- So I'm holding in my hand
Speaker:a Domain Neutron 52x5 Robusto Extra.
Speaker:I'm sitting with Daniel, Daniel Lance.
Speaker:Daniel, you're launching a new cigar?
Speaker:- Sure am, yeah.
Speaker:Domain Cigars has been in progress now
Speaker:for almost five years,
in the world of smoke.
Speaker:Started out, Esteban
Disla, my business partner,
Speaker:who was, you know, a former master blender
Speaker:for more than 30 different companies.
Speaker:He was instrumental in the starting
Speaker:of Latin America Cigars.
Speaker:He's been growing tobacco
since he was 11 years old.
Speaker:You know, incredible
background that this guy has.
Speaker:- Sounds like a good partner to have.
Speaker:- Oh, absolutely, absolutely (laughing).
Speaker:I think he's forgotten more about tobacco
Speaker:than I know, certainly (laughing).
Speaker:But that said, yeah, we've
been working on this project
Speaker:for quite a long time, keeping
it pretty tight-lipped.
Speaker:The last two years, we
started the factory,
Speaker:whenever he parted ways with
his former business partner.
Speaker:He's always had the vision
Speaker:of creating a fully
vertically-integrated cigar company
Speaker:out of the gate.
Speaker:Our own tobacco, we put that in pilons.
Speaker:We own our own pilon
facility in Brigadeiro,
Speaker:which is in Condega, Estelí, Nicaragua.
Speaker:And in doing so, we
actually blend the cigars
Speaker:with our own tobacco.
Speaker:We work with several partners
Speaker:from providing wrapper for the cigars,
Speaker:providing Habano, providing
the Mexican San Andrés
Speaker:that you're smoking there,
in the form of the Neutron.
Speaker:That's by Gilberto Oliva from TANICSA,
Speaker:former founder of Oliva Cigar.
Speaker:So really fantastic partners
that we've worked with.
Speaker:We've collaborated with more
than 100 people in Estelí,
Speaker:Condega, Pueblo Nuevo,
where we all have farms,
Speaker:both contract farms, and
farms that we own ourselves.
Speaker:So it's a lot to put together,
Speaker:but that really kind of
starts us down this journey
Speaker:of what do new brands look like
as they come on the market?
Speaker:What does the future of cigar
making look like, right?
Speaker:And that's very much what
Domain's sphere of activity,
Speaker:or excellence, right?
Speaker:And that's the name of the company.
Speaker:And you see Domain occasionally
as an idea or a concept,
Speaker:flirted with in the cigar industry.
Speaker:But what does it really mean
to be a third wave cigar maker?
Speaker:if you, are you familiar with
that term from I'm coffee,
Speaker:or anything like that?
Speaker:- I'm not.
Speaker:- I'm so, you know,
Speaker:in the coffee industry they
talk about it in waves,
Speaker:and really distinct waves.
Speaker:And that's what I would
like to see elements of
Speaker:in the cigar industry.
Speaker:I've been a cigar smoker
for more than 17 years now.
Speaker:I worked for more than 10
years in a retail capacity,
Speaker:while I was out building other businesses.
Speaker:My professional career was
in industrial cybersecurity.
Speaker:I started a lot of fantastic,
Speaker:really strong companies in that space.
Speaker:And really what what I saw
was the opportunity for us
Speaker:to start better defining
what a cigar maker is doing,
Speaker:and what a cigar maker's approach,
Speaker:or stance towards the industry is.
Speaker:And if we look at how the
coffee industry did this,
Speaker:you take an agricultural product,
Speaker:and you wrap a brand around it,
Speaker:well that's how you get
Folgers, and Maxwell House.
Speaker:- Sure.
Speaker:- That was the first way
Speaker:that the coffee industry
started to actually wrap a name
Speaker:that meant something around
a product that, you know,
Speaker:had a agricultural function before that.
Speaker:You'd buy grain coffee and
roast it at your house.
Speaker:So they did that.
Speaker:That was the first wave of coffee.
Speaker:And very much the cigar community
Speaker:was defined by what happened
in 1962, the Cuban exodus.
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:- That's what defined a standard
set of names, and brands,
Speaker:that were known, or
ubiquitous, for making cigars.
Speaker:And some of those names and
brands persist to this day.
