Business Plan For A Commercial Teff Farm in Ethiopia PDF
Business Plan For A Commercial Teff Farm in Ethiopia PDF
Business Plan For A Commercial Teff Farm in Ethiopia PDF
by
August, 2012
SIGNATURE PAGE
______________________________
Date
______________________________
Date
ii
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
First, I would like to thank my advisor, Dr. Richard A. Cavaletto for offering me his
extensive guidance throughout this project.
Second, I would like to thank Kathy Daniels for putting up with me during my many
visits to the department office.
Last but not least, I would like to thank my parents for giving me encouragement and
support throughout my college career.
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ABSTRACT
This senior project was undertaken to determine the feasibility of creating a profitable
farm in Ethiopia using commercial farming methods in order to raise the standard of
living for Ethiopian subsistence farmers and improve food security in Ethiopia. Initially,
a farmer’s cooperative was the model proposed for this farm. However, further research
into the realities of Ethiopian agribusiness and the difficulties smallholder farmers face in
obtaining capital, along with in-depth financial analysis called for a modification of the
business model. Consequently, this senior project discusses the design and delineation of
a business plan for a privately-held, commercial, teff grain farm in Ethiopia that aims to
empower smallholder Ethiopian farmers by providing them with a living wage while
enabling them to build equity in a profitable farm corporation.
Research, business model design and financial analysis yielded a business plan for a
farm, processing mill and distribution framework that is marginally profitable by the end
of Year One and sufficiently profitable to be capable of expansion by Year Five.
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DISCLAIMER STATEMENT
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
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LIST OF FIGURES
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LIST OF TABLES
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1
INTRODUCTION
Land-locked in the eastern Horn of Africa, Ethiopia is one of the poorest countries in the
world. In spite of its long and fascinating history as a superpower of the ancient world,
Ethiopia has fallen on hard times in the past century as war, political corruption, climate
change and isolation from the developing world have taken their toll. The starving
Ethiopian is a hackneyed stereotype; and yet, this stereotype has some basis in fact.
According to the U.S. State Department (2011), the country has a population of 80
million with GDP per capita in 2009 of $404 USD and an alarming inflation rate of 36%.
Ethiopia’s population is still primarily rural, with agriculture employing 85% of the
workforce, contributing 45% of the GDP and 80% of the country’s exports (Gates
Report, 2010). However, the majority of Ethiopian agriculture is subsistence farming that
relies heavily on rainfall (an increasing undependable resource as a result of global
climate change) and traditional farming practices that have often degraded the soil to the
point of uselessness. Ethiopia’s dependence on this kind of subsistence-level agriculture
is perhaps one of the greatest contributors to economic vulnerability for the country as a
whole and (during times of drought) famine among the rural population.
This senior project created a business plan for Horn of Plenty, a development-oriented
commercial teff farm focused on producing crops for Ethiopian consumption versus
export. Horn of Plenty proposes to take advantage of the favorable agribusiness
conditions in Ethiopia helping former subsistence farmers learn industrial farming
methods while enabling them to earn a living wage and acquire equity in a profitable
agribusiness company. Developments like this have been successful in Mali (Cotula,
2010). The primary goal of this project was the creation of a business model that could
empower former smallholder farmers while creating improved food security in Ethiopia.
The project identified a promising location in Ethiopia as well as which crop was the
most useful for Ethiopian consumption and had the best chance of generating a profit in a
relatively short amount of time. It outlined the monetary investment needed as well as
attainable five and ten year goals and a twenty-five year vision. The proposal
intentionally focused on creating a successful Ethiopian business enterprise rather than
another NGO that would further dependency on foreign aid. This project significantly
benefits Ethiopian farmers and Ethiopians in general by providing a workable alternative
to either poverty or dependency on foreign handouts.
2
Problem Statement
The majority of farmers in Ethiopia are mired in poverty because they lack capital,
agricultural technology and access to markets. The country as a whole suffers from food
insecurity due to inadequate farming methods, climate change, and recent significant
competition for farmland by foreign investors.
