Tag Archives: Searching for Farm Business Opportunities

Farm Business Can Give You a Safer Entry into Retirement (Part 2 of 2)

This is the second and concluding part of this article. The first part appeared here, yesterday (9th October 2013).

Here’s Why I Suggest You Start Your Farm Business SMALL, While You’re Still In Paid Employment:

I believe in the smart use of money. People who have suffered severe, potentially traumatizing lack of access to money, often feel that way about using it.

For those willing to learn, “poverty” (no matter how short the period of exposure to it) can be a good teacher of money management :-)

Believe me dear reader, I say this from painful personal experience!

The fact that you have money does not mean you have to throw it at anything you want to do.

To flourish in business, it’s best to train yourself – and your employees – to use as little money as possible, to generate as much money as possible.

That’s the key to being competitive. Take a good look at Richard Branson’s Virgin range. It’s what makes them tick!

When you’re in firm control of what it costs you to produce, you’re likely to have plenty of profit “margin room” to play with.

In other words, you’ll be able to price your farm output competitively (to fend off rival farms), and attractively (to entice profitable buyers).

So, keep that in mind.

Don’t just go buying this and buying that and hoping to impress people with different machinery and livestock littering your farm. Practice focus – aim to develop a production system that works with one or two specific livestock ventures – using cost-saving strategies.

What you learn by being so painstaking will enable you keep that operation going with minimal running expenses incurred.

Do Not Start a New Venture Until That/Those on Ground Are Yielding Significant, Sustainable Income

The reason is simple. You want to start a business that at some point starts to generate enough revenue to finance itself – so you can stop dipping your hands in your pockets.

That way, you can use what you generate from them, to finance new ventures (even if in part).

It would make no sense for you to still be using your salary to pay salaries, buy feeds and cover other expenses on a fish farm that’s over a year old!

If that is happening, something you’re doing is not right. Investigate and correct it, so the farm can start making money!

Once that farm is setup right, and generating useful revenue, explore ways to further save costs, so you can raise your profit margins.

Then if you have plans to start any other farm enterprise – say an egg laying poultry enterprise – find ways to use the income from the fish farm to slowly finance it.

Again, understand what I mean here.

Nothing stops you from going out and buying all you need to start a piggery, poultry, rabbitry and poultry layers farm ALL at once.

However, I’m saying that being in a salary job, it will be difficult to monitor multiple enterprises. Unless you’re really lucky to get reliable manpower.

So, whatever you want to start should be done slowly. Aim to learn how to do it well on a small or pivot scale – in preparation for a full launch later on.

That process will help you determine what areas problems or challenges can arise from. And because it would be on a manageable “scale”, your spending needs to get it up and running would be minimal.

No Matter How Far Away Your Retirement Day Is, You Can Start Preparing Today

It won’t be easy. But the process of engaging in all the aspects of running the enterprise you choose, will give you valuable education you will draw on later.

The best part is that you will do all this while still earning a salary!

And by using an intelligent step-by-step or phased implementation like the one proposed above, you can actually end up with a fully operational farm business.

That’s because the longer you’ve been doing something, especially if you’re not lazy, the more proficient you’ll become.

Running a farm business – especially livestock – is not easy to do.

That’s why I suggest starting as early as possible, while the advantage of salaried income is still there.

Get your immediate family members involved, and extended family members you can really trust. That will enable you save on labour costs.

With that kind of cost-effective arrangement in place, you’re more likely to succeed in making the scaled down version of your farm business profitable.

Then, using what you’ve learnt, and the experience you’ve gained, you can then gradually scale up the business. Do this, possibly to coincide with (what will hopefully be) your planned exit from paid employment.

Imagine what it would feel like, to quit today, and get home knowing you can walk into your very own – already profitable – farm business that same day!

That’s an experience many who retire after years of serving their employers often do not have.

Instead, those periods tend to be characterised by fear, and worry, about how they’ll cope with the significant loss of monthly salaried income.

A person who works a plan like the one proposed in this article, with diligence and determination, is much less likely to have such an experience.

It is my hope that YOU will take THIS, as a wake up call, and start making necessary enquiries – and plans – today.

To that end, I suggest you read my article titled: Searching for Farm Business Opportunities? (5 Tips, Based on a Real Life International Phone Conversation)

I wish you success.

