| As
the US spends $177 billion a year to produce its food
and $400 billion to market it, you’ll find that
you can never put too much thought into marketing. If
direct marketing appears to be a good strategy for you,
you can find further information and assistance to develop
an effective plan through the following resources:
Organizations
The Rodale Institute
611 Siegfriedale Road
Kutztown PA, 19530
(610) 683-1400
info@rodaleinst.org
www.rodaleinstitute.org
www.newfarm.org
Appropriate Technology Transfer For
Rural Areas (ATTRA)
Business Management Series: “Direct Marketing”
PO Box 3657
Fayetteville AR, 72702
(800) 346-9140
www.attra.org
MidAtlantic Direct Marketing Association
c/o PaFarm, Room #104
4184 Dorney Park Road
Allentown PA, 18104-5798
www.madmc.com
Pennsylvania Retail Farm Market Association,
Inc.
1000 Thorndale Road
West Chester PA, 19380
(610) 269-3494
(610) 391-9840
market@pafarm.com
www.pafarm.com
Jersey Fresh
New Jersey Dept. of Agriculture
Division of Markets
Trenton, NJ, 08625
( 609) 292-8853
Maryland Dept. of Agriculture
50 Harry S. Truman Parkway
Annapolis, MD, 21401
(410) 841-5700
www.mda.state.md.us
American Farmland Trust (FRESHFARM
Markets)
1200 18th Street NW,
Suite 800
Washington DC, 20036
(202) 331-7300
info@farmland.org
www.farmland.org
National Farmers Direct Market Association
14850 Countryside Driv
Aurora OR, 97002
(503) 678-2455
Publications
Growing For Market (newsletter), PO Box 3747,
Lawrence KS, 66046. (800) 307-8949.
Dynamic Farmers’ Marketing
by Jeff Ishee, 1997. Bittersweet Farmstead, PO Box 52,
Middlebrook VA, 24459. (540) 886-8477. www.eMarketFarm.com.
The New Farmer’s Market
by Eric Gibson, 2001. New World Publishing, 11543 Quartz
Drive #1, Auburn CA, 95602. (530) 823-3886 or (888)
281-5170.
The Legal Guide for Direct Farm
Marketing by Neil D. Hamilton, 1999. Drake University
Ag Law Center, Des Moines IA, 50311. (515) 271-2065.
A Guide To Successful Direct Marketing
by Charles R. Hall and Jeff L. Johnson, 1992. Texas
Agricultural Extension Service, Texas A&M University,
Attn. Charles Hall, 464 Blocker Building, College Station
TX, 77843-2124. (409) 845-1772. |
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| Claire &
Rusty Orner: Their Quiet Creek Herb Farm is a
creative combination of school, CSA, retreat and organic
health market. |
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Market reports don’t tell
the whole story. While one farmer sells a 50 pound bag of carrots
for $1.05 at the wholesale auction, another farmer can fetch $1.05
for a single pound of carrots by selling them through his local
farmer’s market directly to the people who will eat and enjoy
them. The difference in profit lies entirely in the marketing. The
farmer who takes the time to nurture a relationship with direct
market customers will find the increased profits to be well worth
the effort.
What is Direct
Marketing?
By definition, “direct marketing” describes any technique
that allows a farmer to sell his product directly to the person
who will use the product, and, in the process, develop a one-on-one
relationship with that person. Examples of direct marketing include:
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Farm stands
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Roadside markets
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Pick-your-own
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Farmers Markets (“producer
only” markets)
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CSAs (“Community Supported
Agriculture” that is funded by a subscription based clientele)
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Mail order home delivery services,
by mail, e-mail, phone, or Internet
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Business-to-Business sales,
including restaurants and other farms
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Marketing partnerships
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Any other venue your creative
mind can imagine!
Direct market channels allow farmers to make more
profit by giving them full control over their product’s
delivery, quality, and pricing. The consumer also benefits by
paying reasonable prices for products that are locally grown,
fresher, tastier, and more nutritious than items they may find
at the supermarket. These benefits help to make direct marketing
a satisfying win-win relationship for both the farmer and the
consumer!
Is Direct Marketing Right
for You?
To help decide whether or not direct marketing might be a good
strategy for you and your operation, begin by asking yourself
the following questions (adapted from “Market What You Grow”
by Ralph J. Hills Jr.):
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Are you willing to take some risks?
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Do you take pride in your products?
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Do you enjoy showing and telling people how
great your products are?
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Are you willing to do some serious planning
and research?
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Are you willing to experiment?
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Are you able to be flexible?
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Do you like to operate independently and determine
your own path?
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Do you like to do creative things, and solve
problems creatively?
If you answer “yes” to four or more
of these questions, then direct marketing may be a very good strategy
for you, especially if you are a small farmer making less than
$250,000 a year from your operation.
For a “people person” who grows a diverse
mix of vegetables for fresh consumption, the appeal of direct
marketing is quite clear. However, if you don’t enjoy working
directly with the public, or even if you grow a crop that people
don’t consume directly (such as wheat or grain corn), you
may still be able to partake in the benefits of direct marketing
by forming marketing cooperatives with other growers in your area.
