RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:All APHRIANS will want to be sporting one of these shortly!!I agree the supply chain is completely under the care and control of the company. The problem that can arise is from the end user. Abuse cannot be controlled and must be taken with a grain of salt. That’s not to say someone won't get a bad product due to a plethora of factors. Like the alcohol industry, these should be rare for a quality company and as you point out the costs would be insane. What we don’t know is little Johnny was messed up and he stored his new bottle of kush in the sauna, then blamed his supplier. I have had enough of BS reports that don’t express all the details. Either way it will need to managed and will be part doing business with plant material. Like you stated I thnk companies better start to figure out how to mange these occurances.
optimi$tic wrote: here's a good example:
https://www.foodandwine.com/news/brewdog-overworks-sour-beer-defective-bottles and i recall even something as simple as a mislabeled bottle in a truckload will be cause to be dumped. Lots of QA investments will need to be made rather than marketing if any LPs want to survive this devastating effect in a new market.
optimi$tic wrote: i had some time in the beer and spirits industry, anytime there is a spoiled batch, whether its a bottle or a case or say the vat being transported didn't arrive at final destination at an exact temperature....guess what? The entire truckload is considered "dumped" and will need to be discarded at an undisclosed location, under the oversight of a federal employee, and then said company will be reimbursed tax credits.
i presume MJ beer will cost more than what we know to be regular beer currently, so imagine the potentially MASSIVE LOST REVENUES, wasted operational costs. Matter of fact, don't be surprised to hear plenty of such cases within the next few years.