I could make all sorts of prejudiced guesses and assumptions. But, thankfully, someone bothered to do research at the time. Not exactly disinterested research, as it was at the behest of Lager brewers themselves.
Let's start with a brewer close to home: Heineken.
"The company have also carried out an extensive research project into the market for draught lager and they have found that most draught lager drinkers tend to be in the younger age group, half of the present drinkers being under 35, and three quarters under 45."
Brewers' Guardian, Volume 99, March 1970, page 44.
I'm amazed that 25% of Lager drinkers were over 45. Had they been drinking Lager for years or were they new converts, too? Or, perhaps, Scottish?
There was a downside, though. These new Lager drinkers had little brand loyalty:
"Heineken's view on the annual 30 per cent increase in this market is that one-bird of the present draught lager drinkers started drinking it in the last year. It was also found that brand preferences are low - nine out of ten people would willingly accept another brand if their usual one was not available."
Brewers' Guardian, Volume 99, March 1970, page 44.
What had these new Lager drinkers been drinking before?
"Heineken say that most people who do not drink draught lager have not tried it because they regard it as too expensive. In view of this they strongly recommend that the retail price for Draught Heineken should be at 2s. lOd. per pint. Finally, although many licensees appear to think that the introduction of draught lager will hit bottled lager sales, it seems to Heineken that a sizeable proportion of the present draught lager drinkers are drawn from the ranks of previous draught bitter and keg drinkers - hence the promotion of Draught Heineken as a new draught beer."
Brewers' Guardian, Volume 99, March 1970, page 44.
What a surprise - cask and keg Bitter. Though I'm sure there must have been some converts from Mild, too.
Another Lager brewer found a similar age profile:
"Since lager is increasing in popularity each year, who is drinking it? According to a market survey conducted recently for Skol, it is men and women between the ages of 20 and 40 who find lager their favourite tipple. People generally have more money in their pockets these days and are prepared to spend it on more “sophisticated” drinks providing they offer value for money."
Brewers' Guardian, Volume 99, March 1970, page 46.
Young people with too much money. That's who's to blame. As always.
Not meaning to be offensive but it is hard for mass market lager brands to be distinctive from each other. You would be able to tell the difference between Brehon Brewhouse red and Sullivans red. Treaty city Sarsefield stout and O’ Hara’s single dry stout.
ReplyDeleteOscar
Throw enough advertising money behind something and stop brewing other stuff and you will get the guilable to swallow it.
ReplyDeleteProcess that began with the tour of destruction in Ireland and Britain.
DeleteOscar
I can recall far more lager taglines from 70's adverts than other beers - Heineken refreshes the parts, Carlsberg probably the best lager, Harp stays sharp, Oranjeboom a lager not a tune, Skol skol skol skol...must have had some of the best advertising minds working on making lager a success.
ReplyDeleteI started going to pubs in the very early seventies, myself, and most of my friends, were drinking 'light and bitter', if we did have lager it was lager and lime, or lager top which was lager with a drop of lemonade. Christ! beer must have been sh1t in them days, we knew no better.
ReplyDeleteThere were good and great beers out there then.
DeleteOscar
Great walk through how lager started to take over. Unfortunately. But as someone born at the tail end of the 70s, I can only live vicariously through these memories. I was a lager drinker for my early drinking years until I found other options.
ReplyDelete