Speaking only for me, I could never brew 150 quid worth of ingredients in the rental time even supposing it was a month.What about rent it for free if you spend say £150 on ingredients?
I'm seeing the biggest market as, kit and extract brewers. If one was to offer that customet base the opportunity to dabble in a batch of AG at realistic price, there may be some mileage in providing the kit, ingredients and clear instructions. I'm presuming AG is where the margins are, with breaking down bulk bought ingredients, so it could give some brewers a push into going AG. Which would also drive equipment sales.You need an awful lot of people interested enough in brewing, who don't have space for kit or aren't quite interested enough to be regular brewers
I think you're spot on. Also, I think there needs to be a very comprehensive list of terms and conditions detailing exactly what is included in the hire (no ingredients or fermenter etc) and what they're responsible for that the customer has to have read and ticked a box for before they can rent.I'm seeing the biggest market as, kit and extract brewers. If one was to offer that customet base the opportunity to dabble in a batch of AG at realistic price, there may be some mileage in providing the kit, ingredients and clear instructions. I'm presuming AG is where the margins are, with breaking down bulk bought ingredients, so it could give some brewers a push into going AG. Which would also drive equipment sales.
Possibly the most important thing to consider after terms and conditions is electrical safety. The unit and controller will need to be at least visually checked after each hire period and then periodically tested to make sure there are no faults. Unless you're qualified and have the right test equipment, that could be quite costly
That becomes complicated because if you are then allowing people to ferment on site then surely when the fermentation is finished you would technically become a small scale brewery by providing alcohol at the end.Firstly I'm not your target market as I have my own kit. If a brewer is at the stage of AG brewing there's a good likelihood that they have a lot of their own kit already, so I suppose are you coming it from the angle of 'try before you buy' or just rental? I think there's legs in the 'try before you buy' aspect, spend the £50 and give it a go, if you like it we'll give you £xx back on buying one from us - that's certainly something I'd have considered when I was ready to make the move up from BIAB.
I also think there's legs in offering brew days. Plenty of people do the gin distilling thing so why not do the same with beer? While the mash & boil are doing their thing you could do tastings etc to keep the punters interested. Only issue after that is you need somewhere for all the beer to ferment out and then bottling/conditioning/getting the beer to the customer.
Another idea is some sort of brew club, you provide site, facilities and a bit of supervision and they pay a monthly/annual fee to use it. That means that they do the work from start to finish but you'd attract those that don't have the space or kit to brew their own, you could chuck brewing courses into the mix as an additional revenue stream. Thinking about it you'd probably want a nominal membership fee and then a charge to use the kit on a brewday and then a smaller weekly rental fee for the fermenter to cover the temp control and encourage them to come back and bottle/keg.