Different marketplaces facilitate different types
of interactions, with farmers playing the role of
producer or consumer (or both at the same time).
Produce marketplaces operating downstream
engage farmers as producers. Fragmented and
sparsely distributed farmers are brought into
one single Platform to sell their crops, fruits,
vegetables, and livestock wholesale to local
traders, agro-processors, and in some cases
directly to consumers. Ag supplies and service-
only marketplaces, on the other hand, engage
farmers as consumers. In these marketplaces,
farmers can purchase inputs or insurance, rent
tractors, or contract transportation services.
Finally, within integrated service marketplaces,
farmers are engaged as both producers and
consumers, enabling various types of interactions
in one single Platform. While integrated service
marketplaces can address multiple market
failures simultaneously, facilitating various
types of interactions within one Platform creates
unique operational complexities for the Platform
operator. These intricacies can be challenging for
many marketplaces that seek to operate under
one brand and a single business model.
THE POPULARITY OF BUNDLING
AND ONE-STOP SHOPS
Perhaps unsurprisingly, more than one-third of all
product and service marketplaces we identified
are either combined ag supplies and produce
marketplaces (8 Platforms) or integrated farm
services marketplaces (19 Platforms). Both
categories focus on interactions both to and from
the farm—products and services go to the farmer
and market access for farm produce is available at
harvest time.
A majority of smallholder farmers lack—and
urgently need—access to a comprehensive
package of both products and services that enable
them to increase productivity (e.g., through inputs,
often on credit, and/or mechanization services)
and to translate these productivity gains into
increased income (e.g., by accessing markets
and better prices). This need for broader, more
holistic smallholder farmer support has been well
documented in previous ISF and RAF Learning
Lab research, including our latest state of the
sector report, Pathways to Prosperity.
17
Providing
a “one-stop shop” featuring holistic services may
also strengthen the impact case and, therefore, the
value proposition of these Platforms. This could
increase business model sustainability through
cross-subsidization of lower-margin services—for
example, inputs—with higher-margin activities
like produce brokering. As marketplaces continue
to evolve their offerings in the agricultural market,
we expect more bundling of complementary or
enabling services within a single Platform.
17
ISF Advisors and Mastercard Foundation Rural and Agricultural Finance Learning Lab (2019).
Pathways to Prosperity.
pathways.raflearning.org/
.
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