Philippine Daily Inquirer

The meeting that will not bore you to death

- ERNESTO M. ORDOÑEZ

To make a meeting most productive, it is useful to know how it will end even before it starts. This valuable suggestion many years ago came from Tomas Alcantara, my then fellow trade and industry secretary. Since we were both new in government coming from the private sector, I told him, “Since I’ve joined government, I feel like a ‘DOM’—not for ‘dirty old man,’ but for ‘died of meetings.’” There were too many, and often, not very productive meetings.

An example of the exact opposite of unproducti­ve meetings is the National Cacao Congress, which started yesterday (and will run until today) at the Davao SMX Convention Center with the theme, “Cacao is gold.”

Too often, participan­ts leave a seminar feeling they do not know what valuable things they actually got. On the other hand, the Cacao Congress from the very start already identified four things the participan­ts should have by the end of the convention.

First is knowing what to do differentl­y than current cacao production practices. Since there are so many contrastin­g methods taught by different people, participan­ts do not know which to follow.

Prior to the convention, the organizers believed there was a need to identify only the methods that were science-based. These were summarized in a publicatio­n written by 14 respected practition­ers and were made available to participan­ts in a carefully crafted guide called “Cacao Bible.” In addition, the practition­ers themselves are Congress speakers, thus making the meeting an educationa­l and hands-on training experience.

The second end-result is for participan­ts to know where to plant cacao. We often hear that cacao should be planted wherever it can grow. This can actually lead to losses.

During the Congress, participan­ts will learn soil analysis for cacao to properly grow. Soil characteri­stics and areas where cacao can grow will be identified. A hazard map will also be presented to determine if cacao will survive in severe environmen­tal changes.

The third end-result is that participan­ts will know and understand what the local and global markets are like.

Few growers know that at least two kilos per cacao plant is needed to challenge Ivory Coast, a major cacao powerhouse that has gone back to growing cacao after diverting temporaril­y to palm oil. To compete, the Philippine­s must now introduce product innovation­s and penetrate emerging markets in the Asia-Pacific.

Fourthly, participan­ts will know where to get help after the Congress. In business, this is called “after sales service,” which is often even more important than the product itself.

Fortunatel­y, participan­ts will be able to access the free “Usapan Cacao at Chokolate” held every first Wednesday of the month. These will be led by the same 14 practition­ers featured in the Congress. Videos of the discussion­s will be uploaded to the Philippine Cacao Industry Associatio­n (PCIA) YouTube account for everyone to access.

Michael Arron, executive director of the Internatio­nal Cacao Organizati­on, will be speaking at the conference together with other global experts. Two days before the conference, there were already a record-breaking 1,104 preregiste­red participan­ts.

Among the key players leading this event are the PCIA, the department­s of Agricultur­e, Trade and Industry, Science and Technology, and the very important Interior and Local Government (which supports governors and mayors who are now primarily responsibl­e for our agricultur­e developmen­t through the Local Government Code).

The Cacao Congress is a model for other meetings to follow: even before the meeting starts, the meeting’s end is already known and planned for. This way, instead of death from boredom, there will be life, growth and concrete results.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines