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Meat Goat Economic$

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Title: Goat Economics Author: North Carolina State University Last modified by: Geoff Benson Created Date: 2/8/1998 4:54:40 PM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Meat Goat Economic$


1
Meat Goat Economic
  • GEOFF BENSON, PhD
  • Extension Economist
  • Dept. of Ag. Resource Economics
  • N.C. State University
  • August, 2009

2
Outline
  • Why do you want to have goats?
  • Who will buy your goats or goat meat?
  • How will you produce your goats or goat meat?
  • Are goats a good fit for your farm and family?
  • Will it be profitable? -- Running the numbers

3
WHAT IS SUCCESS?
  • WHEN THE MOST IMPORTANT FAMILY AND BUSINESS
    GOALS ARE BEING MET
  • How will meat goats contribute to your definition
    of success?

4
1. Why Have Goats?
OR
FUN OR MONEY?
5
Why Have Goats?
  • Are Goats a Good Fit With
  • Your Personal Goals
  • Your Business Goals
  • Goals of other family members

G. A. BENSON, ARE-NCSU
5
6
Why Have Goats?
  • How much money do you want to make from selling
    live goats or goat meat?
  • How much time and money are you willing to
    invest?
  • Write it down!
  • Your answer helps determine the size and type of
    enterprise

GEOFF BENSON, ARE, NCSU
6
7
Income Potential
  • There is little published information from actual
    meat goat operations
  • To base planning decisions on
  • To use as benchmarks for evaluating farm
    performance
  • Several Universities have developed goat
    enterprise budgets

G. A. BENSON, ARE-NCSU
7
8
Meat Goat Enterprise Budgets, per Doe per year
Does Rev. Cost Neta
S. Carolina 180 Head 50 91 116 -25
Ohio1.5 X 130 kid 25 123 132 -9
Ohio1.5 X 170 kid 25 165 135 30
Ohio1.5 X 210 kid 25 207 138 69
Kentucky-Low Int. -- 77 75 2
Kentucky-Med Int. -- 95 98 -3
Kentucky-High Int. -- 111 124 -13
aNet Returns to Land, Management, Risk, Farm
Overhead
G. A. BENSON, ARE-NCSU
8
9
Why the differences?
  • Based on different production systems
  • Differences in animal performance
  • Differences in the cost categories included
  • There is no standard budget methodology user
    beware!

G. A. BENSON, ARE-NCSU
9
10
Farm Financial Performance Varies from Farm to
Farm
  • Net Returns over Total Expense, Minnesota FINBIN
    data
  • Cow-Calf, per cow, 2008
  • Top 20 46, Bottom 20 -688
  • Stockers, per head, 2007
  • Top 20 65, Bottom 20 -223
  • Dairy Net Farm Income per cow, Cornell
    University, 2007
  • Top 10 1,985, Bottom 10 67

11
Size Income
  • Larger farm operations may be truly profitable
  • Smaller operations can
  • Depend on non-farm income either from choice of
    lifestyle or financial necessity
  • Get bigger
  • More of the same
  • Develop value added activities
  • All sizes -- Manage for profitability if net
    income is the primary motivation, especially cost
    control

G. A. BENSON, ARE-NCSU
11
12
Economies of Size
  • If you double the size of your goat herd
  • It doesnt take twice as much time to feed or
    move goats from one field to the next, time and
    expense to take your goats to market, fencing,
    equipment, facilities, etc.
  • You spread your fixed costs overhead
  • You might get volume discounts on purchases
  • But there can be diseconomies too, especially in
    marketing your product(s)
  • ?Prediction Meat goats will become more like
    other commercial farm enterprises

G. A. BENSON, ARE-NCSU
12
13
Value-added?
  • Sell meat or meat products instead of the live
    goat
  • Wholesale
  • Restaurants
  • Direct to consumer
  • Farmers Markets
  • On-farm sales
  • Event Catering
  • CSAs, etc.

G. A. BENSON, ARE-NCSU
13
14
Value-added
  • There are also Added Costs!
  • Processing
  • Wrapping, packaging, labeling
  • Storage
  • Sales and distribution costs
  • Record keeping, office, etc.
  • Cost of complying with regulations
  • More of your time or cost of extra hired help
  • An opportunity, not a magic bullet!
  • Run the numbers!

