in Kenya and Malawi), passing through highly
curated models (e.g., EthicHub in Mexico or
Croper in Colombia), and single or crop-agnostic
value chain players. This diversity is due, in part,
to the highly localized nature of agriculture,
where farmer needs depend strongly on their
location and the value chain(s) in which they are
active. But it is also driven by the nascent stage of
the sector—the industry seems to be in a constant
state of experimentation and innovation, with no
clear winning models yet uncovered.
Ultimately, defining an agricultural product and
service marketplace model comes down to five
key strategic and business management choices
regarding: 1) who to serve and what market
friction to solve, 2) in what value chains and
geographies, 3) with what products and services,
4) through what customer engagement model,
and 5) using which revenue model. See the Annex
for overview of how the different types of market-
places differ on these characteristics.
1. Who will the marketplace serve and
what friction will it solve?
Product and service marketplaces create value
by reducing market frictions. At the most
fundamental level, most agricultural marketplaces
active today focus on bringing farmers and
value chain actors together when they would not
otherwise be able to connect (or would do so less
efficiently). However, different user segments
(e.g., offtakers, input suppliers, service providers,
or farmers) face an array of additional friction
points and needs that agricultural marketplaces
must understand and potentially meet. This
impacts the range of services facilitated or offered
through the Platform, as well as its go-to-market
strategy. For example, an agricultural supplies
marketplace targeting smaller, more vulnerable
farmers may have to facilitate advisory services
in order to educate farmers on the use of
fertilizers—or enable access to finance if target
farmers struggle to pay for the inputs. It may also
need to create a network of agents to increase
product awareness and train farmers in the use of
the Digital Platform to onboard them quickly. A
produce marketplace targeting large buyers may
need to work with local aggregators that collect
produce from multiple farms to meet minimum
production volume requirements.
The different core Platform functions outlined
in Section 2—aggregate and organize, facilitate,
curate, provide infrastructure, and generate
and utilize data—are each suited to resolving
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