RELATED ARTICLES WRITTEN BY TAYO K. SOLAGBADE

1. Searching for Farm Business Opportunities? (5 Tips, Based on a Real Life International Phone Conversation)

PREVIEW: I recently took an international call, from a Nigerian based abroad, on my mobile line. I was then on a farm in South West Nigeria, where I was coaching users to use a Poultry Farm Management application the CEO hired me to build.

He and a partner were trying to decide on investment opportunities to pursue in Nigeria. They yearned to come home after decades of working in foreign countries. But they also worried – rightly too – based on news they kept getting  – that it could be quite risky.

Perhaps too risky.

He shared the story of a colleague who traveled home with his entire family to “retire”, only to return saying he NEVER return there till death!

Read full article

2. Should You Quit Your Job or Start Your Business Part-time?

PREVIEW: “No enterprise worthy of accomplishment would ever begin, if all obstacles were first to be overcome – Napoleon Hill

In attempting to help you come to your own decision about the better of the two options mentioned above(quitting your job vs. starting part-time), I will give you an insight into how I entered into the business of entrepreneuring. I start by reproducing the exact words with which I narrated the experience in an ebook I wrote back in 2003 titled “How To Help Your Child Discover His/Her Purpose In Life” (see excerpts below).

Read full article

3. Once You Start Your Business, You Must Think & Act Like An Entrepreneur To Succeed!

PREVIEW: “I wanted to be an editor or a journalist, I wasn’t really interested in being an entrepreneur, but I soon found I had to become an entrepreneur in order to keep my magazine going” – Richard Branson.

Preamble

In this article I explain why ANYONE starting a business needs to realise that s/he MUST become an entrepreneur in order to succeed. For many people this will require changes in spending habits, use of personal time, friendships kept- and most importantly THINKING HABITS!

Read full article

Searching for Farm Business Opportunities? (5 Tips, Based on a Real Life International Phone Conversation)

I recently took an international call, from a Nigerian based abroad, on my mobile line. I was then on a farm in South West Nigeria, where I was coaching users to use a Poultry Farm Management application the CEO hired me to build.

The caller and a partner were trying to decide on investment opportunities to pursue in Nigeria. They yearned to come home after decades of working in foreign countries. But they also worried – rightly too – based on news they kept getting  – that it could be quite risky.

Perhaps too risky.

He shared the story of a colleague who traveled home with his entire family to “retire”, only to return saying he NEVER return there till death!

It Was Not However All Doom and Gloom

Apparently, another friend had returned to Nigeria more recently, and told them he’s doing well in the farming business.

Specifically, fish farming.

That’s probably what led my caller and his friend to begin thinking to themselves:

“Maybe this is possible after all. If our friend is really doing as well as he says he is doing, maybe we can too.”

But they decided to do more due diligent investigations into what the farm industry, and the Nigerian economy as a whole offers.

One of many Google searches led them to my Cost-Saving Farm Business Article(s), and eventually they called me.

NB: He did make it clear they were looking at a variety of other options in terms of business opportunities – which I considered a wise move.

Our Conversation Roused a Desire to Help, In Me

He told me their concerns. How they truly wanted to feel safe coming home to start something they could live on in retirement.

How it could get tough working to pay the bills – and as one got older, even tougher.

At that point, I honestly felt his pain.

I have family also in the UK. My sister and her husband live and work there, with their kids. I therefore had a fair idea of what he meant.

So I loosened up, and spoke from my heart about what I’ve seen in the past 10 years.

I’ve interacted closely/rubbed minds with, and served farm business owners based in various locations across Nigeria – and some parts of Africa.

I’ve done this face to face, via email and on phone.

Today, my website mailing list of farm business owners, and enthusiasts (some past buyers of my products/services), continues to grow.

First he asked questions, to establish if indeed I was who I said I was.

And more importantly, if I truly did what I claimed I did…and if I was competent.

We ended up spending over an hour conversing. He called back even when we got cut off .

Judging from the foregoing, and the thank you email he later sent me, I guess I “passed” :-))

When Our Conversation Ended, I Promised to Email Him Suggestions I Felt He Could Use

I asked him to send me an email from his inbox, so I could write him. He did that the same day. Below, are excerpts of the email I sent him 2 days later. I feel some of the information provided may benefit others with similar interests.

1. Check With a Recognized Regulatory Body in Your Preferred Location

He told me they owned land in Lagos, on which they hoped to base their operation.  I mentioned Lagos state’s “SCADO”, when we spoke, and how an officer from there once reached out to me.

The article I subsequently published last year (titled “A Permanent Solution to Africa’s Low Per Capita Protein Consumption“) contains information you may find useful in that regard.

