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The Rural Voice, 1983-09, Page 44QUALITY PRESSURE CLEANERS HOT! SAFE RELIABLE EFFECTIVE SEE OUR NEW MODELS r epps Clinton. Ontario. NOM ILO Model 9415 shown 4 gal. at 1500 psi 519-482-3418 CO.OP CO-OP Profit Maker Supreme 19 See the Farmers' Market on page 65 Right from the start! What makes "Supreme 19" Special? "Supreme 19" Pig Starter combines research on energy, protein, amino acids, vitamins, trace minerals and feed blending technology into a superior formula for the young pig. Knowing how fussy and sensitive young pigs can be, CO-OP nutritionists have tested and retested this formula. looking for maximum performance in these five key areas: PALATABILITY, FEED CONVERSION, GAIN, FEED TEXTURE, COST. We believe that the current "Supreme 19" formula is the best combination of these five factors available at a reasonable price. Available with - Pro-Banmith,Mecadox, Tylazone, SP -250 or LS -20. "Supreme 19" Program CO-OP "Supreme 19" in- troduced at 4-7 days of age, and fed free choice to at least 20kg. liveweight. NO NEED TO CHANGE FEEDS AT WEANING. Results of Ontario farm trials to date prove that ' Supreme 19" delivers what we promise. FARM MSS 011 tat - AN HI FEED/ GAIN COST OF GAIN MAN A 26 0.40 1.65 0.46 B 20 048 1.50 0.44 C 180 0.43 1.63 0.46 D 112 0.45 1.63 0.47 AVERAGE 0.44 1.60 0.46 Lucknow District Co-operative 519-529-7953 VIICOt 11,1,10.3 11.,11 PG. 42 THE RURAL VOICE, SEPTEMBER 1983 FARM ADVICE ■ Getting a good deal Every legitimate business deserves a reasonable profit. This applies not only to farming but also to those businesses which supply goods and services to the farmer. Farmers, like the rest of us, nor- mally shop around to get what they want at the lowest cost. This is con- sidered "good business". It is called "competition" and is at the heart of the free enterprise system. There are, however, times when the farmer is "caught between the devil and the deep blue sea". There are pitfalls which one can fall into if one pushes competitive bids too far - particularly in these economic times where, in many cases, we have a number of companies scrambling over one another to get a share of a relatively small pie. First, there is the matter of quality. Every producer of goods and services must charge enough to cover both his input costs and a profit. As sales become scarce the profit margin becomes quite small; this causes several things to happen. First, in order to cut costs, the business operator may reduce quality. This in turn leads to two effects - a) The farmer is short-changed - he does not get the durability, service -ability, etc. he expected; b) farmer dissatisfaction leads to tarnished reputation, which in turn leads to reduced sales. Whenever a farmer (or anyone else) buys something, he expects aftersales service. The more costly and complex the item the more important this is to continuing customer satisfaction. To be able to provide this service - to provide facilities, equipment, trained staff, etc. costs money. This means that in addition to covering basic in- put costs, plus reasonable profit, a business must charge extra to set aside for future service. Severe price - cutting forces the business operator to abandon any capability for after- sales services. When this happens the customers (farmer) lose. Severe price -cutting just to get a sale (or from the other view point - forcing competitive bidding beyond reason) causes businesses to fail. Those to go first are often the smaller, more local businesses which serve the farmer directly. Larger, more distant companies often have capital reserves that will see them