Program Notes
Summer/Fall '99 |
Field Notes A Fact Sheet Sharing Practical Results from
USDA Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education Projects in the North Central Region
No. 5, Cooperatively Producing and
Marketing All Natural Beef
Introduction
Pooling with other Producers for Profit
An Unconventional Path to Market
Cattle in the Hen House
Connecting with Consumers
Lessons Learned
Future Visions
Kansas ranchers Diana
and Gary Endicott have big ideas for their small farm.
In their application for a SARE producer grant, they envisioned following their organic beef from
the farm to a rural slaughtering plant to a small processor to a major supermarket and
finally to a satisfied customer: alternative marketing in the mainstream food system.
In todays perilous
agricultural markets, realizing this kind of vision takes initiative, energy, and a lot of
courage the Endicotts have an abundance of all three.
Diana and Gary grow greenhouse
vegetables, grain and hay and run a small cow/calf operation in southeast Kansas on their
400-acre certified organic Rainbow Farms.
In the mid-1990s, they wanted to
sell tomatoes at an upscale, conventional grocery Hen House Markets, with more than
10 stores throughout Kansas City. Diana said she simply took her tomatoes to Hen House and
passed out samples to produce managers.
With her trademark enthusiasm, Diana
added, "We went into that store and not only tried to sell our product, but we tried
to sell ourselves."
Hen House began buying tomatoes from
the Endicotts. They then offered meat managers hormone- and antibiotic-free, corn-finished
beef. Hen House, coincidentally looking for a branded beef product, began buying the beef.
When demand exceeded supply, the Endicotts searched for other producers who could provide
"natural beef."
Diana added, "I started as
someone who knew little about marketing," which is an incredible statement,
considering that in five years she has led marketing efforts for a farmer cooperative that
has found a profitable niche in a major supermarket chain.
Pooling with other Producers for Profit
Cooperatively producing and
marketing allows producers to participate in the "value-added" sector of the
marketplace, while sharing risk, knowledge and profits.
"The meat market is very
competitive," Diana said. "Were all competing for shelf space in the
supermarket, and we dont have the volume to compete with the large producers.
Were trying to develop the local markets, and the best way to do this is to have
many producers band together."
In 1997, Diana and area farmers
formed a closed cooperative to ensure quality and consistency in their beef. Ten producers
joined the "All Natural Beef Cooperative" to sell through the grocery chain
under the "Natures Premium All Natural Beef" label. The co-op added 10
members since then.
To qualify for membership, ranchers
must raise cattle without growth hormones or sub-therapeutic antibiotics, on a "small
family farm" where family income is primarily generated from the operation and
the family members are actively involved in labor.
Most co-op ranchers raise Angus
crossbred cattle. Animals are free-ranged and finished for 90-120 days on a 50 percent
corn ration. Grain does not have to be organically grown; however, most producers in the
co-op try to be as natural as possible in their production methods.
Primarily third and fourth
generation farmers, All Natural Beef Co-op members come from central and southeast Kansas
and west central Missouri. They operate diversified farms using certified organic,
transitional or sustainable practices.
To organize a formal cooperative,
the Endicotts did research, networked with knowledgeable people and attended meetings to
learn about technicalities such as articles and bylaws, business plans, feasibility
studies, tax registration and trademarks.
With a lot of legwork, Diana brought
her co-op to fruition in a short time.
Diana manages most marketing duties
of the co-op with no paid staff in a market where competitors include
numerous branded beef programs. She and Gary have learned from other co-op members about
organic beef production. Eugene Edelman, co-op president, does the slotting for the group.
"A cooperative is like a
family. You put together a diverse group of people and you have to respect each
others knowledge and opinions," Diana said. "Each of us tries to do what
we think we can do best. Getting people together who have different skills and attributes
really helps the business."
The All Natural Beef Co-op is
presently slaughtering 10 head of cattle per week for Hen House, with plans to increase
production. Diana said they are realizing $40 to $60 per head more than if they sold their
cattle on the open market.
An Unconventional Path to Market
As if the challenge of organizing a
producer co-op wasnt enough, the co-op had to find a slaughtering plant and
processor to accommodate the ranchers desire to follow each cut from field to
grocery.
In order to sell beef at all Hen
House Markets, located in both Kansas and Missouri, Diana had to slaughter and process in
federally inspected facilities. This meant meandering the maze of USDA regulations.
They found a meat slaughtering plant
Adrian Meats, in Adrian, Mo., and a third generation meat processing plant
Sambol Meat Co., in Kansas City, Kan., that dry-ages and distributes the co-ops
beef.
Diana worked with inspectors and
bureaucrats at federal and state levels to comply with the strict labeling and food safety
laws. In fact, she wrote her own labels, with little assistance.
