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Sasaki Kojiro
11-10-2009, 06:28
YORK, Pa. (AdAge.com) -- The beer you drink says a lot about you -- even before you've had a few too many.

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Your choice of beer can be as telling about your personality as what kind of clothing you wear or the car that you drive. And if you don't drink suds at all, or change brands depending on your mood -- well, that says something too. The concept of beer-as-window-to-the-soul comes from Mindset Media, the market researcher specializing in psychographics. The company started out with a theory that with so many opinions and brand loyalty around beer, the choice people make must be connected to personality. Mindset interviewed more than 2,600 people online in August and September and found specific personalities and mind-sets "popped" for more than half a dozen branded beer choices.
"I was surprised at how much we did find out," said Mindset Media Director-Research John Durant, who also admitted that he "doesn't just like beer, I love beer."


He and his team found generic differences as well. For instance, people who prefer domestic beers over craft beers or imports are generally middle of the road in their politics. They're not nearly as conservative as people who don't drink beer at all, but not as liberal as people who prefer more exotic beer.
People who drink a broad portfolio of beers are different than one-brand drinkers as well. Those "indifferent" beer drinkers are more open-minded and emotional people who enjoy a variety of life experiences. Mr. Durant pointed out that they might be the types of people who would identify with a marketing campaign like that of Dos Equis: "I don't always drink beer, but when I do, I prefer Dos Equis."
And that is the point of the research, of course -- it's not just all fun and drinking games, but it comes with marketing lessons, Mr. Durant said. For instance, there are a lot of Bud Light drinkers in general, but there is a big difference between the ones who also drink only other domestic beers such as Coors Light and Miller Light, and ones who also prefer craft and import beers. Domestic Bud drinkers are more impulsive and less compliant to authority, while Bud Light and import drinkers are outgoing extroverts who tend to be perfectionists.
Mindset Media walked Ad Age through some specific brand findings.

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BUDWEISER

True to form, Bud drinkers are sensible, grounded and practical. They are the polar opposite of daydreamers and don't easily get carried away. These beer drinkers also don't like authority—can anyone say union?—and are emotionally steady people who live in the here and now. However, what may be a bit surprising is that people who prefer Bud can also be very spontaneous and tend not to do much advance planning. Budweiser drinkers are 42% more likely to drive a truck than the average person, 68% more likely to choose a credit card with flexible payment terms and 42% more likely to use breath-freshening strips every day.

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BUD LIGHT

Are Bud Light drinkers just Bud guzzlers on a diet? Not a chance. Bud Light personalities actually skew quite different from their more-caloric sibling. Keep in mind, this was the beer choice for President Barack Obama during his so-called "Beer Summit" this summer when he invited police officer James Crowley and Harvard professor Henry Gates over to the White House for a beer and a make-up chat. (The cop chose Blue Moon and the professor selected Red Stripe.) Bud Light drinkers profile as lacking in carefulness. They are grounded like their Bud brethren, but respect authority. Bud Lighters can also have frat boy-like personalities, particularly when it comes to personal risk-taking. In regard to others, these good-time guys and gals are accepting of most everyone and generally easy to get along with.
Bud Light drinkers are also 48% more likely than the average person to play the lottery every day and 34% more likely to never buy organic products.

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MICHELOB ULTRA

Have you seen the 2008 TV spot that's still on about the hip, handsome young male executive dashing out of a meeting to put on running gear? He meets up with an equally fetching athletically garbed woman for an inner-city run before both magically change into trendy threads and hit a fabulously decorated rooftop-bar party with even more young and beautiful friends—all drinking Michelob Ultra, of course. Every personality trait Mindset Media came up with appears there. Michelob Ultra drinkers rate high in superiority; that is, they think highly of themselves and can be a little bit conceited. They care what other people think about them and want to appear perfect. They also tend to be take-charge types with strong opinions, and can even be confrontational. Michelob Ultra drinkers are 43% more likely than the average person to consider sustainability a priority, and 34% more likely to buy life insurance.

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CORONA

"Where's the party?" is probably an oft-asked question by Corona and Corona Light drinkers. They are busy and energetic people who are also extremely extroverted. They're people persons who seek out the company of others whether in a group or just one-to-one. Corona drinkers do more and see more people in one day than most people see in a week. But the life-of-the-party Corona drinkers also have an altruistic side; they care deeply about other people and see themselves as giving and warm. Corona drinkers are 91% more likely than average to buy recycled products and 38% more likely to own three or more flat-screen TVs.

