The Rural Voice, 2006-05, Page 30Wnth prices for many
farm commodities
so low there's no
profit in producing them and
government support
reluctant, at best, many
farmers are looking for
alternatives that can pay the
bills.
Recently. Growing Your
Opportunities conferences
across the province gave
farmers and small scale food
processors a chance to hear
from others who have been
successful and those with
information to pass on.
Keynote speaker at the
nearest Conference, in
Seaforth, March 21, Gary
Morton, outlined exactly the
issues for farmers looking
for profitable alternatives.
While world trade in farm
commodities has been
booming, prices have been
dropping and margins have
decreased to the point of
evaporating. The number of
wholesalers and retailers has
declined, reducing
competition for these
products. The result is'the
number of farmers has been
decreasing.
Meanwhile farm input costs have
gone up, as have the size of farms,
and regulations and food safety
requirements have increased.
On the other hand, Morton said,
consumer interest in where food
comes from has increased the market
for value-added, organic and
alternative consumer products.
Morton quoted Harvard professor
Theodore Levitt on the subject of
market myopia which he termed as
"the failure to see 'down the road'
and make the change necessary to
adapt to future markets."
Producers need to explore new
profit opportunities from value-added
and diversification, Morton said.
Commodity production means
everyone makes the same products.
Value -adding .creates unique
products. Producers tend to focus on
what they know today. Value -adders
focus on the opportunities others
miss. Many people create reasons
why something can't be done instead
of asking how it can be done, he said.
Re -inventing
the farm
Producers need to explore new profit
opportunities from value -adding and
diversification, a Nova Scotia
farmer/consultant tells Ontario producers
Story by Keith Roulston
Farmers' markets can provide a testing ground for those
wanting to add value or create new products.
Traditionally, agriculture has been
rural in nature and involved in
primary production while processing
and manufacturing has been urban.
Morton sees farmers' future in what
he calls the "value-added zone", an
interface between the two isolated
traditions.
Most of agriculture is focussed on
"mature" markets that have little
opportunity for growth, Morton said.
"You have to look at reinventing
what you do."
Even best-sellers, such as Tide
laundry detergent are always
reinventing themselves with a new
scent or miracle cleaning ingredient.
How do you reinvent what you
do? Your options can include getting
out of farming altogether and taking
on something with more future or
shrinking your business, which might
actually create more profit in some
cases than trying to carry on at too -
large a scale. You can value -add,
which means moving up the market
chain toward the consumer. You can
diversify by adding more crops or
26 THE RURAL VOICE
other enterprises to your
operation.
Value-added doesn't need to
be a complicated new process,
Morton said. If you have
expertise in something, for
instance, you can offer
consulting services (Morton
has done just that, by using his
own experience with his
brother, adding value at
Morton Horticultural
Associates in Colbrook, Nova
Scotia to counsel others in how
to add value to their
enterprises.)
Start by understanding the
definition of "value". Morton
suggested: the ratio of utility
(usefulness) to price. To add
value, increase the value ratio;
offer sbme new, unexpected
value or create new market
opportunities.
It might not be necessary to
build a new enterprise that is
profitable enough to stand on
its own. Morton reminded the
audience of the days when
many farm wives had a flock of
hens that provided "chicken
" money" — that additional
money that eased the farm
monetary pinch.
In looking for value-added
opportunities, build on your
successes, he suggested. Don't think
of adding value as a quick fix
because a strong business is built one
block at a time. Remember to make
sure what you're going to do is
profitable.
Between the traditional
commodity producer and the
consumer is a whole chain of
people creating their own profit
centres from your product: packers,
processors, brokers, wholesalers,
distributors and retailers, Morton
said. Take the apple distribution
channel, for instance. The consumer
pays 93 cents a pound of which
producer gets 12.85 cents a pound at
the farm gate, about 13.8 per cent of
the consumer dollar. The packer,
processor and distributor get 35.15
cents, a pound, or 37.8 per cent of
what the consumer spends. The
wholesaler gets seven cents, or 7.5
per cent of the final price. The
retailer gets 38 cents, or 40.9 per cent
lof the consumer's expenditure.