"Anyone can do this," she
said. "I formatted information by looking at other labels. I would send it in to be
approved, the USDA (Food Safety Inspection Service) would send it back with corrections,
and I would finish it."
Looking at labels and ear tags on
the cattle, co-op members can follow animals through feeding, transporting, processing and
retail sale. Farmers match final cuts to specific animals with detailed information on a
producer data sheet.
"From the data sheet, we can
find out which beef performed well and which didnt," Diana said. A spreadsheet
for each carcass indicates hot weight, weight of individual cuts, and price per cut.
At first, producers were frustrated
with the detailed paperwork and confusion of spreadsheets; however, because this
information allows farmers to learn more about their beef quality, Diana said, "They
learned to read the spreadsheets pretty quickly."
Diana researched pricing by taking
into account five-area daily weight averages, USDA five-year average primal prices, and
other branded beef program pricing grids to develop their own pricing spreadsheet.
Diana added that the middle meats
are easiest to sell, while "end meats are the hump we needed to get over."
With assistance from Kansas State
University students, they now process chucks and roasts into homemade ethnic sausages at
Ragan Meat and Sausage Co. in Kansas City, Kan. to sell sausages as a value-added product.
Diana said that independently taking
animals from slaughter to store has inefficiencies costing nearly double what it
would cost to slaughter conventionally. But she sees this as incentive to reap even higher
profits as they increase efficiency.
Cattle in the Hen House
After
slaughter and processing, Natures Premium All Natural Beef finds a prime spot of
shelf space at Hen House Markets. At a butcher block, customers choose from a variety of
mouth-watering All Natural Beef cuts, such as strip steaks, rib eyes, filet mignon, ground
chuck, and back ribs.
While Hen House is unique in its
commitment to local and regional food producers, and meat managers happened to be looking
for a branded beef product, Diana still made many visits to Hen House and offered free
samples.
"The retail meat mangers and
meat employees behind the counter can make or break sales of meat products," Diana
said. "This is especially true of new meat products."
She partnered with Michael Boland,
an agricultural economist at Kansas State University, to survey meat manager attitudes
towards Natures Premium All Natural Beef.
The co-op gave five participating
meat managers a total of nearly $1,500-worth of meat products to prepare and judge for 15
consecutive weeks. Thirty-eight responses collected information on product attributes,
from price to flavor to attractiveness.
Information from the survey not only
provided producers with valuable production and marketing information, but it also helped
cement positive, reciprocal relationships with meat managers.
With support of the meat managers,
the co-op now has lead-off counter space in eight Hen House stores throughout Kansas City.
Connecting with Consumers
As with any alternative marketing
strategy, selling at supermarkets requires constant consumer contact and education.
Diana markets the co-ops beef
products by collecting market research, doing in-store food demonstrations and offering
buying incentives.
"Market research allows you to
identify your consumers and the products that work and dont work," Diana said.
"It helps you find out who wants your product and how much theyre willing to
pay."
A Kansas State student wrote a
market survey for consumers for a masters project. After Gary Endicott developed a
computer program for an interactive "kiosk" to deliver the survey, the Endicotts
brought the computer to Hen House so consumers could take the survey and receive a beef
coupon for their efforts. Both the co-op and Hen House benefit from survey results.
Consumers indicated they wanted to
know how their meat was raised, and said they read labels to ascertain the presence of
artificial additives and preservatives. Perhaps most important, those surveyed said
"taste and tenderness" outweighed price as the most important purchasing factor.
"Demo, demo, demo, market,
market, market," said Diana when talking about in-store beef samples for customers.
She hires restaurant chefs to prepare samples so Hen House shoppers can taste All Natural
Beef and then buy it with coupons. Diana invites producers from the co-op to meet with
taste-testing customers, fostering a valuable urban/rural bond, from which consumers learn
about family farms and producers learn what urban consumers want in their food products.
Food demonstrations also allow Diana
to introduce and gather survey information for new products, such as their Natures
Premium All Natural Beef Franks.
With customer contests, Diana
gathers names and addresses on entry cards to build a database. The co-op gives free All
Natural Beef "grill packs," and Diana partnered with the Bourbon County, Kan.,
tourism division to give away free weekends at southeast Kansas bed-and-breakfasts with a
purchase of her beef. Diana sells beef and gets customer addresses, and Bourbon County
b-and-bs get low-cost advertising.
Diana plans to add a shopper card
scanner to her kiosk, allowing her to use the stores mailing list to add to the
database of customers whom she can further entice with newsletters and mailings.
Lessons Learned
Spending endless hours reading,
networking and attending meetings and conferences, not to mention working the farm and
ranch, has been exhausting for the Endicotts.
"But I just go, go, go, then
take a breath and go again," said Diana, on her way home from a speaking engagement
at the University of Nebraska.
Unlike producers protective of their
markets, Diana believes there is room for more direct marketing, and that saving family
farms means educating other farmers about profitable alternatives.
Diana emphasizes the value of
mutually beneficial relationships, such as those shes cultivated with graduate
students and Bourbon County tourism.
She suggests producers build
relationships with private and governmental agencies, organizations, institutions and
businesses. Diana said that her first producer grant from NCR-SARE gave the project
credibility and created more interest from other funding organizations.
"It is working with people like
Tom Moore (meat director of Hen House) and Pat and Mary Oates (of Adrian Meats) that have
made this project so very rewarding to me," Diana added, speaking positively about
relationships with processors and retailers.
The connection between the survival
of farm communities and rural businesses is obvious to Diana. Working with small, local
processors and meat lockers boosts rural economies.
And working with grocery stores
helps foster a necessary urban/rural connection that benefits local businesses, consumers
and producers.
Diana tells producers exploring
similar projects that the road will be rough, but persistence and some sacrifice have paid
off for her.
"Do the leg work process
yourself and hire as little done as possible," she said. "This will allow you to
understand the necessary procedures from the farm through the market."
Future Visions
The All Natural Beef Cooperative,
with Dianas marketing leadership, has high hopes for the future. They want to
vertically integrate the operation by partnering with others to buy a processing facility.
To increase producers
accountability to label claims, co-op members will also be working with ATTRA the
Appropriate Technology Transfer for Rural Areas on a "beef farm sustainability
checklist."
Educational efforts will continue to
be a hallmark of the All Natural Beef Co-op. Producers will invite meat managers and other
non-farmers on tours of cattle operations and processing facilities, and Diana will
continue to use the kiosk to gather consumer information.
Diana also wants to publish a
newsletter, which will eventually be on the Internet when the All Natural Beef Co-op
develops a website.
Their most important vision remains
keeping the small farm viable. As the co-op sets forth in beef promotional materials:
"They believe and practice sustainable agriculture not only to achieve the health and
environmental benefits, but also to economically produce beef a new way to hold on to an
old way of life the family farm."
-August 1999
Editors
Note: Diana Endicott will be a keynote speaker at NCR-SAREs marketing
conference Alternative Agricultural Marketing:
Developing Skills for the New Millennium Nov. 19-20, 1999, in Lincoln, Neb.
Program
Notes
News and
Announcements from the USDA SARE Program in the North Central Region, Spring/Summer 1999
Make your Mark at the Marketing Conference
Website Face-lift Presents User-Friendly Features
Call for Proposals: Research and Education/Professional Development
SARE Project Results Now Available Online
Put Your Farm to the Test with New On-Farm Research Bulletin
Make
your Mark at the Marketing Conference
Many of you manage innovative marketing projects and
enterprises. Youre selling
products directly to consumers. Youre doing market research. Youre supporting
farmers and ranchers marketing directly. Or youre creating products or resources for
alternative marketers. Why not apply to share your marketing savvy and make
valuable contacts through a poster or display at the NCR-SARE marketing conference?
Alternative Agricultural
Marketing: Developing Skills for the New Millennium will take place Nov. 19-20,
1999, in Lincoln, Neb. The meeting will help farmers and ranchers develop skills and
supportive relationships that will allow them to create and sustain successful alternative
marketing ventures. In addition, others promoting healthy food systems will share ideas
about how to make direct connections between farm gates and dinner plates for healthy food
systems.
Exhibits, workshops, panel discussions, keynote
speakers and other activities will probe a variety of direct marketing topics. Each
conference participant will receive a marketing resources notebook and Neil
Hamiltons Legal Guide to Direct Farm Marketing.
Poster/display sessions promise to provide
opportunities to network with farmers, educators, agricultural and environmental groups,
food industry representatives, researchers and general consumers. Exhibit proposals are
invited on topics relevant to alternative agricultural marketing, such as small business
planning, using the Internet to make sales, producer cooperatives, consumer education,
community-supported agriculture, small-scale processing, value-added agriculture and
resources for direct marketing. Exhibitors can rent poster board space for $15 or exhibit
tables for $25.
A Call for Exhibitors, as well as registration
materials, can be found at www.unl.edu/conted/acpp/sare.
Or contact Lisa Bauer at 402-472-0265 or lbauer2@unl.edu
for more information. Exhibit proposals will be evaluated for contribution to conference
goals and educational merit. Exhibitors will be notified of acceptance by Sept. 15, 1999.
