Title: Competing in the global agrifood system: A buyside perspective
1Competing in the global agri-food system A
buy-side perspective
- Peter Goldsmith
- NSRL Endowed fellow in Agricultural Strategy
- University of Illinois
- Agricultural and Food Cooperatives in Rural
Development - Implications of Business Dynamics for the Public
Policy - June 16-17, 2004
- Waugh Auditorium, 3rd Floor, ERS
- 1800 M Street, NW, Washington, D.C. 20036
2Opportunity and Investment in the post-modern
economy
- Global Sourcing
- Global Competitors/Opportunities
- Scale Economies Frag. of Demand
- mass customization
- End-user driven
- solution orientation
- Service and Knowledge Bundling
- Multinational Players
- regions over nations
3My Thesis
- Cooperatives have been noticeably absent from
adaptation to structural change in the US.- - Why ?
- Traditional and New Gens have struggled
- Group action though thrives, just not
self-organized - Because.
- Co-op theory of the 80s and 90s only half the
story - Prescriptive about governance and core
competencies - Other Half
- Co-ops need new strategic architecture
- Become buyers agents not sellers agents
- Post-modern prescription
- Need both pieces
- Changed organizational design
- New Strategic Architecture
4Co-op TheoryModern Theory (1940-1980)
- Co-op comparable and competitive with proprietary
firms - Emilianov (1942) Phillips (1953) Helmberger
and Hoos (1962), Ladd (1974), Zusman (1982) - Rational and Stable
- Homogeneity and Stationarity
- Conditionality
- Co-op as a firm
- An inward focus of theory
5Neo-Modernists (1980-2000)
- Broke with modern theory
- Identified organizational design flaws
- Heterogeneity
- Dynamics
- Rational patrons
- Staatz (1983) Game Theory
- Subadditivity and Harm
- Sexton (1986) Game Theory
- Pricing and Voting
- Cook (1994) Neo-Institutional
- Property rights
- Goldsmith (1995) Transaction Theory
- Existence/Senescence and Governance Choice
6Neo-Modern Co-ops
- Consistent with the Prescription of the
Neo-Modernists - New Generation Co-ops and LLCs
- Growth in New Gens/LLCs
- 252 (Merritt et al, 2003)
- K Sourcing (liquidity)
- Commitment (obligation)
- Quality (closure and differential pricing)
- Governance (hierarchical)
- Resources (core competencies)
- Co-op as a firm
- But.. still an inward focus
- Addressing internal weaknesses
7Why hasnt value been driven up the chain? ----A
Lense Problem The Buy Side vs. Sell Side
- Farmer looking down the chain selling a
commodity - Meat animal or Grain product
- Retailer/Wholesaler/Manufacturer looking up into
the supply chain - Buying an array of inputs
- Meat (grain), packaging, labor, credit, equipment
etc. - Each input has numerous attributes- a bundle
- Lot size, timing, processing quality, end-use
quality, commodity characteristics, logistical
quality
8Differing Perspectives Case of Mexican White
Corn Buyers --looking down the chain vs. looking
up the chain
Sell-Side Proposition Sees a rifle shot -One
Product -Production Characteristics -USDA
Grade -Offer Grid
Buy-Side Proposition Sees a shot gun -Many
Products -Many Characteristics -Industrial
Needs
9The Buy-side Half-Pipe
- Does the buyer really want a relationship?
- Very little evidence in the food system
- Substitutability the norm
- Simplicity in Procurement- not complexity
- Wary of over-investment in relationships
- Low ROI
- e.g. indemnification
10Why does the buyer want to buy from a group?
- Where do cooperatives and other forms of group
action fit in with - Industrial marketing and supply chain management?
- End-user orientation
- guiding the supplier Kohli and Jaworski, 1990,
JOM. - The evolution to a service/knowledge sector?
- Global environment with many suppliers?
11Not Quite Right
- Neo-Modern theory maybe only half right
- New Gens and LLCs may be getting the org. design
right but - New design didnt seem to solve the problems of
- Value creation and capture
- Competing for K
- Co-op firm still had a inward (producer)
orientation - Co-op as a means to producer ends
12Thoughts and Prescription
- Need to analyze the coop in an outward context
- What does grouping of individual suppliers do for
buyers? - How does a group achieve relevance?
- Need to directly address the major feature of raw
ag/semi processed procurement supply risk - Prescription
- Analyze the cooperative as a risk manager (Buyer)
- Analyze the cooperative in the context of the
wholesaling function- Buyers agent - Analyze the cooperative in the context of
relationship management (N. Rackam and D.
Peppers) - Focus the cooperative on features, services, and
products, not just cost
13Contact information
Dr. Peter Goldsmith NSRL Endowed fellow in
Agricultural Strategy The Department of
Agricultural and Consumer Economics The
University of Illinois 433 Mumford Hall 1301 West
Gregory Drive Urbana, Illinois 61801 217-333-5131
Fax-333-5538 pgoldsmi_at_uiuc.edu http//www.ace.uiuc
.edu/faculty/goldsmith/