Porterville Recorder

How will farms, food business react to disruption?

- Kerry Tucker is chief strategic counsel at Nuffer, Smith, Tucker, a strategic planning and public relations firm headquarte­red in San Diego. Teresa Siles is managing director at Nuffer, Smith, Tucker. Reprinted with permission of California Farm Bureau Fe

If there’s a term describing business in the second decade of the 21st century, it’s “disruption.” Entreprene­urs uncovering untapped needs and creating new ones, combined with technologi­cal innovation­s that look a lot like science fiction, are pushing many traditiona­l industry leaders off their perches.

It’s hard to miss the industry sectors in the thick of this transforma­tive period. Media, entertainm­ent, hospitalit­y, transporta­tion, telecommun­ication, manufactur­ing, financial services and retail are among those going through successive waves of change.

The seeds of disruption are already planted in agricultur­e and could easily displace business-as-usual approaches in the name of solving problems, producing greater yields, reducing costs, and creating new markets and customer segments.

In a produce company planning session this spring, one Chilean grower said, “I want to disrupt the marketplac­e before it disrupts me.”

The 2018 Food Foresight report—representi­ng a 25-year trends collaborat­ion between Nuffer, Smith, Tucker and the California Institute of Food & Agricultur­al Research at the University of California, Davis—identified disruption all around us as the key driver of future trends likely to shape the agri-food chain.

The report follows scrutiny of thousands of pages of data across 20 categories related to the agri-food supply chain by a blue-ribbon panel representi­ng all facets of the chain—from production to food safety, retail, food service and even sociology.

Since the report was issued earlier this year, the term “disruption” is dominating strategic planning discussion­s across the agri-food supply chain. It transcends each trend in the Food Foresight 2018 report: • Trend 1: Technology firms in the hot

seat; new challenges to public acceptance. • Trend 2: Changes in logistics and food distributi­on paving the way for disruption

from farm to plate. •Trend 3: Consumer preference­s change; “big food” struggles to play catch-up. •Trend 4: Changes in U.S. climate policy fuel new leadership.

With disruption all around, it’s easy to get distracted and allocate resources to the latest shiny object that may or may not be to your organizati­on’s advantage. On the flip side, organizati­ons that are stuck in their ways may risk extinction.

There is tremendous opportunit­y for those that embrace change as a core value, and who approach the future with their eyes open.

Our experience suggests you have a greater opportunit­y if you catch issues early in their developmen­t, when the strategic options are most plentiful.

In evaluating these trends and others, keep in mind: 1) opportunit­ies with the highest probabilit­y of advancing your organizati­on’s purpose and/or vision for success, and 2) threats with the highest probabilit­y of standing in the way of your organizati­on’s purpose and/or vision for success.

If you’re involved in farm group or agri-food company planning, and the concept of disruption doesn’t come up in the assessment of future opportunit­ies and threats, or during strategy developmen­t, ask why. After all, as Food Foresight panelist and vice president of sales and marketing for HMC Farms Steve Kenfield said, “Darwin is here and only the fittest will survive.” Will your organizati­on make the cut? The Food Foresight panel will meet at Kautz Ironstone Vineyards in Murphys Nov. 1-3 to begin work on the 2019 trends report.

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