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An Interview With C.A.O.'s Tim Ozgener

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  • An Interview With C.A.O.'s Tim Ozgener

    AN INTERVIEW WITH C.A.O.'S TIM OZGENER
    By David Savona

    Cigar Aficionado
    http://www.cigaraficionado.com/Cigar/CA _Features/CA_Feature_Basic_Template/0,2344,2607,00 .html
    Dec 29 2008

    Tim Ozgener, the president of C.A.O. International Inc., is following
    in the footsteps of his father, Cano, who founded the Nashville,
    Tennessee, company in 1968. The 39-year-old Ozgener is a former
    stand-up comedian with the eye of an artist, which is evident in
    the visually arresting packaging and nontraditional blends that
    make C.A.O. one of the world's most innovative cigarmakers. Ozgener
    recently sat down with senior editor David Savona to speak about the
    40th anniversary of C.A.O., and the changes in the company since its
    January 2007 acquisition by Holland's ST Cigar Group, the maker of
    Henri Wintermans cigars.

    David Savona: Let's start from the beginning, and talk about C.A.O. and
    its origins. Tim Ozgener: This is our 40th year. My father started
    the business in 1968 out of the basement of our home, and it was
    really just a hobby. It was his love of meerschaum pipes. We started
    shipping out of the garage of our home, and it was something that
    developed organically into a family affair.

    Q: It started as a pipe business, and you and your sister, Aylin, would
    help your dad? A: Yeah. He is an Armenian who was born in Istanbul. He
    was trained as an engineer, and he didn't like the engineering of the
    pipes [that he smoked]. He improved the engineering, and he went to
    a retailer in North Carolina, and the guy said, "Where did you get
    that pipe?" And my dad said, "Well, I made it." The guy wanted to
    order some, and my dad said, "Listen, son, when you are Armenian,
    you never say no to an order. How many do you want?" [Laughs.] This
    retailer had some pull, and soon people started calling our house
    phone, and people wanted to order my dad's pipes. They wanted to make
    sure the pipe had the same improved stem, and he started putting his
    initials on the pipes, which are C.A.O. [for Cano A. Ozgener.] That's
    how the company started. He didn't have any employees, so when my
    sister and I were home, we would occasionally hear my dad say, "Are
    you done with your homework? Come downstairs." Downstairs, it would
    be a sea of pipes, and he would say, "This row of pipes--$45. Go." And
    he would hand us the pricing gun.

    Q: So it was a very modest beginning. A: Oh yeah. Looking back on it
    now, there are some fantastic stories. He had a retailer that he would
    do barter deals with--pipes for green coffee beans, and he would cook
    the coffee beans in a pan. And I would wake up in the morning and I
    thought there was a brush fire in our house because there was a haze
    of smoke. I would say, "This smells horrible, Dad!" He said, "You do
    not know what the hell you are talking about. This is quality! I am
    roasting coffee--look how oily the beans are!" He was a mechanical
    engineer. He used to analyze microfibers, so he was into the specifics
    of everything.

    Q: How did C.A.O. evolve from a company making pipes to a company
    that's best known for its cigars? A: When you're going to the trade
    show, it's basically pipes, cigars and humidors. And it's a small
    circle of people. My father got to know everybody, and he saw a
    trend of cigars having a resurgence, thanks in large part to Cigar
    Aficionado, and celebrities smoking again. So he said people need
    humidors. He was in London, found some beautiful antique boxes,
    bought 30 of them, shipped them here and lined them with Spanish cedar.

    They were all vintage pieces from the 1700s and they would sell
    out each time we went to the trade show. They would retail around
    $2,000, $3,000. So based on that demand, my father decided to make
    humidors that were more reasonable. And we were pretty proud of the
    fact that we were the first company to make humidors out of solid
    cherry, mahogany and walnut here in the United States. We found two
    woodworkers who were perfectionists like we were, I would help my dad
    put them in the back of his hatchback, and we shipped them from our
    home. Humidors quickly became a big part of our business--I remember
    at one point it was 60 percent of our business.

