Enhance Economic Opportunities for Agricultural Producers
Direct Farm Marketing and Tourism Activities to Keep
the Farm
Issue
For many small and medium-sized farms, traditional commodity markety
channels no longer provide sufficient returns to support a family through
farming. The value-added contribution by U.S. producers of consumer food
expenditures has fallen from 22.8 percent in 1950 to only 7.9 percent in
2000. By allowing farmers to retain a higher share of consumer food expenditures,
direct marketing, along with agritourism, have proved to be alternatives
for keeping these farms economically viable. Global competition and modern
production technologies have pushed the price of raw agricultural commodities
downward so that many farmers and ranchers have found it difficult to remain
in production agriculture. However, some farmers and ranchers have mastered
the art of obtaining a higher profit margin from their agricultural land
holdings by marketing food products and farm recreation directly to the
consumer.
What has been done?
Two UA College of Agriculture and Life Sciences faculty members convened
the first annual Arizona Direct Farm Marketing and Tourism (DFMT) conference
in 1995 at the same time they finished putting together a 250-page layman's
publication on the topic. The educational curriculum was designed to provide
producers with an A-Z publication for finding the essentials needed to
start and develop a direct farm marketing enterprise. Producers have been
able to network and learn from each other at the annual conference by sharing
their failures and success stories. The 8th annual conference was held
at Young's Farm in Dewey, AZ in 2003. The event draws both regular and
new participants who are investigating whether they should try direct farm
marketing. Generally 50 to100 individuals attend the annual conference
and the handbook curriculum has reached thousands of people.
An interim board was recently formed to organize an Arizona Farmers'
Direct Marketing Association. Issues the association will address include
being a collective voice in the state for direct farm marketing issues,
educational programs, collective buying of insurance products for members,
coordinating better with Arizona Grown, developing a farmers' market directory,
and creating an association Web site.
The Western Extension Marketing Committee and University of Arizona
Cooperative Extension recently published a book, "Western Profiles of Innovative
Agricultural Marketing: Examples from Direct Farm Marketing and Agri-Tourism
Enterprises." The book is a collaborative effort with authors from seven
Western states. Using a case-study approach, farmers learn concepts that
can be applied to stabilize and enhance their businesses. Examples include
failures and successes of 17 enterprises located in Western urban and rural
settings. Six thousand copies of the book will be distributed throughout
the West.
Impact
Participants at the direct farm marketing conference (DFMT) in 2003
not only rated the topics presented as being relevant to their operation
but indicated that they thought there was a high probability (3.2 on a
4.0 scale) that they would incorporate the information learned at the conference
into their business operations. One hundred percent of the respondents
said the conference enhanced their knowledge of the topics presented, and
100 percent said they would share the information they learned in the following
ways: with another colleague (75 percent); with family (57 percent); with
friends (46 percent); with community leaders (46 percent); with educators
(32 percent) and with others (11 percent). One participant is networking
with others who attended the conference to develop an organic farming enterprise
that will include a restaurant and grass-fed beef program.
The DFMT Handbook is still widely accessed and maintains the #1 listing
for "Direct Farm Marketing" on the Google search engine (rank is based
on web sites selected by users). Requests to utilize the handbook for a
short course or class have come from other Western states, and Australia,
Canada, South Africa.
"I actually used the information from your website to begin looking
into marketing my eggs! I must have used a ream of paper and 2 ink cartridges
printing it off. I found the section on business planning extremely helpful."
–participant.
Funding
Arizona Cooperative Extension
Contact
Russell Tronstad, Associate Professor & Specialist
Department of Agricultural & Resource Economics
The University of Arizona
Economics Bldg. (#23)
Tucson, AZ 85721
Tel: (520) 621-2425; FAX (520) 621-6250
Email: tronstad@ag.arizona.edu
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