Actuary turned wine maker? Ten years after Tim Perr started his insurance consulting firm, Perr & Knight, he got "an itch to start a second business."
So he took his love of wine, his contacts with wine makers in his area, crunched some numbers and started Pali Wine Co.
You'd think that for someone who studies the financial risks of companies it would be a snap to make wine, but Perr says it wasn't that easy. It was actually much harder to make money in the wine business then he thought. (That's a common theme we keep hearing.)
But as CEO, he's pushing on, making some highly-rated Pinot Noir and Chardonnay. Perr sources the grapes from vineyards in Willamette Valley in Oregon, Russian River Valley and Sonoma Coast in Sonoma and from the Santa Rita Hills in Santa Barbara County.
And being a numbers guy helps him keep the price of the wine competitive.
"I watch literally every penny that comes in and goes out, from the price of glass to screw caps to the price of fruit," says Perr.
They recently started a second winery, Tower 15, named after a lifeguard chair on the beach where he grew up, which focuses on Rhone and Bordeaux varietals that thrive in the Paso Robles area of California. "Paso Robles is one of the most undervalued wine regions in the United States," he says.
So try a wine from Paso Robles and let me know if you agree with Perr.
Cent' Anni.
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