Click here to read it

It contains – front and back images of a flyer she gave to me, which has details of funding (grant) being disbursed to farmers in collaboration with an foreign sponsor organization.

2. Find a Competent Resource Person to Guide You

I know Gbolahan Saba from my days as a student in the University of Ibadan. In my first year, I lived in the same room with his older brother, Debo.

Gbolahan Saba is an Agric. Officer working with the Lagos State government.

His Linked In profile is at http://ng.linkedin.com/pub/gbolahan-adekunle-saba

And on facebook at https://en-gb.facebook.com/public/Gbolahan-Saba

Last time I met him in person was over a year ago. Google his name, and you should see some recent news reports relating to him playing the above mentioned role.

3. Seriously Consider Adopting Integrated Farming: Get Guidance from the World Famous Songhai

Instead of running one farm enterprise, it’s been proven smarter to operate a mix of self-complementing ones.

I highly recommend you get across to, and possibly physically visit Songhai in Porto Novo. Maybe you could attend their training programme. They teach farming and also coach those they teach farming, on entrepreneurship: a valuable combination!

You can also (or alternatively) get them to provide you with guidance towards choosing the right mix of enterprises to run.

Visit www.songhai.org – to learn how they run their Zero Waste Integrated Farming Centre, in which virtually everything is recycled. I have met (twice in the recent past) “Leonce Sessou”, a key member of the Songhai management team.

Googling his name could turn up leads you can follow to contact him. He handles most of the online marketing efforts – and should be able to link you up.

TIP – One Possible Way to Get Leonce Sessou’s Songhai Email Address:

a. Go to www.google.com. Then type the following filename with quotation marks around it: telecentres.pdf.

b. In other words type “telecentres.pdf”. Unless it has been removed from the location I found it online, Google should return a result with a direct download link to it. Click the link, to download and read it.

c. On page 6, you’ll see Leonce Sessou’s name and email address boldly printed, with short notes added.

NB: That PDF (i.e. “telecentres.pdf) is a document authored to promote a collaborative online project of which Leonce, from his base at Songhai, is a part of. When you read it, you’ll learn more about the project. But I offer the foregoing information, to tell you how to get access to his email.

Lagos state is one of many Nigerian states that have gotten Songhai to replicate the system for their use.

Maybe you can also ask Gbolahan about that: They have poultry, piggery, fishery etc.

4. Get a Feasibility Study Done By a Competent Expert

During my conversation with the caller, he asked for prices and other finer details about starting up a fish farming business.

I told him Nigeria’s environment is subject to so many variables, which makes many things change frequently – often unexpectedly.

Smart thing to do is to get a formal study done.

And AFTER that, keep an eye on those sensitive factors that could introduce significant changes to deductions you make from the study report. Like I noted earlier, in Nigeria, they tend to be many – and can be difficult to anticipate or keep track of.

A feasibility study or business plan may, as a result, have a limited shelf-life of usefulness “as is”.

Having said the above, you can ask Gbolahan Saba, or Leonce Sessou (both mentioned above) about getting a feasibility study done. They are on ground and would be better equipped to guide you.

I no longer offer to do feasibility studies. So this recommendation has no personal motivation.

Why?

Well, on 1st April 2013, I relocated from Nigeria, to Benin Republic. And I’ve worked from there since. Right now, I’m trying this article ahead of Wednesday (tomorrow) in Lagos. I’ll set it to auto publish tomorrow. By the time you read it, it’s likely I’ll already be back in Cotonou.

So, I’m less available in Nigeria these days – limiting my ability to move around in that market, like I used to.

5. If You Decide to Start, Do Try to Follow Best Practices

Lastly, and by way of interest, you may wish to click the link below to:

A. Watch a mind map based video presentation that explains why I always strongly recommend results focused farm business owners adopt what I call a Best Operating Process Management System.

B. Watch the demonstration video for the Excel Visual Basic driven Poultry Layers Farm Operations Management software that I developed for a client’s farm PC in South West Nigeria.

The client had me brought in from my base in Cotonou, for about 5 days, to install it, and train his two top farm managers to use it.

You can see the videos at http://www.tayosolagbade.com/pfmgr.html

You’ll also find links to many of cost-saving farm business ideas articles that may provide you useful info.

Final Words

To all who are looking to make the transition from abroad to return home and start a farm business, I with you all the best!

Disclaimer: Please do your own DUE DILIGENCE in using any information supplied above. You take full responsibility for whatever results you get.