G. A. BENSON, ARE-NCSU
14
15
Other Financial Benefits
  • Tax advantages for farmers
  • Preferential sales tax rates
  • Agricultural Use property tax rates
  • Farm income tax rules
  • All farming tax advantages have qualification
    requirements
  • Do you qualify as a farm/farmer (acreage, gross
    income)?
  • Are you farming for profit?
  • Do you materially participate?

G. A. BENSON, ARE-NCSU
15
16
2. Lots of Market Opportunities
  • People NC 9.2 million, VA 7.8 mil.
  • Personal Income NC 318 bil., VA 333 bil.
  • Consumer trends
  • Buy less on price, more on convenience
  • Care how food is produced no GMOs, no added
    hormones, no antibiotics, organic, natural,
  • Value special characteristics locally produced,
    sold direct, fresh, type or variety,
    heritage/nostalgia, etc.
  • Demographic trends Changing racial ethnic mix,
    population growth, aging, more two-wage earner
    families, single head of households, etc.

17
Who Are Your Customers?
GEOFF BENSON, ARE, NCSU
17
18
Know Your Customers
  • When planning a new enterprise
  • Helps you identify opportunities and challenges
    more clearly
  • Helps you develop your product a marketing
    strategy to sell your product to the consumer
  • Helps you develop a farm production plan
  • For an existing business
  • Helps you see new opportunities, see if your
    operation is meeting, exceeding or falling short
    of your customers expectations, helps you fine
    tune your marketing efforts

19
Know Your Customers
  • Live Sales
  • Where will you sell your animals?
  • What kind of animals does this market want? What
    premiums are available for certain
    characteristics frame size, weight, fleshiness,
    breed, sex, kosher or halal, number of head, etc.
  • When does the market want them is there a
    seasonal pattern to prices? Are their ethnic
    holiday opportunities?

20
Selling Meat Who are Your Customers
  • Four Characteristics
  • They want or need your type of product
  • They have the ability to buy what you are
    selling
  • They have decision making power over purchases
  • They have ready access to your product or service

21
Selling meat Some Key Questions
  • 1. What type of person will buy my product?
  • Race or ethnicity
  • Attitudes towards food, health, production
    methods and animal welfare
  • Income
  • Age
  • Marital Status
  • Education

22
Selling meat Some Key Questions
  • 2. What are their buying habits?
  • Who makes the purchasing decisions?
  • Where do they make their purchases?
  • How often do they buy?
  • How much do they buy?
  • What form of product do they preferlive, meat
    package size, type?
  • 3. How much can or will they pay?

23
How many potential customers are there in my
market area?
24
More Marketing Questions
  • 5. Who is my competition?
  • Operations selling the same product
  • Sellers with a similar product in a different
    market channel
  • Sellers of a competing product that is a
    substitute
  • 6. How will I compete?
  • Price
  • Product
  • Service
  • Quantity X Price Your revenue

25
Competitor Analysis
  • If you dont have a competitive advantage, dont
    compete
  • Jack Welch
  • Former CEO of
  • General Electric

26
3. How will you produce goats, meat?
  • Revenue
  • Type and number of animals
  • Sale weight and form
  • Time(s) of year
  • Operating expenses
  • Feed forages and supplements
  • Health care
  • Labor
  • Processing /or Marketing
  • Other utilities, repairs, services

27
How will you produce goats, meat?
  • What will you invest?
  • Animals does, bucks, kids
  • Buildings and facilities feeding, shelter
    handling, storage
  • Fencing, water, lanes
  • Cash flow is it feasible?
  • Operating income and expenses
  • New investments and asset sales
  • Borrowing and debt repayment
  • Non-farm income and family living needs
  • New operations -- Make quarterly estimates
    through the start-up phase

28
Fitting the pieces together
Customers Markets
Resources

Marketing, Distribution
Production
GEOFF BENSON, ARE, NCSU
28
29
Planning for Success
  • Suck it and see
  • This can work if the business venture is small in
    scope and the cost of failure is not
    significantif not, then more effort is required

Experience is the name everyone gives to their
mistakes -- Oscar Wilde
GEOFF BENSON, ARE, NCSU
29
30
Planning for Success

