It was one of only two cigars to receive a 95 rating and the only Black-owned brand to be rated that high by Stogie, Spencer said.
'I cannonball into the water'
"Right now, there may be 40 Black-owned brands across the United States out of thousands of brands,'' Spencer told The Enquirer. "So it's hard for us to even be part of the conversation, much less score such a high rating.
"But I don’t want to necessarily be seen as a Black-owned brand, I want to be seen as a great brand that happens to be Black-owned,'' he said.
Spencer said he sometimes spends 15 to 20 hours a day marketing his cigars on social media and directly to cigar lounges, smoke shops, bourbon bars and restaurants across the country.
He got his first big break when the owners of Drobe Stogies, a cigar lounge popular with athletes and celebrities in Inglewood, California, discovered the Mansa through word-of-mouth advertising.
"They like them (the Mansas) so much they ordered 50 boxes,'' Spencer said. "I still have a relationship with them to this day. They probably buy 500 boxes from me a year.''
Spencer quit his corporate job in 2017 to devote his full attention to the cigar business.
"This is what I do full time now,'' he said. "I don’t believe in doing anything halfway. I don’t put my toe in the water, I cannonball into the water.''
Spencer said he's negotiating with Jungle Jim’s and Montgomery Inn to carry his cigars.
Selling from the trunk of his 'cigar car' [/b]
But the business meetings he attends these days are a far cry from the way he got started.
Cincinnati native Alex Spencer of Alex Spencer Reserve boutique cigar company pictured Thursday, Nov. 18, 2021, at Blaze Cigar Lounge and Bar in Newport, Kentucky. Spencer tells aspiring entrepreneurs: "If you want to be truly successful, you’ve got to put 100% of your effort into it.''
Before he handed over $20,000 of his savings to his Honduran distributor for his first shipment of the Mansa, Spencer hit the road in his "cigar car'' to test the market.
He began by selling unlabeled cigars he obtained from a North Carolina-based cigar roller out of the trunk of his 2002 Lincoln LS at local bars and nightclubs, bourbon tastings and other special events.
He even hand-delivered cigars to buyers who contacted him through social media and lived within a 50-mile radius of Cincinnati.
"At that time, I wasn't sure if there was even a market for what I wanted to do here, and I didn’t have any relationships with retailers,'' Spencer said. "My roller in North Carolina said if you can sell 1,000 cigars a month, you're doing pretty well.
"That's what I did, and that's when I decided I wanted to start my own line of cigars,'' he said.
Spencer has plans to expand The Mansa line and introduce a new line of cigars that would pay homage to Cincinnati's cigar-making history.
In 1860 – when cigars and pipes were more popular than cigarettes – Cincinnati was fourth-leading cigar-producing city in the United States, behind Philadelphia, New York and Baltimore.
Spencer has some simple advice for aspiring entrepreneurs who want to follow in his footsteps: "If you want to be truly successful, you’ve got to put 100% of your effort into it.''
The Alex Spencer file
Occupation: Owner, Alex Spencer Reserve
Age: 39
Residence: Cincinnati's Madisonville neighborhood
Education: Hughes High School; University of Cincinnati (bachelor's degree in economics

Xavier University (master's degree in business)
Family: Single