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Wine Paris field notes: what’s actually changing (and what isn’t)

Wine Paris field notes: what’s actually changing (and what isn’t)

From export urgency to no-alcohol trends, the fair showed how producers are adapting to a rapidly evolving market.

Illustration of a wine bottle on a paper plane flying over Paris representing global wine trade trends at Wine Paris Vinexposium
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Vinexposium Wine Paris is supposed to happen in the middle of a difficult moment for wine.

  • Consumption headwinds.
  • Generational shifts.
  • Distribution pressure.

I expected caution, maybe even fatigue.

What I found instead was energy.

Wine Paris trade show entrance with attendees walking between exhibition halls at Vinexposium in Paris
Attendees arrive at Wine Paris as producers and buyers meet to discuss export growth and evolving beverage trends.

Brighter halls. Open stands. Conversations flowing. At the end of the day, music started, cheese appeared, and business kept happening. Serious, yes... but human. Epicurean. Alive.

Optimism was not loud or naive.
But people were still investing, traveling, launching, meeting.

The industry is not retreating.
It is trying to adapt.

Export is no longer ambition. It’s survival.

If one topic surfaced again and again, it was distribution.

Producers are hunting for importers. Expanding beyond traditional routes. Looking wherever demand might exist.

A Lebanese winemaker told us 80% of his production must leave the country because local buying power simply isn’t there.

We heard wineries exploring Senegal, Cameroon, Côte d’Ivoire: markets where wine signals rising luxury status.

That is not trend chasing.
That is structural necessity.

Meanwhile, the attention crisis is real

Let’s be conservative.

Assume each stand shows only five wines (already unrealistic).
A visitor staying from opening to closing for three full days would still need to taste roughly 19 wines per minute to try everything.

Choice is infinite.
Attention is not.

In that environment, the enemy becomes friction.

Anything harder to understand, explain, or resell loses, which is why suppliers investing in imagery that helps buyers sell gain an immediate advantage.

No/Low: inevitable, strategic, uneven

The no-alcohol area carried curiosity and momentum.

Some producers embrace it. Others participate reluctantly because it opens doors with distributors.

Quality varies dramatically.

Whites, sparkling, rosé: sometimes impressive.
Some reds: still a struggle.
A few examples drifted into syrup territory, so sweet they felt closer to mixer than beverage.

At the same time, brands like Noughty argue convincingly that no/low should not be apologetic or cheap. Their thesis is commercial: people moving between alcohol and non-alcohol within the same occasion increase total spend for venues.

This is less about ideology than practicality.

Close-up of alcohol-free rosé wine bottle labeled MAGIE EN ROSE displayed at a no-alcohol beverage stand at Wine Paris
Non-alcoholic rosé (with extra flavors like apple, rose and mint) showcased at Wine Paris reflects growing innovation in the low and no-alcohol wine category.

Three booths, three strategies for relevance

Domaine Wardi

Tiny space. Huge emotional presence.

Traditional mosaic-inspired labels, visual storytelling, deep human exchange. You remember the person (Khalil!) and the place.

Authenticity still works... when translated clearly.

Laurie Millotte of Outshinery with exhibitors at the Domaine Wardi wine booth during Wine Paris trade show
Always so inspiring to meet passionate people!

Troupis Winery

Indigenous grapes from the Greek Peloponnese, modern execution.

Tablet in hand. Vineyards, varieties, history made easy to grasp.
Heritage without dust.

Tradition, upgraded.

Noughty AF

Bold, unapologetic, commercially sharp.

Understands drinkers are fluid. Occasion matters more than identity.

Different paths.
Same objective: remain easy to choose.

Two industries under one roof

Walking the halls, you could see it.

Some booths run by a solo founder and a friend, hoping to meet opportunity.

Others operating like machines: teams, calendars full, buyers pre-booked.

Relationship model vs system model.

They are competing for the same shelf.

Wine tasting at Vinarchy producer booth during Wine Paris with visitors sampling wines and discussing products
Producers engage buyers directly on the show floor as wine and adjacent beverage categories compete for attention.

What felt stuck

Without a compelling human interaction, certain labels disappeared instantly into the sea of tradition.

Perfectly respectable wines.
Competent packaging.

Unmemorable.

And in today’s market, forgettable is dangerous.

Sustainability & lighter glass

Important. Everywhere. Expected.

But no longer differentiating.

The uncomfortable truth

Most consumers do not live for wine.

Wine lives inside dinner, celebration, moderation, curiosity.
It competes with cocktails, beer, abstinence, early mornings.

Producers who understand this design for flexibility.
Others defend identity.

What will separate brands now

Not just story.
Execution.

Clarity.
Ease of resale.
Reduced cognitive load for buyers drowning in options.

Final impression

More optimistic and energetic than anticipated.

And quietly, underneath the tastings and music, a serious question:

Who is truly ready for the next step after the handshake?

Advanced perspectives for beverage brands

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