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JJ welcomes Sheila Donohue for a conversation that blends entrepreneurship, lifestyle, and the art of curated Italian wines and foods. Sheila shares how her company, Verovino, sources small-batch, farm-made wines, olive oils, and specialty foodsโ€”many not readily available in the U.S.โ€”and delivers them to both consumers and businesses across America.

In This Episode

Meet Sheila in Bologna: Sheila shares her life in Bologna, Italy, where sheโ€™s lived since 2001, and how Italy shaped her expertise and relationships with producers.

What Verovino does: Verovino curates and imports authentic, sustainably made, small-batch productsโ€”primarily from Italy, plus select producers from other countries and Californiaโ€”selling B2B and direct-to-consumer.

From fintech to food & wine: Sheila explains her background in financial technology (fintech), her sommelier training in Italy, and how her personal immersion in artisan food culture inspired the company.

Starting from a โ€œclean slateโ€: In 2017, after major life changes, Sheila began building Verovinoโ€”funded through savingsโ€”and took early action by importing product and going door-to-door to find customers.

How the business grows: Sheila emphasizes the importance of continuity (repeat business), building scale, and covering operating expenses. She explains how an omni-channel strategy helps stabilize the business:

Distributors nationwide

Wine stores & restaurants (especially in California)

Direct-to-consumer shipping across the U.S.

Corporate gifting & events

Marketing & education that compounds: Verovino invests in education and storytelling through digital marketingโ€”especially their blog and YouTube channelโ€”to build long-term brand trust and demand.

Product philosophy: As a sommelier-led team, Sheila curates for variety and distinction: reds, whites, rosรฉs, orange wines, sparkling (dry and sweet), plus standout olive oilsโ€”including single-varietal olive oils with specific pairing profiles.

Events as a growth engine: Sheila shares how tastings, fundraisers, private events, and collaborations introduce people to the productsโ€”because tasting creates appreciation and connection.

Specialty foods: The conversation highlights a Piedmont hazelnut producer offering toasted hazelnuts, caramelized hazelnuts, hazelnut creams, pasta, and pestosโ€”plus JJโ€™s enthusiasm for pistachio cream and clean ingredients.

Wine club & gifting: Sheila describes Verovinoโ€™s monthly or quarterly wine club, curated shipments with insider notes and stories, and a growing trend of gifting memberships (including personalized letters).

Gift sets: Verovino offers curated gift setsโ€”popular in Decemberโ€”and a standout option that pairs wine + olive oil, plus expanded options for non-wine drinkers.

A second brand line for broader appeal: To avoid being pigeonholed and to meet different market needs, Sheila shares how Verovino expanded into a separate line for more โ€œrecognizableโ€ wines, including Prosecco and kegsโ€”ideal for events and high-volume restaurant service.

Advice for new producers: Sheila emphasizes the need to stand out in a crowded marketโ€”especially as the wine industry faces headwindsโ€”and to clearly differentiate your product and message.

Memorable Moments

JJ connects her own journey as a winemaker (High Vibrational Wines) and discusses why she values small-batch, purpose-driven production over mass distribution.

A fun community collaboration emerges: JJ invites Sheila to co-create a March event in Ojai with โ€œWomen Behind the Business: Real Conversations,โ€ potentially adding a wine tasting experienceโ€”and they discover their birthdays are both in March.

Connect with Sheila / Verovino

Website: Verovino.com

YouTube: Vero Vino

Instagram & Facebook: VeroVinoGusto

Closing: JJ encourages listeners to explore Verovino for personal discovery, gifting, and creating meaningful food-and-wine experiences that bring โ€œa taste of Italyโ€ home.

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