Help us build on this educational experience!
Website Face-lift Presents User-Friendly Features
The NCR-SARE program invites farmers and ranchers,
researchers, educators and others
interested in sustainable agriculture to www.sare.org/ncrsare
for information on research results, competitive grants and other resources to support
profitable, environmentally sound farming and ranching systems.
"We designed the new website as a user-friendly
means to deliver information to a variety of audiences," said Steve Waller, NCR-SARE
regional coordinator. "This site will simplify the process of applying for grants and
obtaining sustainable agriculture information, and it should even entice new audiences to
participate."
Users can find the latest information about NCR-SARE
activities and programs, including competitive grants, educational opportunities,
sustainable agriculture resources and links to products from the national SARE office and
SAREs Sustainable Agriculture Network (SAN).
Features include: application forms for competitive
grant programs; helpful tips and links for grant applicants; information sorted by North
Central states, including links to funded SARE projects, state SARE contacts, and lists of
and links to state organizations; newsletters, fact sheets and links to other publications
and resources from SARE; links to the national SARE program and SAN, which offer a variety
sustainable ag information products and a searchable database of SARE projects; links to
organizations and programs nationwide; information on NCR-SAREs November 1999
marketing conference; and, coming soon, a calendar of educational events and resources
developed in NCR-SAREs Professional Development Program.
Contact Lisa Bauer at 402-472-0265 or lbauer2@unl.edu for more information. We welcome your
comments to further improve the site.
Call
for Proposals: Research and Education/Professional Development
Innovative researchers, educators and collaborative
teams can apply for competitive Research and
Education grants until Sept. 10, 1999. Approximately $1.3 million is available in 2000 to
fund creative projects addressing sustainable agricultural issues. Priority areas are
listed in the Call for Prepropsoals at www.sare.org/ncrsare. Or contact the SARE office at
402-472-7081 or ncrsare@unl.edu for print copies.
The NCR Professional Development
Program (PDP) will call for competitive grant proposals in mid-September, with proposals
due Dec. 15, 1999. Approximately $500,000 is available to fund one- or two-year projects
that focus on professional development programs in sustainable agriculture systems and
concepts for Cooperative Extension Service, Natural Resources Conservation Service and
other agricultural educators. The average funding level for 1999 SARE PDP competitive
grants was $52,224.
Successful proposals will include
anticipated outcomes and outcome-based evaluation plans. Anticipated outcomes must include
participants knowledgeable in sustainable agriculture and capable of conducting adult
education programs at the local, state and/or regional level. Projects that involve
farmers, ranchers and other end users as meaningful participants are strongly encouraged,
as are projects that foster partnerships between public and private organizations,
sustainable agriculture associations and 1862, 1890 and 1994 land grant institutions.
Proposal authors are expected to contact their state sustainable agriculture coordinators
to obtain information about current professional development efforts.
Find the Call for
Proposals at www.sare.org/ncrsare or contact Paula Ford
at 785-532-5328 or pford@oznet.ksu.edu for more
information.
SARE Project Results Now Available Online
Searching for SARE project information is now as easy
as a click of the mouse.
Researchers, educators,
farmers and ranchers and anyone interested in reviewing past and present SARE grants
from the NCR and nationwide can access a database of 1,400 SARE projects. Go
to the SARE homepage at www.sare.org then click "Funded Projects" to visit a gateway page
explaining grant programs, how to search and basic information about annual reporting
processes, which feed the database. Or go directly to the search engine by clicking on
"national projects database"
from the homepage.
Users can search for projects by state, region, topic
area, date, project coordinator and grant type (producer grant, professional development
grant or research and education grant). Searches will result in a list of project titles
linked to abstracts and contact information.
"The database will provide a variety of users
valuable SARE project results at their fingertips," said Kim Kroll, SARE associate
director and database project coordinator.
Comments, problems and questions about the database
should be directed to Kroll at kkroll@asrr.arsusda.gov
and/or to Andy Clark, Sustainable Agriculture Network (SAN) coordinator at san@nal.usda.gov.
Put Your Farm to the Test with New On-Farm Research Bulletin
In these trying agricultural times, many farmers and
ranchers are opting to conduct on-farm
research to help them boost profits while protecting natural resources. The national SARE
program has published a 12-page bulletin to assist producers with their farm-based
inquiries.
Designing and carrying out simple
research tests in a more organized fashion can provide reliable, valuable answers to
production and marketing questions. The bulletin covers the basics of how to conduct
research at the farm level, presenting practical tips for both crop and livestock
producers, as well as a comprehensive list of more in-depth resources.
Contact Lisa Bauer at 402-472-0265 or lbauer2@unl.edu
to get your copy.

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