Hypothesis
A business model can be created that would use the current incentives for foreign
agribusiness investment in Ethiopia for the betterment of Ethiopian subsistence farmers
and the improvement of food security in the Horn of Africa.
Objective
LITERATURE REVIEW
Ethiopian Agriculture
Ethiopia’s population continues to be primarily rural with 83% of the population living
outside the few urban centers (World Bank, 2011). Agriculturally, the majority of
Ethiopians depend upon the produce of smallholder farmers rather than larger
agribusiness farms. Consequently, food availability in Ethiopia is extremely dependent
upon the factors that influence the productivity of these small farmers: climate change
and weather variability, farming methods and irrigation technologies, mountainous
terrain, degraded soil, underdeveloped infrastructures (roads, bridges, transportation
methods for both water and produce) and inadequate government investment (IFAD,
2005).
In the past fifty years, Ethiopia has been plagued with recurrent droughts and resulting
food shortages, becoming a global byword for underdevelopment and extreme poverty.
According to Uwe Hoering of Brot Für Die Welt (Bread for the World), “Almost half of
the rural population suffers from chronic food insecurity. Year by year, six to eight
percent of the 70 million inhabitants are dependent on food aid” (Hoering, 2007). The
problems Ethiopia faces today are not because of lack of water or shortage of land.
Ethiopia has five main rivers and a great deal of uncultivated land. However, the
majority of Ethiopians live in the densely populated highlands and 60% of farmers work
less than a hectare of land using rain-fed cultivation methods (Gates Report, 2010).
Unfortunately, 80% of Ethiopia’s population depends upon this kind of small-scale, rain-
dependent agriculture (Hoering, 2007). Climate change has made this dependence
increasingly precarious as rainfall can be limited to just a few months or even weeks of
the year. In addition, deforestation (created by the common practice of using wood for
fuel) has resulted in the erosion of topsoil on the steep hillsides during the rainy season.
As a result, ecological and infrastructure disasters are commonplace with roads, bridges
and harvests regularly washing away (Hoering, 2007). These harsh ecological realities
create the underpinnings of extreme poverty in Ethiopia where between five and fifteen
million Ethiopians (up to 15% of the population) must depend upon international food aid
annually (IFAD, 2005).
In some areas self-motivated small farmers have been able to farm year-round by using
one of the Ethiopia’s rivers for irrigation. The Konso tribal group in southern Ethiopia
has been able to support itself and provide crops to the local market year-round, with the
help of foreign NGO’s. Other tribal groups in the northern part of Ethiopia have
constructed reservoirs. With the use of diesel pumps they are able to irrigate from these
reservoirs year-round (Hoering, 2007). Modern irrigation technologies could benefit
Ethiopia with its many rivers and relative availability of arable land. However, problems
with salinization, soil erosion and mismanagement have plagued the few Ethiopian
irrigation projects that have been attempted in the past. Geo-political problems have also
made it difficult to obtain water for irrigation. “Egypt has been particularly successful in
torpedoing numerous plans for large-scale irrigation and dam projects on the Nile’s head-
water by using diplomacy as well as threats, because every drop diverted onto the fields
of Ethiopian farmers is feared to be lost to the farmers downstream in the Nile Valley.”
(Hoering, 2007). For decades Egypt and Sudan have been able to use 80% of the water
originating in Ethiopia while Ethiopia uses less than 20% of their own water resource.
According to Uwe Hoering, the Ethiopian government has defined a framework for legal
and institutional reforms in the water sector, with $1.7 billion slated for investment in
development to benefit agricultural irrigation. There is also some support from the
government for rain-fed agriculture aimed at increasing productivity and reducing the
danger of crop losses. These efforts depend heavily on support from European nations
and NGO’s. However, it is acknowledged that rain-fed cultivation alone is not the
answer to the need for greater food security (Hoering, 2007).