If you cant make a profit with a pencil, you
cant make a profit with a plow Anonymous
31
Revenue Sources Amounts
  • Kids sold live and/or as meat
  • Kids sold for breeding
  • Cull does bucks
  • Does bucks sold as breeding stock
  • Value of inventory changes, /-
  • ?Calculate revenue per doe based on number of
    does exposed to the buck

G. A. BENSON, ARE-NCSU
31
32
Goat Enterprise Expenses
  • Operating or Variable Costs (Vary with scale of
    production)
  • Feed Costs -- Pasture hay, Supplements --
    (Number of head X days fed X lb./day X cost/lb.)
  • Health care -- (No of head X no. of treatments X
    cost per treatment)
  • Hired labor -- (hours per day X 365)
  • Processing /or Marketing -- (time, travel,
    advertizing, etc.)
  • Other utilities, repairs, office, professional
    services

G. A. BENSON, ARE-NCSU
32
33
More Expenses
  • Fixed or ownership costs annual charges to
    recoup your investments in your goat enterprise,
    including buildings, equipment, facilities,
    fencing, pasture improvements, and breeding
    livestock
  • Depreciation,
  • Interest
  • Property taxes
  • Insurance

G. A. BENSON, ARE-NCSU
33
34
Fixed or Ownership Costs
  • Average annual depreciation charge
  • New Cost - Salvage Value
  • Years of life
  • Average annual interest charge
  • New Cost Salvage X Interest rate
  • 2

G. A. BENSON, ARE-NCSU
34
35
More Expenses
  • Overhead Expenses
  • Specific to goats, e.g., goat association
    memberships and subscriptions
  • Farm overhead -- general to farming, e.g.,
    accounting and tax preparation, legal, land cost
    (ownership cost or rent), etc.
  • Value of your and your family members
    contributions (opportunity cost)
  • Chore labor time
  • Management time
  • Money you invested in the goat enterprise

G. A. BENSON, ARE-NCSU
35
36
Expenses Decision Making
  • Fixed or ownership costs to be recouped
  • Will these be new investments?
  • If you have existing equipment facilities, do
    they have alternative uses or value?
  • Land cost who pays?
  • Lifestyle farm your cost
  • Land as an investment your cost
  • Farming for profit farm enterprises must
    justify the land investment or land rent
  • Profit v. Cash Flow
  • Budgets do not consider cash flow issues, such as
    how to finance new investments, make debt
    principal payments and family living withdrawals

G. A. BENSON, ARE-NCSU
36
37
Consider Risk
  • Probability or chance of an event
  • Exposure financial impact if an event occurs
  • Sources
  • Production
  • Prices and market risk
  • Financial
  • Legal, Business, regulatory, etc.
  • Human, including the 5Ds

38
What Are Your Figures?
39
Are Goats a Good Fit?
  • Lifestyle or supplementary farm enterprise
  • Fitting and showing, pleasure
  • Controlling brush and weeds
  • Using underutilized pasture species, e.g., with
    cattle
  • Farm Income
  • Breeding stock production
  • Commercial meat production live or meat sales
  • Income Goals
  • Gain tax advantages
  • Cover Cash costs
  • Make a true profit

G. A. BENSON, ARE-NCSU
39
40
Once your are in production, Is it working?
  • Controlling -- Evaluating the results
  • Set standards or targets
  • Measure performance keep records!
  • Compare actual performance to target or benchmark
  • Take corrective action promptly if performance is
    below target

41
Summary
  • Why have goats what are your family business
    and personal goals?
  • Who are your customers, Where will you sell, what
    do they want, how much do they want, what will
    they pay?
  • Develop a farm production and marketing plan
    geared to your market

42
Summary
  • Develop projections based on realistic
    expectations of farm and financial performance
  • Profitability
  • Cash flow
  • Are goats a good fit for your operation?
  • Monitor and evaluate how your farm and business
    plan is working
  • Production performance
  • Financial performance

43
Summary
  • If its easy, fun or can be done from the seat
    of a tractor, there aint no money in it
  • Anonymous Cowboy

44
Remember the Economic






Photo courtesy of the Department of Animal
Science, Oklahoma State University, Stillwater,
Oklahoma.
45
Geoff Benson
  • Phone 919.515.5184
  • Fax 919.515.6268
  • E-mail Geoff_Benson_at_ncsu.edu
  • Web page
  • http//www.ag-econ.ncsu.edu/ faculty/benson/bens
    on.html
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