Initially published by TChing as www.tching.com/2018/05/tea-concept-experience-economy/
I recently attended an Adobe software
conference tied to the theme of experience business or experience economy. The general idea behind
that concept is this: as economies
evolve people go from demanding basic goods (agrarian and then industrial based
economies) to demanding services and specific forms of experiences (service and
then experience based economies). The
higher the level of value the more that can be charged; “experiences” can
command higher pricing than typical services.
It’s not necessarily simple to tie this
back to tea. A
bestseller “The Starbucks Experience: 5 Principles for Turning Ordinary
Into Extraordinary” outlines how that company built an empire by shifting
themes and adding more value.
Of course we’ve now seen that approach not
work related to being duplicated for tea sales.
This
World Tea News article from January 2016 explained how all the Teavana
cafes were closing, but the retail stores were doing fine, and then in July of
2017 Starbucks announced
they were closing all those shops. I
won’t try to interpret that, since related factors were surely complicated, but
it probably works to say that sorting out the best approach to selling tea
isn’t simple.
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Former NYC Teavana café (photo credit) |
I’m noticing a divide in experiences related
to this theme and tea. By far the most
popular teas sold in Bangkok are bubble tea, or other flavored, sweetened,
milk-based take-away versions that might as well have tapioca pearls at the
bottom, even when they don’t. It’s a
beverage item and that’s it. Tea
enthusiasts are at the other end of the spectrum. There can be secondary emphasis on ceremony
or collecting gear but it’s mostly about the overall experience.
Of course it’s still about the tea,
right? Discussion arises about teaware,
preparation methodology, and even subjects like health concerns, in places like
online groups or at events, but in the end it comes back to liking aspects of
the brewed teas. That’s where the
experience is, there is just plenty of room left for framing that.
Related to this split there might be a normal
experience or preference curve of sorts, as people shift from floral blends, Tazo
tea bags, and matcha lattes onto Gongfu--style brewing something like Dan Cong
oolong or aged sheng pu’er. True to the
theory, as the demand transitions to a different focus it’s much less about
price.
Focus on minimizing level of cost can even
invert. Someone recently claimed in an
online comment to have only spent under $200 on a sheng pu’er cake once this
year, quickly qualified as a smaller 200 gram cake. Bulk order photos are a different form of
demonstrating status in consumption level. $200 orders can look impressive, but then a
single cake can cost more, and name-dropping decades old version references trumps
any quantity. A foreign tea enthusiast
recently upped even that ante, describing commitment level as best expressed by
a percentage of overall income spent on tea.
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Wuyi Origin Mi Lan Xiang Dan Cong; better teas don’t need to cost a lot |
It seems all this really isn’t describing a
general trend into expanding tea as a service-based experience versus a
commodity. The priciest local café here
in Bangkok charges over $20 for a pot of tea, for a scant few grams; that’s at
least back to purchasing an on-site experience.
How to build that into the next version of
a Starbucks, or did that prove to be a flawed goal? Are these people focused as much on
experience or on displaying status instead, or can the two really not be
split? It’s a bit of a tangent, but I’m
reminded of a far more absurd topic coming up in an article
about a golden taco:
The world's most expensive taco is
specially prepared at Grand Velas Los Cabos resort… Ordering it will set you back $25,000 —
almost the price of a new car.
The taco's foundation is a gold-infused
corn tortilla, which is then layered with Kobe beef and lobster. Toppings
include black truffle Brie ($100 per ounce) and a dollop of Beluga caviar ($700
an ounce). Then, more layers of gold are added on top to finish…
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I'd take a cheap Tex-Mex version over this any day |
Complaining about a $30 pot of tea and
people spending enough to buy a car for a taco seem worlds apart.
These diverse threads make it hard to stick
to the train of thought of what experiences people might want next related to
tea, or what will become popular, and how expenses would factor in. Seeking out traditional, quiet, feng shui
designed cafes doesn’t seem likely to catch on.
Even the committed tea bloggers I read sometimes speak of setting aside
the better teaware and complex brewing processes due to just getting busy, maybe
taking up a grandpa style approach instead.
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I drank Tazo ages ago; I have no hate for tea-bag based blends |
All the while in beginner oriented tea
groups I keep finding myself arguing the merits of basic, plain, inexpensive
loose teas. In one recent discussion
someone asked if mixing peanut butter powder into tea might work (and it might,
I guess), and I wondered if that person ever tried a Tie Kuan Yin of any
quality level before, or a single example of Chinese black tea. It turned out they were really looking for
Thai iced tea (which can be nice).
Plain, simple teas can be amazing experiences,
but it’s only easy to package and sell the leaf. It’s not as simple to bring the rest of the
experience to everyone.