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HEINEKEN

There's a slang term that could sum up Heineken drinkers: posers. These self-assured people believe they are exceptional, get low scores on modesty and high scores on self-esteem. They love their brand badges—a role the distinctive green glass bottle may play—and in fact, this group is attracted to luxury products in general. They are also energetic and dynamic and enjoy being both the center of attention and in the middle of the action. People who choose Heineken as their favorite beer are 58% more likely to have American Express cards, 45% more likely to be early adopters of new mobile phones, and 29% more likely to drive sports cars.

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BLUE MOON

The personality traits of people who prefer Blue Moon, a Belgian style wheat beer, tracked similarly to the same type of people who prefer craft beers—which means Blue Moon drinkers probably don't know it's a Molson Coors Brewing Co. family product made in Colorado. Blue Moonies are socially liberal and usually quite willing to go against convention. They really hate moral authorities, and believe children should be exposed to moral dilemmas and allowed to come to their own conclusions. They can also be sarcastic and snide in order to get a point across.
People who drink Blue Moon beer are 105% more likely than the average person to drive hybrid cars, 77% more likely to own Apple Mac laptops, 65% more likely to purchase five pairs or more of sneakers every year, and 32% more likely to not be registered voters.

CRAFT BEERS

These specialty made beers get lumped into one category both because there are fewer fans (and thus less statistically significant data) of them, but also because the personalities of one type fairly well describe another. This group is more likely to spend time thinking about beer rather than work. They are more open-minded than most people, seek out interesting and varied experiences and are intellectually curious. Craft-beer drinkers also skew as having a lower sense of responsibility—they don't stress about missed deadlines and tend to be happy-go-lucky about life. Craft-beer lovers are 153% more likely to always buy organic, 52% more likely to be fans of the show "The Office" and 36% more likely to be the ones to choose the movie they are going to see at the theater.

ABSTAINERS

It probably doesn't take a psychographic profile to discover that those people who refuse to drink beer at all don't like to loosen up very much. They are socially conservative and see many issues as black and white. Teetotalers honor tradition and authority and prefer a less-hectic social life. People who turn down beer are 50% more likely to call themselves Republican, and are 30% more likely to never buy organic products.

******

America-centric study obviously. But entertaining anyway.

Samurai Waki
11-10-2009, 06:48
Craft Beers for me, mostly just because I like a thicker, headier, malted taste over Domestics. Blue Moon is alright, but nothing to write home about.

And whats up with there not being a Guinness option? Gah.

Ice
11-10-2009, 06:49
BLUE MOON

The personality traits of people who prefer Blue Moon, a Belgian style wheat beer, tracked similarly to the same type of people who prefer craft beers—which means Blue Moon drinkers probably don't know it's a Molson Coors Brewing Co. family product made in Colorado. Blue Moonies are socially liberal and usually quite willing to go against convention. They really hate moral authorities, and believe children should be exposed to moral dilemmas and allowed to come to their own conclusions. They can also be sarcastic and snide in order to get a point across.
People who drink Blue Moon beer are 105% more likely than the average person to drive hybrid cars, 77% more likely to own Apple Mac laptops, 65% more likely to purchase five pairs or more of sneakers every year, and 32% more likely to not be registered voters.

Well the sneakers part is correct.

naut
11-10-2009, 08:10
And whats up with there not being a Guinness option? Gah.
Ah they joys of a good stout. Here James Squire makes a good one, "The Craic", tasty and strong.

Owen Glyndwr
11-10-2009, 09:27
ABSTAINERS

It probably doesn't take a psychographic profile to discover that those people who refuse to drink beer at all don't like to loosen up very much. They are socially conservative and see many issues as black and white. Teetotalers honor tradition and authority and prefer a less-hectic social life. People who turn down beer are 50% more likely to call themselves Republican, and are 30% more likely to never buy organic products.


I find that rather offensive. :no:

Oh, and come to think of it, this sounds an awful lot like a facebook quiz.

Fisherking
11-10-2009, 10:37
Sorry the quiz only works if you live in the US.

You have a lot of trouble getting American Beer in Bavaria because of purity laws.

Most of the Beers here are limited to a rather small geographical area so you usually order by type of beer rather than by brand.

That would be Dark, White, Light (color not calories), Alcohol Free, Bock, Double Bock, and even Triple Bock (which is a meal in its self). That covers most of the choices but there are more.