According to the USDA’s Production Estimates and Crop Assessment Division of the
Foreign Agricultural Service (2003), crops grown in Ethiopia include “cereals (teff, corn,
wheat, barley, sorghum, millet, oats, etc.); pulses (horse beans, chick-peas, haricot beans,
field peas, lentils, soybeans, and vetch); oilseeds (linseed, nigerseed, fenugreek, noug,
rapeseed, sunflower, castor bean, groundnuts, etc.), stimulants (coffee, tea, chat, tobacco,
etc.) fibers(cotton, sisal, flax, etc.) fruits (banana, orange, grape, papaya, lemon, apple,
pineapple, mango, avocado, etc.) vegetables (onion, tomato, carrot, cabbage, etc.), root
and tuber (potato, enset, sweet-potatoes, beets, yams, etc.) and sugarcane.” Grains
(primarily teff, Ethiopia’s staple grain) account for almost 90% of the area planted. Teff
is grown primarily in the cool highland areas and sorghum is the main lowland crop
because of its drought-resistant qualities (USDA, 2003). For many years coffee has been
Ethiopia’s major cash crop and main export accounting for over half of Ethiopia’s export
income (Abrahim, 2007). A significant percentage of Ethiopians depend upon coffee
production for their livelihood. Oil seeds and cotton have also played a major role as cash
crops in the Ethiopian agricultural economy. Oilseeds are currently the second largest
export from Ethiopia, with sesame seeds being the most significant export within the
oilseed category (Tiruwha Melese, 2010). For the purposes of this project, Dr. Charles
Nicholson (personal communication 28 Jan 2011) advised that horticulture production
(cereals, pulses, vegetables, and/or roots and tubers) would provide a better return on
investment than tree crops (e.g. coffee, oranges, bananas, apples, and cashews).
5
Unfortunately, Ethiopia has a poor track record with cooperative farming as a result of
the socialist revolution of the late 1970’s. Under the communist Derg regime, farmers
were “encouraged” with incentives to form cooperatives so that the country could
maximize production and solve the problem of chronic food insecurity. The ultimate
goal was a complete collectivization of agricultural production (Ofcansky and Berry,
1991). In spite of pressure from the government to collectivize, traditional small-scale
farmers resisted these efforts, seeing the new programs as a threat to their ownership of
family farms. These farmers were wise in their assessment since those who fully
participated in the collective programs often ended up as land-less workers on state-
owned farms (Ofcansky and Berry, 1991). The Derg responded to the farmer’s resistance
by turning large commercial farms owned by individuals into state farms. These state
farms receive a significant share of the Ethiopian government’s agricultural investment in
terms of seeds, fertilizers, equipment, subsidies and loans even though they account for a
small percentage of the nation’s agricultural output (Ofcansky and Berry, 1991). As a
result of this negative history with collectivization, smallholder farmers need to see
another model of cooperative farming that will not result in the loss of control of
ancestral lands and livelihood. Fortunately, recent efforts by the Agricultural Cooperative
Development International and Volunteers in Overseas Cooperative Assistance
(ACDI/VOCA) to promote farming cooperatives have met with some success. “In 1999,
ACDI/VOCA began implementing the USAID-funded five-year Agricultural
Cooperatives in Ethiopia (ACE) project. This undertaking, which supported the
establishment of secondary level unions, expanded farmers’ access to purchasing and
distribution outlets”, particularly coffee and grain farmers (2007).
from this affiliation” (Koopmans, 2004). Koopmans’ cites this checklist of foundational
principles for cooperative ventures from the ICA Congress of the International
Cooperative Alliance in Manchester, held in 1995. Farming cooperatives should:
Form through an open and voluntary basis
Govern itself through the democratic process of its members
Be financed by equitable member contribution of capital
Be characterized by autonomy and independence from other structures
(including governments)
Provide education, training and information to its members
Cooperate with similar organizations
Develop a larger community concern
Some form of private farming cooperative based on these principles may well be
attractive to Ethiopian farmers. According to Dr. Lorenzo Cotula of the International
Institute for Environment and Development, there are other models of cooperation and
empowerment that can help smallholder farmers. For example, contract farming has been
well-tested. “There is also growing experimentation with a wider range of business
models. In a biofuels project in Mali, for instance, farmers have an ownership stake in the
project” (Cotula, 2010).
