosmic's post as the crux of the matter, is to buy the hell out of what you're going to miss.

If people want to go "wah, wah, wah" as some sort of therapy rock on but it changes nothing, so buy what you'll miss while it's still around to buy.
This is fair and reasonable.

The “nobody cares what you think” part of it rubs me the wrong way.
 
  • Like
Reactions: yardjocky

Beers 'N Briars

Starting to Get Obsessed
Feb 5, 2021
153
679
Yakima, Washington
This requires a bit of a history lesson that starts with Peter Stokkebye. STG had always produced the Stokkebye blends in DK, and sometime around the early 2000s (maybe earlier) STG purchased the brand.

Prior to 2011, the Peter Stokkebye brand was distributed in the U.S. by a company called Villiger-Stokkebye. When STG purchased Lane Limited from Reynolds in 2011, we now had a U.S. presence, so distribution shifted from Villiger-Stokkebye to Lane. Villiger-Stokkebye is now just Villiger.

In 2011 Villiger went to Mac Baren and asked them to attempt to recreate the Stokkebye blends. Hence the Newminster brand was born. It was always an attempt duplicate the Stokkeybe portfolio and only intended for the U.S. market.
So it’s R.I.P. Newminster. Thanks for the clarification.
 

sablebrush52

The Bard Of Barlings
Jun 15, 2013
21,152
51,110
Southern Oregon
jrs457.wixsite.com
This is fair and reasonable.

The “nobody cares what you think” part of it rubs me the wrong way.
It's the basic reality of the situation. Did STG, or leonardw conduct any kind of public survey to see what people wanted? No. So no "caring about what you think" as a part of the decision making process. Why wouldn't it rub you the wrong way? Even so it's still the reality.
 

NookersTheCat

Starting to Get Obsessed
Sep 10, 2020
180
524
Correction:
It APPEARS very "in vogue" on forums and YouTube videos from an echo chamber that represents only 2-4% of the overall American market.
I mean, like someone else said here before. 2024's Carolina Red Flake was 18,000 units and it sold out in like what... 3-4 days? That's 2,250 lbs. Those seem like more than echo chamber numbers. They seem like STG/Leonard numbers lol. Could you do that literally every week? No. But C&D does it damn near every month.

I just can't believe that it along with only the most popular other blends (HH etc.) couldn't support a cut-in-half staff and produce a nice profit when the entire dang thing was already there (supply chains, farm relationships, blender contracts, equipment, IP, etc). Vs. the cost of nuking the whole thing in "the most profitable pipe market in the world".

Again I'm not bashing the guy personally and I don't have access to his numbers but I do perform accounting and logistics for a small/medium size business and it just seems like odd bigcorp-think to me looking in blindly from the outside.
 

geoffreybeene

Lurker
Sep 4, 2024
38
353
Seattle
It's the basic reality of the situation. Did STG, or leonardw conduct any kind of public survey to see what people wanted? No. So no "caring about what you think" as a part of the decision making process. Why wouldn't it rub you the wrong way? Even so it's still the reality.
I'm not pro-corpo bullshit but they don't need a survey to get a sense of what people want. They have hard sales figures that show what people want.
 

KennethR

Lurker
Dec 27, 2024
12
27
Warrensville, NC
milkolor.com
I'll answer as best I can... and it's still going to seem like a big "screw you" and corporate B.S.

Below is what I posted on the pipe forum we host. It repeats a lot of what I've said on this thread:

As it pertains to the U.S. portfolio, Sutliff sells 988 items (including items from the Mac Baren family). That is a very, very large portfolio. For reference, the Lane portfolio, which does far more volume, has about 125 items. 700 of their items sell less than 100 lbs. annually. This is a very, very small amount. Only about 30 items sell more than 1,000 lbs. per year. Anything under that would be considered small batch in a modern factory.

The Sutliff facility is comparatively small, older and well suited for during short production runs for the U.S. market. The STG facility in Denmark has extra capacity and well suited for long production runs to serve the needs of pipe smokers in more than 70 countries around the globe. Plus there is the Mac Baren facility, also in Denmark, that is sort of a mix between the STG and Sutliff facilities.

So I was faced with a conundrum. Maintaining three pipe tobacco factories was never going to be a financially viable option. Producing small batch items at STG's facility will not work with our current setup. The other two facilities do not have the capacity to produced the combined portfolios.

Based on this and multiple other factors, I recommended that we discontinue the majority of the Sutliff portfolio. STG followed my advice. The Sutliff produced items that we are keeping will ultimately be produced in Denmark. The Mac Baren items we are keeping will also be produced in Denmark. No Lane items are being discontinued (we discontinued low volume items from 2018 - 2020). I don't have the full list of the Sutliff/Mac Baren items we are keeping right now, but will in the coming weeks.

So, not good news - even that 988th item is someone's favorite blend - but those are the facts. I did not take these decisions lightly. I knew full well that in making my recommendation it would almost certainly lead to closure of the Sutliff factory. This was indeed the case, and last month I stood in front of those employees as the STG representative when the announcement was made.