    Q: It quickly overtook pipes? A: Meerschaum pipes were really a
    niche. It's not like briar pipes. Right around 1993, '94, there
    was an opportunity to get into cigars. That's when cigars were
    red-hot. Everybody wanted them, and demand superseded quality and
    supply. Most everybody told [my father] not to get into the cigar
    business, but there was one man who told him yes, the late Peter
    Stokkebye, who was buddies with my dad.

    Q: The pipe guy. A: Yes, he and my dad had a very close personal
    relationship, Peter said, "Cano, go for it. Don't listen to
    anybody else. They don't want you in there anyway, you're just
    another competitor." So he went for it, and right around 1994,
    '95, my father hooked up with Carlos Toraño, who introduced him to
    Nestor Plasencia. And they made the first C.A.O. blend, which was
    C.A.O. Black.

    Q: The C.A.O. Black came out during a crazy time for cigars. Was it
    a successful launch? A: There was a very specific blend and look
    that it was supposed to have. I remember going down to Honduras
    and seeing people I didn't know lined up outside of Nestor's door
    hoping to get him to make a blend. The factory was just crazy. One
    box would come in and [the cigars] would be chestnut brown--the shade
    that we had agreed upon. But another box would come in and it would
    be green. Another would be yellow. I was living in Los Angeles, and
    California was everybody's No. 1 market. I was visiting all the stores,
    and I'll be honest with you--it was easy to sell out there--retailers
    were buying anything.

    Q: The inconsistencies didn't hurt? A: Initially, it didn't hurt
    it. People just needed a cigar to sell. But once things started
    slowing down, which took a couple of years, then people said, "Tim,
    I like you, but it's really hard to sell this product. Customers want
    something that's consistent."

    Q: So when cigar sales started to normalize, you heard that there were
    some problems with these things. A: Humidors were still a bigger part
    of our business. Cigars were ancillary at that time, but nonetheless,
    we wanted to be successful with them. When you visit all these stores,
    I like to connect with people, and when I said, "Help me out, what
    will it take to be successful?" they said, "Try this, try that." You
    smoke a lot of cigars and you start developing a palate for what the
    consumer is asking for. That was an education for me. In 1998, we met
    with Douglas Pueringer at Tabacalera Tambor in Costa Rica. He wanted
    to diversify his business, he had some great wrappers in maduro,
    and that's when we came out with our L'Anniversaire Maduro. People
    smoked it and said, "This is a great cigar."

    Q: That was a big deal for you--I remember when that cigar came
    out. What was the result at the trade show? A: The reaction was
    immediate, and we got very good ratings in Cigar Aficionado and
    Cigar Insider. That's what got us in the game. I also had made a
    friendship with Nick Perdomo, and later we decided to do L'Anniversaire
    Cameroon. That got even more accolades, and that just exploded. People
    are always looking for what's new, what's different. Look at the wine
    industry--look at how many new wines come out. Every year, we try to
    come up with [something new]. That's been our m.o. since 1998.

    Q: There are definitely two schools of thought in the industry on
    this. Some say keep it the same, don't change, and then there are
    people who always want something new. You obviously believe in the
    latter. A: If you're not moving forward, you're moving backwards. If
    you're releasing new stuff every year, if you have some stuff that's
    not performing, what do you do?

    Q: You have to whittle some things out. Have you ever dropped a full
    brand? A: Knock on wood, not that much. We've only phased out one full
    brand, C.A.O. eXtreme, and that's because there were inconsistencies
    in the product, and we couldn't tolerate it. That's just a decision
    we made on it. We did that in a very quiet manner.

