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The branding secrets behind booze-free beer business Heaps Normal

Heaps Normal is an alcohol-free beer brand. But take one look at the ads, the socials and the community, and itโ€™s clear this is more than another option for the designated driver.
heaps-normal-dry-july

In the simplest terms, Heaps Normal is an alcohol-free beer brand.

It launched last year with its Quiet XPA product โ€” which has alcohol volume of 0.5% โ€” and has recently unveiled its new Isol-Aid Haze IPA, in collaboration with Melbourne bottleshop chain Blackhearts & Sparrows and online music festival Isol-Aid.

But take one look at the ads, the social presence and the community that rallies around this business, and itโ€™s clear this is more than another option for designated drivers.

Chief executive Andy Miller had worked in the beer industry for years, and founded the business along with three buddies: brewer Ben Holdstock, branding whizz Peter Brennan and pro surfer Jordy Smith, who ditched booze as part of his bid to win a world title.

From day one, branding was front of mind for the four co-founders. They were determined that non-alcoholic beer didnโ€™t have to be synonymous with sobriety, and set out to target people who were just like them โ€” craft beer lovers who wanted to reduce their alcohol consumption.

โ€œWe wanted to build a brand that was a fun beer brand first and foremost, and a great-tasting beer,โ€ Miller tells SmartCompany Plus.

โ€œBeing non-alcoholic was just a feature.โ€

Heaps Normal Quiet XPA. Source: supplied.

That starting point has informed everything from naming the business and its flagship brew, to the design of the cans and even its positioning in bottleshops and at events.

Itโ€™s the very essence of the brand, and so far it seems to be working. Since December 2020, Heaps Normal has seen more than 200% revenue growth.

The number of new customers making orders has doubled each month since January, and from a standing start in August last year, it now has 600 distribution points throughout the country.

For Miller, there are three key ingredients to Heaps Normalโ€™s success so far. SmartCompany Plus sat down with him to unpack exactly how they take shape in practice, and how the co-founders are slowly weaving alcohol-free options into Australiaโ€™s pervasive drinking culture.

The three ingredients

  1. The community

    Traction has been made possible by the people who believed in Heaps Normal from day one, Miller says, โ€œfrom our dreamy investor list to our mates in the beer industry and legendary founding team membersโ€.

  2. The product

    โ€œIt’s so bloody hard to nail a non-alcoholic beer and our co-founder and head brewer Benny [Holdstock] approached it as a technical challenge and with an open mind,โ€ Miller says.

    โ€œThe brand might draw people in, but it’s the beer that keeps them coming back.โ€

  3. Purpose without preaching

    There is good to be done here, Miller notes. But Heaps Normal isnโ€™t about forcing sobriety on anyone, or demonising alcohol at all.

    โ€œWe’re stoked if you enjoy the beer and if you want to dig a little deeper, then there’s more to the story,โ€ he says.

The name

The company may be called Heaps Normal but the reference to โ€˜normalityโ€™ is intended to be tongue-in-cheek, Miller explains.ย 

โ€œThereโ€™s no such thing as โ€˜normalโ€™. Weโ€™re all so unique and different and weird in our own ways.โ€

At the same time, he says the name references the founders’ mission to normalise something that was โ€œvery un-normalโ€ โ€” that is, a non-alcoholic beer that tastes good.

Itโ€™s also about creating a โ€˜new normalโ€™ of sorts, inviting people to make more space in their lives for the things they consider to be important.

Those same principles were applied when naming Heaps Normalโ€™s Quiet XPA product.

Itโ€™s dialed down, alcohol wise. It references having a quiet beer with a mate, and itโ€™s a quiet achiever, Miller explains.

โ€œItโ€™s an understated-ness,โ€ he says.

โ€œYou donโ€™t need to shout about the fact that itโ€™s zero alcohol.โ€

Source: supplied.

The packaging

The team always set out to create a beer โ€œwe could be proud to take to a barbecueโ€, Miller says.

In bottleshops and bars itโ€™s often stocked next to boozy craft beers, and it doesnโ€™t look out of place.

That was very deliberately done, Miller explains. The founders didnโ€™t want their drinks โ€œstuck in the dark corner of the cool-roomโ€.

Rather, they wanted something that on trend, yet understated.ย The idea was to fit in, not stand out.

Heaps Normal’s packaging aims to fit in, not stand out. Source: supplied.

People can order a Quiet XPA at a pub, a restaurant or a gig, and not face questions on why theyโ€™re not drinking.

Again, Miller notes that being alcohol-free is not what their business is about, first and foremost, so itโ€™s not front and centre of the packaging either.

