cali
03-15-2004, 01:24 PM
There seem to be some pretty experienced people out there, so I have a question:
I understand that they way beverage distribution contracts work, if a certain distributor has the rights to a new brand that becomes very popular (like Red Bull), then they can sell it to another larger distributor and basically get a huge premium.
It sounds like the way baseball teams used to trade players around before free agency. Is this true? Did all the *original* RB distributors make a big premium selling their rights to big guys?
Who was the original RB distributor in San Francisco, & did they get a big payday? Is that the game for the small guys - discover new talent?
Very curious. Thanks...
I understand that they way beverage distribution contracts work, if a certain distributor has the rights to a new brand that becomes very popular (like Red Bull), then they can sell it to another larger distributor and basically get a huge premium.
It sounds like the way baseball teams used to trade players around before free agency. Is this true? Did all the *original* RB distributors make a big premium selling their rights to big guys?
Who was the original RB distributor in San Francisco, & did they get a big payday? Is that the game for the small guys - discover new talent?
Very curious. Thanks...