To further assess your interest, be sure to make
a thorough and honest evaluation of your operation, your interests,
and your goals. The following steps, adapted from ATTRA’s
“Direct Marketing: Business Management Series”, can
help you develop a thorough assessment:
1. Determine
what kind of business and lifestyle you want. Visualize
the ways you want your farming business to grow, and commit your
vision to paper. Include a clear description of your ideal lifestyle,
and develop realistic one-year, five-year, and ten-year goals
to help you achieve your vision. Ask yourself the following questions
to guide your planning:
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Do you want your business to be a full-time
or part-time enterprise?
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Do you want to work by yourself, with your
family, or with employees hired from the community?
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What kind of environment do you want to create
within your business?
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What kind of profit do you want to make?
2. Take
inventory of your current physical resources.
Document all your operation’s resources, with some assessment
of their qualities and shortcomings. Include everything you can
think of, from machinery and buildings, livestock and water resources,
to total acreage of land, soil quality, and location. This information
will help you determine the best ways to utilize your current
resources, and also help you assess what other resources you may
need to achieve your goals.
3. Assess
your human resources. Think of the people who
will work with you in your operation. Ask yourself the following
questions:
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Is your family supportive of your plans?
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Will they work directly in your business’
operations, and if so, to what extent?
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Can you find farm workers within your community?
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Do you want these people to work on a voluntary,
temporary, seasonal, or permanent basis?
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What kind of pay and benefits would you like
to be able to offer these people?
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What kind of relationships do you currently
have with the people in your local business community?
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Which of these relationships might be developed
to advance your business plans?
4. Evaluate
your current financial resources and liabilities, and outline
potential future resources. If you haven’t
done so already, outline your current financial assets and liabilities
on paper. Determine what assets you can use to develop your business,
such as savings, investments, or credit. Also brainstorm to develop
a list of untapped financial resources to which you may have access,
such as grants, low interest loans for rural or small business
development, or investment by friends, family, or customers.
When you have clarified your vision, interests,
and resources, you can more easily identify the strategies that
will most effectively develop your direct marketing plan.
Keys to Direct Marketing
Success
Successful direct marketing is based entirely on the quality of
the relationship you develop with your customer. Because direct
marketing removes all middlemen, such as processors, packagers,
and other marketers, from a farm product’s “chain
of custody”, good direct marketers are able to focus their
energies on meeting the needs of their customers.
Positive, interactive customer relationships are
fostered through the following steps:
1. Identify
your target customers. Decide what customers you
would most like to serve. For example, would you prefer to develop
relationships with residents of your community, or with restauranteurs
and market owners in the surrounding area? Think creatively and
“look outside the box” for possible customers that
others may not have found. (For in-depth guidance on market research,
check the “Resources” section at the end of this fact
sheet.)
2. Assess
your customers’ needs. Be curious! Ask questions
and learn everything you can about your customers’ lifestyles,
ages, incomes, interests, shopping habits, and food preferences.
Also visit other direct marketing venues, such as those listed
previously, and ask what their customers want. By finding out
what your competition offers, you can look for ways to improve
their product and services, or identify an unfilled niche.
3. Let
your customers’ needs determine what you produce.
With the above information, you can choose the types of produce
and farm products that best fulfill your customers’ needs
and desires. (This approach differs from standard farm marketing
“strategies” in which the farmer chooses what he wants
to grow and then tries to find a customer for his product.) Toward
this end, some successful direct marketers emphasize the following
points:
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Grow “people food” - You can make
much greater profit from growing human consumable foods than
from commodities for processing, livestock feed, or export.
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Grow a diverse mix of crops - The more types
of produce you offer, the more people will come to you, and
the more they’ll buy. As you select crops, include a few
high-value specialty crops that people will go out of their
way to find. Also choose varieties that excel in flavor.
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Offer other products, too, if you can - Value-added
products, such as preserves, flowers, free-range chicken and
meat, or dairy products (produced by you or a cooperating farmer)
will make the allure of your business even greater, since customers
appreciate one-stop shopping.
4. Focus
on quality. Let one simple rule guide your work:
if you wouldn’t buy it, then don’t sell it. When you
offer only the best produce and products, your customers will
appreciate your efforts and keep coming back. They’ll also
be more willing to pay the price you ask without question. Toward
this end, be sure to invest time in post-harvest handling because
proper washing, cooling, packaging, and storage are essential
to present the best product possible.
5. Be
a price-setter, not a price-taker. Make a clear,
informed decision on how you will set your prices, and then stick
to it! Be sure to set a price that’s fair to you and the
quality of your product. (For example, take the top supermarket
price for an item and add 5% or more. This price is often easy
to get if your product is more fresh, beautiful, and delicious
than the supermarket’s offerings.)
6. Promote
your business and products effectively. Determine
what unique attributes put your farm and products a notch above
the rest. Then be sure to announce those qualities “loudly”
and repeatedly through every promotional venue you can imagine.
Think creatively! Look everywhere for promotional opportunities,
such as good signage around your operation, fliers and brochures,
product placement at another business, or even a web site. (Be
careful when advertising in traditional print publications because
the return can be disappointingly low for the money spent.)
7. Be
prepared for your customers’ needs to change.
Your customers’ needs will change over time. Therefore,
you will need to be flexible in the development of your market
plans. The most successful direct marketers will tell you that
their customers are “moving targets”, and that their
direct marketing “success” is measured differently
every year.
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