โ€œIt wasnโ€™t about conforming to the rules of being a non-alc or the established format of being a non-alc.โ€

The personality

Thereโ€™s also something about being a very Aussie brand that resonates with consumers, Miller explains.ย 

Increasingly, people like to know theyโ€™re buying local and supporting a small Australian business. But he believes it goes further than this.

โ€œBeing an Australian brand allows us to connect on a more genuine level with our audience,โ€ he says.

This comes down to the language used in their social media messaging, the kinds of situations they show Heaps Normal beers being cracked open and the kinds of events and businesses theyโ€™re partnering with.

The above Instagram post centres Heaps Normal as part of the classic Australian barbecue. Think snags, chips, foldout chairs, grilled onions, and cubed cheddar cheese with cured meats.

โ€œAll of that combines to demonstrate that we get it,โ€ Miller says.

โ€œWeโ€™re young Australians who share the same world as the people who are drinking the product.โ€

The partnerships

Which brings us on to brand partnerships. Now that parts of Australia are opening up for large live music events again, the team has been pouring Heaps Normal at music festivals all over the country.

They were serving at Summer Sounds in Brisbane, Sounds of Summer in Inverloch, the OK Motels series and the Small Town Big Sound tour throughout Victoria.

These are exactly the kind of situations in which the co-founders would typically enjoy a beer or two.

โ€œThey have also been the first point of call for us to enjoy a non-alcoholic beer, to demonstrate how the products can be woven into those situations,โ€ Miller explains.

The culture

Much of Heaps Normalโ€™s branding is about tapping into the Australian drinking culture โ€” a culture that, especially when it comes to beer, appears rock solid.

But, as Miller explains, if you look back at how Australian beer culture has evolved, it wasnโ€™t long ago that mid-strength beers entered the market.

Just 20 or 30 years ago, these lower-alcohol options would have been frowned upon or scoffed at, he notes. Now, theyโ€™re widely accepted.

โ€œAll the blokiest blokes of bloke town โ€ฆ theyโ€™re all about the mid-strength now,โ€ Miller says.

โ€œWeโ€™re now having the same conversation around non-alc,โ€ he adds.

โ€œTheyโ€™re seeing that itโ€™s not a threat to their way of life, or a particular kind of relationship they might have with their mates.โ€

Rather, alcohol-free beer is simply another option.

โ€œNo matter what your habits and your lifestyle are, itโ€™s an option that will be relevant to you at some point, if you enjoy the taste of beer.โ€

Heaps Normal co-founder and chief Andy Miller. Source: supplied.

The product

There is, of course, an aspect of Heaps Normal thatโ€™s not exactly branding, but is inextricably linked to it: the strength of the product itself.

The main thing that makes this product viable is the flavour. For Miller, the measure of success is whether people can forget theyโ€™re sipping on a booze-free option.

โ€œNon-alcoholic beer is such a bloody hard thing to get right,โ€ he says.

โ€œBenny [Holdstock] has just really nailed our Quiet XPA and made it a really enjoyable beer, regardless of whether youโ€™re sober or not.

โ€œThatโ€™s the thing that has garnered quite a lot of respect from trade and from other beer companies.โ€

Heaps Normal co-founders Ben Holdstock and Peter Brennan. Source: supplied.

This brings credibility to the brand. After all, you can have all the uber-trendy branding you want, but if the product isnโ€™t right people just wonโ€™t buy it.ย 

โ€œIt definitely is part of what has given us the traction so far.โ€

The fans

Heaps Normal has picked up some fairly high-profile investors along the way, including Koala founder Dany Milham, Adore Beauty founder Kate Morris, Linktreeโ€™s Alex Zaccaria and Nick Humphreys and former Essendon and Sydney Swans AFL player Ted Richards.ย 

The list goes on and on, and includes a mix of entrepreneurs, angel investors and influential members of the music industry.

Having also taken part in the Startmate accelerator program, Heaps Normal has accumulated a vocal army of entrepreneurial supporters too.

All of this โ€œdefinitely helpsโ€ spread the word, Miller says.

A quick search on Twitter also unearths reams of Tweets from consumers with absolutely no connection to the business recommending the brews.

โ€œWe havenโ€™t ever set out to try and align ourselves with the most popular people or the people with the most followers,โ€ the co-founder explains.

โ€œAll of our relationships have come really organically โ€ฆ theyโ€™ve discovered Heaps Normal for themselves and itโ€™s a genuine recommendation,โ€ he adds.

โ€œThereโ€™s no more powerful recommendation or word-of-mouth than that.โ€