    Q: You've had some very bold product launches, and nontraditional
    ones. When you came out with C.A.O. Brazilia, C.A.O. Italia, Italian
    tobacco has been used in the industry, but you were the first to
    brag about it. What were your thoughts about those launches? A:
    Most everybody was going down the same path, playing it safe. Wooden
    boxes. If you stain them, it's chestnut brown or red. We had this blend
    that everybody put their heads together and came up with, which had
    a Brazilian wrapper. At the time the famous Brazilian wrapper was
    Mata Fina. This was Arapiraca. I had noticed that in the humidor,
    everything blended together. I said, why not roll the dice to have a
    box that pops. People told me, "You're crazy." Fortunately, it worked
    out for us. Another reason we went with that packaging, whenever I
    went down to Nicaragua and Honduras, there would be all these cigars
    ready to go, but the boxes weren't ready, for they had to be kiln
    dried. Then I would see boxes--even famous Cuban boxes--they're wood,
    and they're putting paper over them. What a waste. They're chopping
    down trees, and they're going to cover the inside and outside lid
    with paper. Why not get boxes that are very stiff and don't use wood?

    Q: What's the Brazilia box made of? A: It was made from a very rigid,
    stiff cardboard, and now it's an MDF [medium density fiberboard]. Now
    we don't have to wait for the boxes, and we're not contributing to this
    wild deforestation. I don't want people to think when they're buying
    C.A.O., they're paying for the box. We can get boxes that are beautiful
    and the price is the same. For example, our Sopranos box. Beautiful
    box. That's basically sawdust that's been compressed. You're not
    paying for the box. We look at the cigar at the end of the day--but
    we want it presented in an elegant manner.

    Q: Was C.A.O. Italia a bigger risk than Brazilia? Italian tobacco
    is obscure. I know people use it, but people don't talk about using
    it. Was that a more risky move? A: We're interested in improving the
    quality in whatever medium, but we're also interested in breaking
    down myths. We try to be fearless in that arena. Going back to
    L'Anniversaire Maduro, there was a strip of Italian ligero used in
    that blend, which we didn't publicly market.

    Q: You never told me. [Laughs.] A: [Laughs.] It was kind of our
    secret--like a little dash of cayenne. When we didn't have it
    in there, it wasn't the same. And it was amazing, it was just a
    strip. So I remember my dad talking about how the Italian ligero is
    key. And I noticed that people in different factories have it--kind
    of an underdog kind of thing. Traditionally a lot of that Italian
    tobacco was ground up for cheap cigars. I spoke to leaf suppliers,
    and they said what Fidel [Olivas] and the guys were doing in the
    factory was magic. Taking compressed tobacco with a crusted look,
    moistening it--they're finding diamonds in the rough.

    Q: So it took a lot of work? A: Yeah. It took a lot of work. And that's
    the talent of our organization at the factory level, and I have to give
    credit to Fidel Olivas and his sons. We used Italian tobacco in there
    and the marketing of it was a bit of a risk. We blended around it by
    adding some nice earthiness of Peruvian and some Jalapa [Nicaraguan]
    to give it some sweetness. That was a big learning curve for me on
    how much detail was spent on the preparation of the tobacco.

    Q: What's your No. 1-selling cigar? A: Right now C.A.O. Gold is our
    No. 1 seller. It flip-flops between Brazilia and C.A.O. Gold.

    Q: How many cigars do you make a year? A: Well, since we're not a
    public company, we don't get in the numbers that much. Our focus with
    the cigars is not quantity, but quality.

    Q: But where do you fit in the cigar universe? You're not a small
    company anymore, you're not a giant, you're somewhere in the
    middle. Where do you think you fit in? A: Well, define production
    that would be big?

    Q: Twenty million cigars a year. A: Then I would say your description
    is accurate: middle trending toward more. We've had double-digit
    growth every year since '98. The only year we didn't was the year
    we introduced Mx2, and that cigar was much more difficult than we
    anticipated in making. It has maduro as a binder, and maduro as a
    wrapper. It held more moisture and took a longer time to dry. Once
    the cigars were made, we found it had to spend three times at least
    as long in the drying room. The Mx2 had to sit there for 90 days,
    sometimes more. We had this supply issue with Mx2 for a good two
    and a half years, maybe even three years. But now we've figured it
    out--now the drying rooms are more ramped up for the Mx2.