Speaker:And then we had a period
Speaker:where we really lost
a lot of intelligence.
Speaker:We lost a lot of progression
Speaker:in the making and fabrication of cigars.
Speaker:And in fact, it switched
countries entirely.
Speaker:It went from being a
domestic United States thing,
Speaker:to being something that took place
Speaker:in Central and South America.
Speaker:And in those regions,
several of these companies
Speaker:that I would consider
first wave cigar makers,
Speaker:actually had to start
and found that brand.
Speaker:So as you move forward,
Speaker:and again, what is a
second wave then, right?
Speaker:And in the coffee industry,
Speaker:it was ubiquitous of supply.
Speaker:It was creating a standard
approach, a standard model.
Speaker:And that is the "mermaid company".
Speaker:- Sure.
Speaker:- Which is all over the place.
Speaker:You see Starbucks on every other corner,
Speaker:standard set of drinks, standard menu,
Speaker:and you can walk just about anywhere,
Speaker:and bump into a cafe
Speaker:that's going to have that
standard menu, right?
Speaker:And that was really the
second wave of coffee,
Speaker:was creating the cafe experience.
Speaker:So in the 90s, what we
had happen in tobacco
Speaker:was we had just an in-rush
of people that said,
Speaker:"You, Mr. First Wave cigar maker,
Speaker:"you know everything there
is to know about tobacco,
Speaker:"but I know the customers,
I know the branding,
Speaker:"I know how people want to
see and experience this."
Speaker:And they put together a lot of direction,
Speaker:and commission companies
and they're fantastic.
Speaker:But that defines a lot
of this industry today,
Speaker:which is a cigar maker being told,
Speaker:"Do it this way, put this
name on it, and it will sell,
Speaker:"and you will collect a
commission for it," right?
Speaker:So what the heck is a
third wave cigar maker?
Speaker:Whenever we talk about
that, that you know,
Speaker:doesn't really jive with a lot of people.
Speaker:Now, a third wave cigar maker
to me, in my own opinion,
Speaker:is being able to exact quality control
Speaker:across the entire enterprise.
Speaker:And for Esteban and I, we
wanted to look really far
Speaker:into what a cigar maker could really do,
Speaker:in terms of quality control.
Speaker:How far could we take the
experience of quality control,
Speaker:right down from soil, to production,
Speaker:pilon, and fabrication,
right to point of service.
Speaker:And that's where Boveda comes
in really heavy with us.
Speaker:And we're really proud to announce
Speaker:that working with Mike
Stous and your team,
Speaker:he is been fantastic to work with,
Speaker:we did the first ever
integrated branding with Boveda,
Speaker:where we actually worked with your team,
Speaker:to actually build in
your logos, your artwork,
Speaker:into our artwork, and into our packaging,
Speaker:so that it felt native,
Speaker:and it felt like it belonged there,
Speaker:and it was built in.
Speaker:And I told Mike one time, I go,
Speaker:"You know, if you guys
don't wanna come along
Speaker:"with me on this ride, that's okay.
Speaker:"That's completely okay.
Speaker:"But I have to keep people
Speaker:"inside of my customer experience.
Speaker:"I have to keep them inside of that."
Speaker:The only reason why, you know,
Speaker:it makes sense that Mario can
spit, you know, fireballs,
Speaker:and things of that nature,
Speaker:is because he also jumps 10 feet,
Speaker:and breaks bricks with his head, right?
Speaker:- Right.
Speaker:- We have to keep them inside
Speaker:of how that experience feels,
Speaker:and that's gonna be my
textures, and colors, and so on.
Speaker:And there's a lot of trust back and forth.
Speaker:And that's what I mean whenever I say
Speaker:"a third wave cigar maker,"
Speaker:is being able to exact quality control,
Speaker:all the way down to point of service.
Speaker:And there's no other brand that does that
Speaker:quite like Boveda does with their product,
Speaker:there just really isn't.
Speaker:I've looked, there isn't.
Speaker:And I'm an accessories manufacturer.
Speaker:Lujo Concepts is my other company.
Speaker:And I can tell you there's
just nothing on the market
Speaker:that quite performs the
way that this product does.
Speaker:So we integrated it into our packaging,
Speaker:at the foot of the cigar.