Pipe tobacco is a profitable but declining category. In the past 15 years, companies like McClelland and Daughters & Ryan have chosen to cease operations. Larger companies such as Reynold's, Altadis, Swedish Match, and now Mac Baren, have decide to walk away from pipe tobacco. In each of these latter cases, STG has stepped in and it is only because of this that many of the brands and blends we love still exist. As painful as it has been, I believe the decisions I've made are what's best not simply for my company, but for the long term health of the pipe tobacco category.
Thank you for answering questions @leonardw
 

sablebrush52

The Bard Of Barlings
Jun 15, 2013
21,152
51,110
Southern Oregon
jrs457.wixsite.com
I'm not pro-corpo bullshit but they don't need a survey to get a sense of what people want. They have hard sales figures that show what people want.
I think that the shocker is in their definition of sales figures, given that they deal in mass market. Four goopers survive.

The other shocker is how many Sutliff blends were kept available even if they were marginal sellers. It's a boutique market approach rather than a mas market approach. Sales numbers can be read in different ways, depending on the company's objective.

Now people know what mass market numbers look like.
 

Terry Lennox

Part of the Furniture Now
Aug 11, 2021
567
2,954
Southern California
A question for Leonard: What is the US warehouse stock situation with some of the blends currently sold out at online retailers? Do you expect in the coming days and weeks another re-stock of, say, the HH tins and Mac Baren produced Capstan Original? Will the Mac Baren blends get one more production run this year?

And thank you for providing accurate information in a time of so much rumor and high emotion.
 

geoffreybeene

Lurker
Sep 4, 2024
38
353
Seattle
I think that the shocker is in their definition of sales figures, given that they deal in mass market. Four goopers survive.

The other shocker is how many Sutliff blends were kept available even if they were marginal sellers. It's a boutique market approach rather than a mas market approach. Sales numbers can be read in different ways, depending on the company's objective.

Now people know what mass market numbers look like.
The '<250lbs of HH ODF sold in Germany' is a pretty sobering figure and is helping me clear out some cognitive dissonance. I have personally bought around 3% of Germany's yearly sales of HH ODF in 2024. We might assume that HH ODF sells more than 1klbs a year in the US market, but probably not MUCH more than that. Really shows you the bottom line of how small a scale the 'discerning pipe smoker' sales probably are.
 

LeafErikson

Lifer
Dec 7, 2021
2,341
20,720
Oregon
We are on a pipe forum so yes, there are a few irrationally emotional posts to news that substantially slashes access to pipe tobacco blends. It just comes off a bit sardonic and callous to essentially make fun of the emotional responses. Yes, some people are overly emotional but give them a bit of time to process the news for Christ’s sake.

Not to sound like some sort of new age hippy pussy or anything but it had to be said. puffy
 

sardonicus87

Lifer
Jun 28, 2022
1,430
14,387
37
Lower Alabama
I mean, like someone else said here before. 2024's Carolina Red Flake was 18,000 units and it sold out in like what... 3-4 days? That's 2,250 lbs. Those seem like more than echo chamber numbers. They seem like STG/Leonard numbers lol. Could you do that literally every week? No. But C&D does it damn near every month.
I'll repeat myself:
It bears repeating (for the umpteenth time): your own backyard may not even be representative of the average back yard, nor as big as you think it is, especially when you're only looking at your own backyard, or you aren't even aware of just how many backyards exist or where they exist.

How much of that small batch was bought by what percentage of the overall market? Was all that 2,000-2500 lbs bought by just 2% of the visible and vocal community? How does that 2500 lbs compare to how many pounds of 1-Q is sold in the overall market?

It seems like big numbers only because we don't really have all the numbers. Even then, for a small outfit like C&D and Laudisi, that doesn't have to appease multiple shareholders, those may be good numbers, but they're absolute shit numbers for a large, publicly-traded corporation that has shareholders to contend with.

I'm not a corporate boot-licker, at all. But there's a lot more than just that. If it costs $100 just to fire up a machine, it's worth making large production runs so that the $100 base cost that exists regardless of how many you make in a run, is spread out across 10,000 lbs rather than 1,000. If a machine costs $10 to start, it's not as big a deal to do 1,000 in a run. C&D uses machines that take $10 to start, STG uses machines that take $100 to start.

Even then, what are the actual margins C&D makes on those compared to some of their other production? Furthermore, being smaller, if the margins are lower, it might be more worth it to C&D to keep doing it as a marketing strategy that doesn't make sense for a giant, multi-national, publicly traded corporation.

That's just one example, there's a wealth of other complicating factors in the math that we aren't privy to, as has been pointed out numerous times.

The viability is far more complicated than just 2,000 lbs of a specialized blend being sold out quickly, especially considering part of it's quick sale is due to collectors jumping on it partly because "limited run" (built-in "prestige" value to collectors/enthusiasts that doesn't matter to the majority of people).
 

KennethR

Lurker
Dec 27, 2024
12
27
Warrensville, NC
milkolor.com
@leonardw i have a few question for you. Since many of the McBaren HH blends are being sold out on online platforms does that mean that what is sold out now Is all that is left or is there more to be manufactured that will be released over the coming months? I know many are purchasing blends, knowing they’re going away, but will some of our favorite blends still be released that are sold out right now? Bulk and tins?
 
  • Like
Reactions: Shore
Status
Not open for further replies.