It can be a lot like wine, it depends on what else you are eating.

Even if you go to a neighboring state this changes and other German States don’t have the choices and variety that they do here.

It is surprising what can be done with a little barley and water. I am not much for wheat beers (white beer). They just don’t seem that satisfying, other than some of the Dark White Beers. Aventinus
is about my favorite of those.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aventinus_(beer)

This is the largest of the local brewers to my home.

http://royal-bavarian-beer-selection.com/

It doesn’t list all the beer they make but it gives four.

Their Dunkel is my favorite dark beer.

http://www.beerhunter.com/documents/19133-000026.html

And here is what it is like around the brewery in July every year.

http://www.ritterturnier.de/

Enjoy your beer.


:laugh4:

Fragony
11-10-2009, 11:25
Out of these real Heineken, but I prefer Brand and Hertog-Jan, sometimes a Jupiler

InsaneApache
11-10-2009, 12:11
Depends where I'm drinking. If it's in the pub, (unlikely these days) then a good cask conditioned ale like Theakstons best bitter is the way to go. If it's at home, playing ETW and getting quietly bladdered, then it's either Becks, Grolsch or if I'm feeling 'uppity' wife beater. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stella_Artois)

Hosakawa Tito
11-10-2009, 12:20
Hehehe, and here I thought that I drank Michelob Ultra on occasion, my choice during family night out for a fish fry or chicken wings, because of the low calories and light alcohol content. So who were the nerds who thought up this stuff? Bonus points for them if they got paid for it.

Andres
11-10-2009, 12:56
Something is wrong with the poll. There's no beer in it :snobby:

caravel
11-10-2009, 13:01
Something is wrong with the poll. There's no beer in it :snobby:

+1

My sympathies go out to those having to drink that stuff.

:sweatdrop:

pevergreen
11-10-2009, 13:43
Something is wrong with the poll. There's no beer in it :snobby:


Andres was on the way to the recreation room, to grab himself a chair. It was Friday. Tonight was the weekly Barbecue and 'recreational moderate drinking session'. Oh how he was looking forward to that. The fine Dutch beer. Drool seeped out of his mouth. Someone came up behind him and gave him a beer bottle, with the label of his favourite beer. He drank it, savouring the taste.


Andres had finished his third beer, and was about to doze off - he had always been a real lightweight. A man approached him from behind his chair, slightly disturbing his rest.

"Oh Mr. Andres, you're looking very green tonight. Could it be all that poison you just drank?"

"Poison?" muttered Andres in the way only a drunken man can.

"Oh yes, but not the conventional one. This is a special kind of poison. I like to call it... Heineken."

Andres never moved again. He was found in the morning with his eyes wide in terror.


:beam:

Andres
11-10-2009, 13:50
:beam:

By far the most cruel dead scenes ever written :eeeek:

Fragony
11-10-2009, 14:11
A tragedy of epic proportions indeed. Especially since the Flemish liked Heineken best in blind tests MUAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA PWNED UNTIL THE 6TH GENERATION.

And we aren't even very fond of it. It's for sleurhuttokkies.

KukriKhan
11-10-2009, 15:06
My taste in beer used to be dictated by price and location. When I lived in Tacoma, I drank MAXX Beer at 25 cents a can, it being the highest quality cheap beer. In Tampa I bought Pabst Blue Ribbon, at 23 cents a can, same reasoning. In Goeppingen, it was Stuttgarter Hofbrau, 2 DM a half-litre.

I moved around a lot, so it didn't serve me well to become loyal to one brand. Then I got my honorable discharge, and a steady job in California, and found "my" bar (a little hole-in-the-wall neighborhood joint with 2(!) color TV's and a good grilled burger after 1600, run by a retired Navy Chief and his Okinawan wife). My first visit, Mike asked "What'll ya have?"

"Beer", sez I.
"What kind?"
"Cold and cheap"

He pulled me a Bud draft and charged me 55 cents. Unbeknownst to me, I now had - at least in that place - a "usual". I'd walk in at the end of a workday, Mike or Akiko would see me and immediately pour my a frosty Bud draft. Or 12.

I'm married now, and don't visit the bar often anymore, but the Bud stuck. It's what I buy unless they raise the price too steeply and suddenly, at which time I revolt and buy something else, until they (Bud distributors) come back to their senses.

al Roumi
11-10-2009, 15:18
How can you have a quiz about "Beer" and not include anything that one might actually call a Beer. These Lagers are all pretty much alco-pops to a genuine coneisseur of Beer... Where are the Real Ales, Brunes, Weissbeers and others?