Speaker:And this actually goes back
Speaker:to Esteban and I's collaboration,
Speaker:where I used to come up to Estelí,
Speaker:I lived in Estelí for a period of time.
Speaker:I live in Managua, Nicaragua, now.
Speaker:But I would come up to Estelí,
Speaker:and I'd buy bundles from Esteban.
Speaker:and there'd always be a Boveda
right there at the foot,
Speaker:in the bundle, you know?
Speaker:And I didn't need the box,
or anything like that,
Speaker:you know, I'm not going very
far, a couple hours away.
Speaker:And what I noticed was
those cigars, to me,
Speaker:always seem to smoke better,
Speaker:and they seem to have a little
bit more consistent humidity.
Speaker:And that's because a cigar
Speaker:will actually dry out from foot to cap.
Speaker:And being able to put that barrier
Speaker:as close to its point
of service as possible,
Speaker:was really instrumental for us.
Speaker:So we actually redesigned
our slide top boxes
Speaker:to include a slot for the
Boveda right at the foot,
Speaker:to be able to have that integrated.
Speaker:And having your actual brand
present in my color scheme,
Speaker:you know, in my textures.
Speaker:- And that's a tremendous distinction
Speaker:when you talk about the dynamic of a cigar
Speaker:drying out from foot to head,
Speaker:from the base of the cigar to the cap,
Speaker:it makes perfect sense.
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:- I've never heard it contextualize
that like that before.
Speaker:And tell me about the Neutron.
Speaker:This is when I see the label,
and it's the Domain Neutron,
Speaker:and this is your maiden
voyage for the line,
Speaker:one week old in the marketplace.
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:- This is excellent opportunity for us
Speaker:to have the conversation.
Speaker:When I see Neutron, I think,
Speaker:"Oh, am I gonna get power
hammered in the forehead
Speaker:"by this cigar?"
Speaker:- No, no, no (laughing).
Speaker:That's, you know, that's part
Speaker:of why we, we named it "Neutron."
Speaker:- So it's not a proton.
Speaker:- No, no, it's not a proton.
Speaker:So, neutrons have the ability
Speaker:to kind of rearrange energy around them.
Speaker:And this is a medium
body Mexican San Andrés.
Speaker:- It's very flavorful though.
Speaker:- Yeah, it's extraordinarily flavorful.
Speaker:- I mean, it's got an awesome start to it.
Speaker:- Yeah, yeah.
Speaker:For me, I get a lot of
vanilla on the start of it.
Speaker:I would say macadamia,
Speaker:but more green vegetative
kind of macadamia,
Speaker:than the salty kind of thing
Speaker:you might buy dry at the grocery store.
Speaker:But I love that cigar.
Speaker:I think it's a masterpiece from Esteban.
Speaker:We went out to dinner, and I
was asking Esteban, you know,
Speaker:because he has this incredible portfolio,
Speaker:all these incredible cigars
Speaker:that he's put together over the years.
Speaker:And I was talking to him about, you know,
Speaker:Sumatra, and different wrappers,
Speaker:before we really had a
fairly high grade San Andrés.
Speaker:And people were taking
these different wrappers
Speaker:into areas of the flavor wheel
Speaker:that just haven't been broken open,
Speaker:and explored and unlocked since.
Speaker:And I asked Esteban, I go,
Speaker:"You know, is it possible
if we start in soil,
Speaker:"and start growing tobacco
Speaker:"for these, you know, particular
distinct characteristics,
Speaker:"could we get back into that
area of the flavor wheel again,
Speaker:"where we could maybe
even take a San Andrés
Speaker:into a medium zone?"
Speaker:San Andrés is typically is
medium/full to full body.
Speaker:- Yeah, that's what my
experience has been.
Speaker:- Yeah, and Esteban goes,
Speaker:"You know, I think we can do that today."
Speaker:I think, you know, he went
back through five years now
Speaker:that we've been growing tobacco.
Speaker:We grow 300,000 pounds
of tobacco a year now
Speaker:in our filler tobacco
operation and Brigadeiro.
Speaker:And we went back through
five years of the catalog,
Speaker:and actually found a set of tobaccos
Speaker:that would offset just enough.