    Q: What's your goal when you make a cigar? A: We try to innovate in
    our blends, and also in our packaging, and we try to create a wide
    palate for people, no matter what they like to smoke. And we like to
    use Nicaragua as a base.

    Q: Is Nicaraguan tobacco in all your cigars? A: Almost all our cigars.

    Q: Can you rank your brands, from mildest to strongest? A: C.A.O. Gold
    would be the mildest we have, followed by C.A.O. Cameroon, followed by
    Cx2, followed by Criollo, which is more medium bodied, then I would
    say Sopranos, then I would say L'Anniversaire Maduro, which is more
    like a medium full, as well as Vision, Italia, America, same thing,
    Mx2, and then Brazilia.

    Q: Brazilia is your fullest blend? A: Yes. Now, we want to push the
    envelope and get even fuller, and that's where Lx2 comes in.

    Q: Let's talk about that--it's your newest creation, it has a lot
    of ligero. What inspired the cigar? A: After I left our trade show
    last year, I was looking at all of our products, what people were
    responding to. There's a niche of cigar lovers that gravitates toward
    cigars that are stronger. That was sort of a response to trying to
    create a cigar that delivered a real full-bodied experience, for
    that niche of smokers. But we don't want to do a cigar just for the
    strength of it--we want it to be complex and have rich flavor.

    Q: How do you create new blends? How does it work? A: It's a very
    creative process. We had some Pueblo Nuevo [Nicaragua] ligero. If
    it's something I want to explore, and find out the true nature of
    that tobacco, then I'll smoke only that. I did a lot of improv comedy
    when I was in L.A., so it's an improvisational process, which is
    what makes it fun. I'm down there, these guys at the factory are
    busy, and they're not sure what I'm going to do. But I think they
    like that. I try to take them out of the comfort realm that they're
    used to being in. Most of our blends come from us trying to do a
    creative convergence of things. That's what drives it. We also like
    doing things in threes, which I picked up from my father--we did
    three country blends, Brazilia, Italia and America. We had Mx2, Cx2,
    now we have Lx2, which is a nice completion of the three. Actually,
    I wanted ligero wrapper, filler and binder. The factory said it won't
    burn. I said try it again--they said we can't give you a cigar that
    won't burn! [Laughs.]

    Q: So the wrapper from Pueblo Nuevo? What's special about that farm? A:
    It has to do with flavor. When we were down there, smoking and trying
    these different cigar blends, I had all these cigars made that were 3
    1/2 by 46 ring gauge. They were each made of one type of leaf from each
    region of the country. We use 41 different types of tobaccos from 21
    different countries in all of our blends--that's some total. We looked
    at the materials that we thought were quality ones, and when it came
    down to Pueblo Nuevo ligero and Pueblo Nuevo viso, we found those to
    be outstanding--great flavor, great strength but great sweetness. It's
    like eating barbecue--great barbecue isn't just smoky. It has smoke
    but it also has sweetness. With cigars, if it's strong but doesn't
    have that sweetness, it's not satisfying. I tell all of our leaf
    suppliers--anything that's interesting, bring it and let's try it.

    Q: Is that a standing order? A: Not order it, but get in a bale, let's
    try it out. I'm not saying all of our blends are to be a kaleidoscope
    of different countries--Lx2 is almost pure Nicaragua. But we're very
    open-minded, and that's part of our success.

