Alcohol platform Drizly saw a 350% spike in 2020, here’s what its expecting for the holidays

Alcohol sales are spiking amid the COVID-19 pandemic. Drizly Co-Founder & CEO Cory Rellas joins Yahoo Finance Live to discuss.

Video Transcript

AKIKO FUJITA: With bars facing new restrictions across the country, consumers are increasingly turning to-- where else-- online to stock up on their alcohol this holiday season. E-commerce marketplace player Drizly has seen 350% growth so far this year.

Let's bring in Cory Rellas. He is the co-founder and CEO of Drizly. He joins us from Breckenridge, Colorado. It's good to talk to you today. Cory, I am curious to hear if you've seen a big uptick over the last several weeks in terms of sales online, as we've seen increasingly in a number of states, bars being told to close up after being open for much of the summer.

CORY RELLAS: Well, it's been, as you know, an incredibly different year. And this is in a category that is very, very seasonal, almost like clockwork on what you can expect on a week-to-week basis. That's been thrown out the window. And we have seen an uptick over the last several weeks. It's tough to attribute it to COVID closures at this moment. But we've seen it continue into December, as more and more people are coming back at growth rates that more resembled May and June versus a little bit more of the decline that we had expected in August and September.

ZACK GUZMAN: Cory, in Q2, you guys more than doubled the customers there as well. I'd be curious to get a sense, too, in terms of-- since you guys were profitable earlier in the year-- talk to me about what customers are coming to the platform here, what you're seeing there in terms of the demographic shift and people who want booze delivered in 2020.

CORY RELLAS: Well, I think it's become a little bit more mass-market. We were coming off a very, very low base. This category was less than 2% shopped online prior to this moment. And so the acceleration of COVID awareness, the knowledge that you can purchase alcohol online, and then what Drizly can do for you that the liquor store cannot do has started to open us up to a different audience.

We're about 50-50 male, female. We're starting to move into a more suburban audience. And more than anything else, the occasions of drinking at home have changed so significantly that we're seeing more people build their own cocktails, that cocktail culture at home. Starting to think about, you know, different occasions you might have gone to a bar, how do I start to appreciate those at home? And online can play a big presence there. So, you know, I don't see this changing too much going forward based on the experience that consumers have had to date and growing off a very low base thus far.