Speaker:because normally you
get with a medium body,
Speaker:San Andrés kind of a chalk
like texture in your mouth.
Speaker:- Right.
Speaker:- It dries out your mouth very bad.
Speaker:- Right.
Speaker:- And he managed to turn that
Speaker:into this really silky, smooth thing.
Speaker:- That's a good term.
Speaker:"Silky" is right.
Speaker:It's not intimidating at all.
Speaker:It's a welcoming smoke.
Speaker:It's sincerely got some excellent flavor.
Speaker:- Thank you.
Speaker:- This is a proud moment for you.
Speaker:- Yeah, absolutely, absolutely.
Speaker:- This is your first launch of a cigar?
Speaker:- Yeah, yeah, I've never,
Speaker:I had, you know, no particular interest
Speaker:in launching a cigar company.
Speaker:I moved to Nicaragua five years ago.
Speaker:I always tell people I'm the junkie
Speaker:that moved to the poppy field.
Speaker:It makes no sense.
Speaker:And Esteban would laugh at me,
Speaker:and he goes, "People don't do this."
Speaker:You know, when they're big wine drinkers,
Speaker:they go off and move to a vineyard,
Speaker:or something like that.
Speaker:- Right.
Speaker:- I had no real forethought
Speaker:about what it was gonna
be like living in Estelí,
Speaker:living in Nicaragua, I really didn't.
Speaker:I turned up, and I knew
half the community,
Speaker:due to events like this, like
PCA that we're currently at.
Speaker:And there's so many
fantastic companies here,
Speaker:and they contribute so
massively to the culture
Speaker:that we have in the cigar community,
Speaker:that I was able to walk into Estelí,
Speaker:and I knew half the city. Right?
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:- And they were welcoming,
Speaker:and they wanted to teach me about tobacco,
Speaker:and they weren't used
to someone, you know,
Speaker:coming and showing up, and you
know, being willing to say,
Speaker:"Hey, I don't know anything," you know?
Speaker:- Right.
Speaker:- And that's, that's
kind of the joke today
Speaker:is around the factory, you know,
Speaker:all of our rollers are 10+ years
Speaker:that they've been rolling cigars,
Speaker:every one of them.
Speaker:We wanted everyone that we started with
Speaker:to be first right capable.
Speaker:So we wanted all of them to
be able to hold that position
Speaker:in any factory that we're walking into,
Speaker:to be first right capable.
Speaker:That's a really unusual thing.
Speaker:But Esteban knows the right
people to call on to do that.
Speaker:And so the the joke is, you know,
Speaker:I'm basically like Steve Carell
walking around the factory,
Speaker:and everybody else is so successful,
Speaker:and knows what they're doing.
Speaker:And they're really fantastic people,
Speaker:and they love tobacco.
Speaker:You know, one of our rollers, Sylvia,
Speaker:she's been rolling cigars 38 years,
Speaker:she's been rolling cigars.
Speaker:Incredible experience,
incredible background behind her.
Speaker:And I asked her one time, I go,
Speaker:"Have you ever smoked a cigars?"
Speaker:She goes, "Oh, no, no, no."
Speaker:She loves tobacco, loves
cigars, loves tobacco.
Speaker:She's raised her children, you know,
Speaker:working at a rolling table.
Speaker:And she loves just doing that.
Speaker:Her favorite thing to roll,
Bermejo, Robusto Extra
Speaker:That's her favorite thing to roll.
Speaker:Just a simple cigar, and she's happy.
Speaker:You know, we go away for holiday break,
Speaker:we can't stop our employees
from coming back to the factory,
Speaker:and they want to come
back and have a coffee.
Speaker:You know, they always,
they tell their spouse.
Speaker:- It's a central part of their life.
Speaker:- Absolutely.
Speaker:Even there where they don't have as much
Speaker:of the same cigar culture that we have,
Speaker:there's something about great tobacco
Speaker:that brings together fine men and women
Speaker:that enjoy this experience,
enjoy this culture,
Speaker:and it breeds its own unique
culture everywhere it goes.
Speaker:And that's, I was talking
to a retailer recently,
Speaker:and they were talking about, you know,
Speaker:the recent uptick we've had,
Speaker:since the days of the coof, right?
Speaker:And they said that, you know,
Speaker:this uptick, you know, it's unique.
Speaker:We don't know where it came from,
Speaker:how long is it gonna last, and so on.
Speaker:I said,
Speaker:"The most important thing
Speaker:"that you need to recognize
about what's happened
Speaker:"to the cigar industry
recently is, we didn't change."
Speaker:- Right.
Speaker:- We didn't change.
Speaker:The people that are attracted
to what we're doing here,
Speaker:and the conversations that we've had,
Speaker:coming out of barber
shops, and coming out of,
Speaker:you know, the speakeasy
scene, even way before that,
Speaker:we have a lot of opportunity
here to capture the interest
Speaker:of more and more people
Speaker:that are getting interested in cigars.
Speaker:- Right.
Speaker:- And getting interested in the culture,
Speaker:the cultural aspects I think
is the most significant part.
Speaker:But I think we're right
at the very beginning.
Speaker:We're right at the very beginning
Speaker:of the cultural significance of the cigar,
Speaker:on the American public.
Speaker:I really think that,
Speaker:I think we're right at
the beginning stage,
Speaker:- Not to get all gooey on you,
Speaker:but I would go so far as to say
Speaker:people have begun valuing
relationships, valuing life,
Speaker:with a different sentimentality
in the last five years,
Speaker:with what we've been through.
Speaker:- Yeah, yeah.
Speaker:- And if you, a luminary
in this industry said to me
Speaker:in a similar interview last year, said,
Speaker:"This is not a cigar,
this is a moment in time
Speaker:shared between friends."
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:- Changes everything.
Speaker:- Yeah, absolutely, absolutely.
Speaker:We like to describe it as as a narrative,
Speaker:you know, in that we
don't refer to our cigars
Speaker:in terms of core lines.
Speaker:And Esteban never really cared for that,
Speaker:because he saw too many opportunities
Speaker:for people to slap a band on something
Speaker:that wasn't the original expression.
Speaker:It wasn't the experience
Speaker:that that customer was
looking for anymore,
Speaker:when the tobacco changed.
Speaker:And so we've committed ourselves to,
Speaker:if we can't produce that cigar
Speaker:because we don't have
access to that tobacco,
Speaker:or we've shut that down,
Speaker:we're gonna stop featuring that line.
Speaker:So all of our cigars are features,
Speaker:and we think of them as a
narrative, and a place in time.
Speaker:Absolutely, I think that's
a correct statement.
Speaker:- Yeah.
Speaker:And as your initial launch,
Speaker:as your first story in the marketplace,
Speaker:I think you're gonna be
incredibly well served
Speaker:by this cigar.
Speaker:- You think so?
Speaker:Okay, that's awesome, that's really great.
Speaker:- This is the Domain Cigar Company.
Speaker:Daniel Lance, one of the
partners with Esteban?
Speaker:- Esteban Disla.
Speaker:- Okay.
Speaker:So you've got an artistic craftsman.
Speaker:I think that's a safe description.
Speaker:- Artisan, yeah.
Speaker:- Of Esteban.
Speaker:- Yep.
Speaker:- This is where the cyber-security-expert-
Speaker:cum-accessory-expert, meets craft artist,
Speaker:and this is what's born out
of the the relationship.
Speaker:- Yeah, absolutely.
Speaker:And like I said, I had never
planned to put together a brand
Speaker:because people that make beautiful,
Speaker:delicious cigars are never available.
Speaker:And when Esteban became available,
Speaker:and you know, I already knew
that he was growing tobacco,
Speaker:and that he was interested in pursuing
Speaker:something much bigger,
Speaker:I was shocked that he wanted me
Speaker:to be a part of that internally,
Speaker:and to actually lead the
helm of what that looked like
Speaker:from the consumer experience.
Speaker:- Well, it's a testament
to the way you show up,
Speaker:and it's wonderful.
Speaker:I hope that your, as
far as the innovation,
Speaker:in involving Boveda in
the brand from the outset,
Speaker:can't thank you enough for that.
Speaker:It's a real privilege to be
associated with this launch.
Speaker:I think it's gonna be fun
Speaker:to watch the story unfold for Domain,
Speaker:and we'll look forward to being with you
Speaker:every step of the way.
Speaker:- Yeah, absolutely.
Speaker:And your partnership is
incredibly important to us.
Speaker:I love the fact that we're
your first integrated branding.
Speaker:There's a big commitment to
that on our side, of course.
Speaker:And we, I'll give you one example.
Speaker:I have two more small stories
I wanna share with you,
Speaker:because I've had a lot of experience
Speaker:with your product over the years.
Speaker:But you know, we actually
had our labels made
Speaker:and we had the first sample batch,
Speaker:we had 200 of each size made.
Speaker:And we looked at them, and we said
Speaker:"No," we said, "This isn't
good enough for Boveda,
Speaker:"it's not good enough for us,
Speaker:"because we're representing
both of your companies"
Speaker:and that's the level of commitment
we feel you have to make
Speaker:if you're going to take on
these types of partnerships,
Speaker:I have to represent you as
well as I represent myself,
Speaker:right?
Speaker:And we actually canceled
out all those labels,
Speaker:and went out, and created
a new printing process
Speaker:to get better clarity.
Speaker:So that's one example.
Speaker:And I'll tell you,
whenever I was a retailer,
Speaker:I worked for Outlaw Cigar Company,
Speaker:if you're familiar with
them, in Kansas City.
Speaker:And what we would do is
Añejo by Fuente, right,
Speaker:we would get those every year.
Speaker:It's a cigar, you know,
Speaker:maybe not every cigar smoker
smokes every day, but sure.
Speaker:A couple times a year.
Speaker:- It's a special cigar.
Speaker:- It's a special cigar, yeah, yeah.
Speaker:I like to lay 'em down
for a year or two myself.
Speaker:That's just my preference.
Speaker:But what we would do is, you know,
Speaker:we would sell them as singles,
Speaker:and people would normally
Speaker:buy a couple of 'em here and there.
Speaker:and we would get down to
like the last full box,
Speaker:and we would save that box,
not to hide it or anything,
Speaker:but just for our customers that we know
Speaker:want a crack at a whole box, right,
Speaker:and they wanna lay those
down for a period of time.
Speaker:One year actually that
box fell behind the shelf,
Speaker:in the humidor, so it's
in bad temperature,
Speaker:bad humidity kind of
range for that humidor.
Speaker:That humidor was really
biased towards the walls.
Speaker:You know, the walls had great humidity,
Speaker:but that box was sitting back
there and we discovered it.
Speaker:We don't even know how old it was.
Speaker:And that moment of relief that you get
Speaker:when you crack open a box
that's been lost and found now,
Speaker:and the cigars are in
there, and they're perfect,
Speaker:and they smell beautiful,
Speaker:and they have that Boveda
sitting right on top, right?
Speaker:The only thing that separates
myself, and [Carlos] Fuente,
Speaker:from creating that experience,
do you know what that is?
Speaker:Boveda.
Speaker:- Thank you.
Speaker:- That's the only thing.
Speaker:That's the only thing,
because that's what you need
Speaker:for a third wave cigar maker
Speaker:to be doing point of
service, quality control.
Speaker:You have to have some effort,
Speaker:from the moment we harvest tobacco,
Speaker:from the moment we take
it out of the field,
Speaker:Mother Nature is done,
Speaker:and a human with their own
two hands are responsible
Speaker:for managing the temperature, humidity,
Speaker:vapor pressure of that tobacco.
Speaker:And everything we do
around creating beautiful,
Speaker:delicious cigars, is about
managing the environment
Speaker:that those cigars are upticked in.
Speaker:So I think for us, it's
incredibly important
Speaker:to have your partnership, and you know,
Speaker:we thank you for going
along on this journey,
Speaker:doing the first integrated branding.
Speaker:It's huge.
Speaker:We talk about it with everybody.
Speaker:So really, really glad to work with you.
Speaker:- So a third wave cigar company,
Speaker:and we're gonna hear
that term more, and more,
Speaker:as time goes by.
Speaker:It's been introduced here by Daniel Lance,
Speaker:one of the partners in
Domain Cigar Company.
Speaker:Can't thank you enough
for the partnership,
Speaker:the support of Boveda.
Speaker:We'll be with you every step of the way.
Speaker:Daniel, thanks so much
for your time today.
Speaker:- Appreciate that.
Speaker:Thank you so much.
Speaker:(soft music)