    Q: I was going to ask you that--what are the other secrets of
    C.A.O.'s success? A: Whatever you do, you want to improve the smoking
    pleasure. We did it with pipes, with better engineering. Humidors, same
    thing. We're doing the same thing with cigars. That means quality of
    the product--do we have to add more people to draw-test our cigars? How
    can we improve the manufacturing process? We're about to invest money
    to test the humidity level in each cigar. We've added Humidipaks. It
    also has to do with the quality of our customer service. And because
    I have a background in acting, the best actors listen and respond--so
    we try to listen and respond. Quality of the packaging. We want to be
    an exciting, innovative company. C.A.O. is a brand that is exciting,
    contemporary, innovative, yet still has its roots in what it means
    to make cigars. C.A.O. is a company that delivers quality, but is
    also fresh and innovative without losing touch with its roots. It
    all starts with the cigar.

    Q: How have things changed since the acquisition by Henri Wintermans,
    and what does that mean for the future of the company? What's
    different now? A: As far as here, nothing has changed. They've been
    very hands-off with us. I'm excited about it--they're excited by the
    brand. They see us as this vibrant, creative company and they want to
    be a part of that same mojo. Wintermans is very much into inventory of
    tobacco, and they feel that inventory of tobacco will help deliver a
    consistent product. I see the future as very exciting. Wintermans,
    which is a division of ST Cigar Group, Scandinavian Tabak, just
    sold their cigarette division and now want to have more focus on
    the cigar industry. Hopefully, they will be investing more in the
    American market. For our consumers that means the quality will remain
    as excellent as it is now.

    Q: Can you describe the relationship between C.A.O. and the
    Toraños? A: It started in the very beginning with my dad and
    Carlos Sr. We've known the Toraños for a very long time. Once
    the Toraños invested in a factory with the Olivas [family], based
    on our relationship we started getting more production from those
    factories. Then we saw that Charlie was stretched a bit thin. We
    said, "Why don't you turn your eye toward more day-to-day quality
    control?" When it comes to blending C.A.O., I do that, but we wanted
    Charlie to be focused on day-to-day quality control. Plus, once we
    selected a blend, he spearheads the relationship between the leaf
    growers and the leaf buyers and the factory. Making a cigar is not
    an easy thing. It's not just about making the cigars, but people
    trying them, getting them out there, distribution--those are big
    jobs in and of themselves. At C.A.O. I have to stress that we like
    to stress teamwork at C.A.O. We believe that the best team wins, so
    we try to give everybody something to focus on that's almost like a
    field of specialty.

    Q: When did that deal take place? A: The beginning of 2008. As far as
    with the factory and how it's set up, there's a factory in Nicaragua
    and Honduras. Most of what they're producing in both factories, a large
    percentage is C.A.O. In Honduras, it's more tangible. One building is
    just C.A.O. and one is Toraño. In Nicaragua, it's one huge galleria.

    Q: So they make the cigars and you sell them? Or is that too simple? A:
    We're very much involved in the whole process of blending. All of
    the blends that we come up with, we have a hand in. We're very detail
    oriented. The blends are taking us a longer and longer amount of time
    to do. It's like a concert, everybody getting together and working to
    deliver this blend. It's a teamwork process. We're very much into the
    team concept--we're inspired by that. I'm not motivated by money. I'm
    motivated by delivering something that brings pleasure to people. I
    used to do stand-up comedy because I like to hear laughter. I like
    making people happy. These are products that deliver moments of
    pleasure. That's the ultimate goal for me.

    Q: Forty years ago your father started this business. Your father is
    retired now--you have two young sons. Do you ever look down the road
    and hope one day they'll follow you? A: I look upon it the same way
    my dad did--whatever their heart desires, whatever they want to do,
    I'm going to let them go down that road. I'm going to love them for
    whatever they want to pursue. To me, this is not work. This is fun,
    this is a pleasure. And that should be the same for them, whatever they
    desire to do. You spend most of your day doing your vocation. It should
    be something that you feel passionate about, and that you love. v

    --Boundary_(ID_c0Q8jSMpGYKpQ07igLu8Jg)--
    From: Baghdasarian
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