In their absence, I voted (somewhat ironicaly, given my snobishness) for Corona :D

Otherwise I'd be reaching for the tap of Leffe or Paulaner.

miotas
11-10-2009, 15:25
I quite like Blonde Larger, I don't really like anything too bitter.

Reverend Joe
11-10-2009, 15:27
How can you have a quiz about "Beer" and not include anything that one might actually call a Beer. These Lagers are all pretty much alco-pops to a genuine coneisseur of Beer... Where are the Real Ales, Brunes, Weissbeers and others?

In their absence, I voted (somewhat ironicaly, given my snobishness) for Corona :D

Otherwise I'd be reaching for the tap of Leffe or Paulaner.

And thus they come out of the woodwork... :brood:

Voted Budweiser and Heineken... the Bud description is okay, but the Heineken is way off. Probably becuase it's my luxury beer. I'm a bit curious as to what they would say about Icehouse, though. (Probably not even a description, just a picture of a liver with cirrhosis.)

Mithrandir
11-10-2009, 15:48
Any beer is good beer.

Though budweiser is very nice, as well as corona.

Leffe Blond is great too. Where's Grolsch? Especially Grolsch WeiBen?

Fragony
11-10-2009, 15:48
but the Heineken is way off. Probably becuase it's my luxury beer.

Now I am really curious about what stickers you have on your trailer, Andres may be overly overtaken with national pride but it's just not a very good beer. It's ok. You can drink it.

Andres
11-10-2009, 16:00
Andres may be overly overtaken with national pride

I'm just being civilised and concerned about the general health of my fellow Orgah's :snobby:

Drinking dishwater is not good for you :no:

Well Heineken is not dishwater. It's worse. Something to do with cats and liquids. Brrrr...

Hosakawa Tito
11-10-2009, 16:03
The best beer is the free one.

Fragony
11-10-2009, 16:10
I'm just being civilised and concerned about the general health of my fellow Orgah's :snobby:

Drinking dishwater is not good for you :no:

Well Heineken is not dishwater. It's worse. Something to do with cats and liquids. Brrrr...

You must have different cats, do I really need to remind you that the Flemish prefer Heineken with blind tests. No I don't but I am cruel and I am going to do it anyway. Did you know that the Flemish prefer Heineken at blind tests.

Andres
11-10-2009, 16:12
You must have different cats, do I really need to remind you that the Flemish prefer Heineken with blind tests. No I don't but I am cruel and I am going to do it anyway. Did you know that the Flemish prefer Heineken at blind tests.

They were probably promised 100 bottles of Westmalle Tripel to manipulate the results of that test.

Fragony
11-10-2009, 16:19
They were probably promised 100 bottles of Westmalle Tripel to manipulate the results of that test.

Which is rather generous since we are dealing with a dutch product here.

Strike For The South
11-10-2009, 16:27
Shiner Bock or Newcastle ale.

Zain
11-10-2009, 16:39
Vote: Abstain

:soapbox:

Sasaki Kojiro
11-10-2009, 17:31
This is how they advertise Heineken over here:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TH0fxwMsLfs

:laugh4:

Only the biggest name beers are in the study because they have to have enough people to get meaningful data.

Fragony
11-10-2009, 18:41
This is how they advertise Heineken over here:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TH0fxwMsLfs

:laugh4:

Only the biggest name beers are in the study because they have to have enough people to get meaningful data.

lol Heineken is the volleyball of beers, it's about as hip as using a certain brand of washing-powder.

Fisherking
11-10-2009, 18:52
lol Heineken is the volleyball of beers, it's about as hip as using a certain brand of washing-powder.

I agree.

But they do at least still brew my favorite Irish Stout.

Murphy's Stout which I like better than Guinness.

I would still feel better if they sold it off.:sweatdrop:

:laugh4:

Martok
11-10-2009, 19:04
+1

My sympathies go out to those having to drink that stuff.

:sweatdrop:
Actually, Blue Moon is halfway-decent, although it's probably still somewhat watered-down compared to what you guys across the Pond usually drink.

I'm not jealous, honest.... :wall:


My personal favorites are Leinenkugel's (particularly their Honey Weiss), which is a regional beer made over in Wisconsin; and Dos Equis Amber (especially when it's on tap). Good stuff! :2thumbsup: