| Ian's new approach |
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“We’re
helping fill the demand for local food. We sell almost 90 per cent of what we
grow directly to the ‘eater’. Through direct marketing farmers can get more
return for their product instead of being part of the commodity market.”
~Ian Stutt, organic vegetable grower, Battersea, ON
New farmers break marketing mold
Many farmers are finding value in taking a new marketing approach. It can be
challenging to step away from tried and true techniques, but exploring new ways
to market your product can be rewarding.
“We need alternative models to some of the mainstream ways of doing things,”
says Ian Stutt of Patchwork Gardens in Battersea, Ontario.
Stutt, along with his wife Megan Joslin and business partner Eric Williams, is a
new farmer breaking traditional marketing models by going direct to the people
who eat their food. Business is booming in this organic vegetable operation that
refers to its customers as ‘eaters’. Away from the field, the trio is active in
helping develop a local food movement in Kingston, which is driving demand for
their product.
Developing a local food system
Patchwork Gardens is one of eight community supported agriculture (CSA) farms in
the area. CSA farmers receive a set fee from members (consumers) prior to the
start of the growing season. In return, members receive shares in the farm’s
bounty in the form of produce and also share the risks due to weather and other
factors beyond the control of the farmer.
According to the National Farmers Union (NFU) Local 316, Kingstonians have
embraced the idea of sustainably produced local food and direct marketing – all
the CSAs have long waiting lists. The majority are also run by young farmers who
are just starting out, and whose entry into agriculture has been facilitated by
this innovative marketing model and the low capital investment required.
“We’re a small-scale, labour-intensive operation,” says Stutt who grows more
than 20 types of vegetables on his five-acre farm. “It is low-cost farming in a
sense.”
Local food is gaining popularity everywhere, but it is especially thriving in
Kingston thanks to an NFU project: Food Down the Road: Toward a Sustainable
Local Food System for Kingston and Countryside (FDTR). The goal is to engage
farmers and a broad range of food system participants in a long-term effort to
develop markets that can support the farming, processing and distribution of
locally grown food within a 100 km area.
Recognizing the FDTR project as a way to enhance farm business management, the
Agricultural Management Institute (AMI) provided funding for a four-part
Speakers Series in the spring of 2007 to build momentum, followed by a Local
Food Summit in the fall. The goal was to bring farmers, processors,
distributors, marketing groups, retailers, experts, community organizations,
local government and ‘eaters’ together to learn about local food success stories
from across North America.
“I participated because it is in my interest as a new farmer to increase public
awareness of food and farm issues,” says Stutt. “In turn, this increases the
demand for the food that we grow.”
In fact, Patchwork Gardens can’t keep up with the demand. Stutt, who started
Patchwork Gardens five years ago, had no interest in commodity marketing. “By
selling direct to the ‘eaters’, we cut out the middle man so that we can make
more profit by keeping the full dollar,” he says.
How can your farm benefit from new markets?
The CSA makes up about a fifth of Patchwork Gardens’ business – they also sell
at the Kingston Farmers Market and wholesale to a few shops and restaurants.
Stutt encourages others to consider a local approach. “There are ways to work
with existing local marketing initiatives. There is a huge demand for those
products and people will pay a premium for locally raised food.”
Developing or joining a local food initiative may not be possible – or desirable
– for everyone, but there is merit in looking at new markets and marketing
models to enhance farm business success. Work with others to explore new
opportunities and collaborate to get more return for your product. |