Crafting a detailed business plan is an important part of developing any new business. A
business plan provides a blueprint for the definition of a company’s values and goals. In
their manual for agricultural business planning entitled Building a Sustainable Business:
A Guide to Developing a Business Plan for Farms and Rural Businesses, (2010) authors
DiGiacomo, King and Nordquist outline five basic planning tasks:
1. Identify values
2. Assess the current situation (including marketing, operations, human resources
and financial situation)
3. Develop an organizational mission statement, vision and goals.
4. Outline a business strategy (including strategies for marketing, operations, human
resources, finances and alternative plans)
5. Present, implement and monitor your business plan.
In Hurdle: The Book on Business Planning (2004), Tim Berry recommends that although
a start-up plan is sufficient to decide whether or not to pursue a particular business idea, it
is not enough to continue running a business with only a bare-bones plan. To be
successful all businesses need to create a thorough plan. There is no one right way to
organize a business plan; the choice of organization depends on the focus of one’s work
whether that is developing a new product line, creating a plan to gain investor support,
starting up a venture from scratch or creating a cooperative business approach. However,
most plans will contain the key elements of an executive summary, mission statement,
description of current realities, vision and goals, strategic plans (or marketing, operation,
human resources and finances), including supporting data and documents (DiGiacomo et
al., 2010). While most entrepreneurs primarily feel the need to write a business plan in
order to present their business idea to investors, ideally a business plan should be a living
document that guides the development of the business. DiGiacomo et al. suggest (2010)
8
that regular checkpoints should be set to review progress, analyze successes and failures
and make course corrections. In this way, the plan becomes more than a one-time
strategic exercise----it is a continuously evolving dialogue with the founder’s original
aspirations and his/her actual environment that serves as a checkpoint for progress and an
aid to future decision-making.
9
The idea for this senior project was born during a trip to rural Ethiopia in 2010. While
participating in a water project internship with the Millennium Villages Project in
northern Ethiopia, it became clear that smallholder farmers needed access to modern
equipment to achieve profitability and a higher standard of living.
Design Procedure
Using Business Plan Pro software guidelines and on-line research collected and estimated
approximate measurements, costs and projections for:
1) Start up Costs (equipment purchases, shipping, fees for incorporation, etc.)
2) Marketing (including market realties, competition, distribution, pricing)
3) Operations (equipment and land needs)
4) Human Resources
5) Organizational and Legal Structure
6) Sales and Financial projections
See Appendix C for detailed lists of specific data collected and analyzed.
10
RESULTS
The final product of this project was a five-year business plan for Horn of Plenty, a
commercial teff farm on an initial 300 acre site near Bahir Dar, Ethiopia
(see Appendix B: Business Plan for Horn of Plenty). Included in the plan is a grain mill
near Bahir Dar and distribution center in Addis Ababa, the capital city of Ethiopia. Horn
of Plenty utilizes commercial farming technologies and introduces an innovative
approach to packaging and marketing teff flour for Ethiopian consumption. Plan
projections estimate marginal profitability in Horn of Plenty’s first year of operations,
largely due to the low cost of labor and favorable tax incentives for foreign investment in
Ethiopia. By Year Five, Horn of Plenty should be able to self-fund an expansion of 50
acres of teff cultivation and an additional distribution center in Addis Ababa.
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DISCUSSION
This project was initially proposed as a farmer’s cooperative rather than a privately held
farm in the hopes of empowering smallholder farmers as farm owners rather than merely
farm laborers. However, research into the Ethiopian political and business climate
revealed that a) all land is held in lease from the government (thus no one really “owns”
their land), b) the current favorable investment conditions are focused on large-scale
commercial operations, c) due to the land-lease situation there is no way for individual
farmers to contribute sufficient capital to participate in an egalitarian cooperative model
(as outlined by the Reitse Koopmans and the USDA). These factors necessitated a re-
design of the business model that would take into account both the current opportunities
in Ethiopian agriculture and the roadblocks to equity acquisition for smallholder farmers.
The new business model addresses these issues by providing immediate economic
support for subsistence farmers in the form of a living wage, medical, educational and
pension benefits while allowing them to obtain stock in the farming corporation over
time.
The profitability of the Horn of Plenty business plan relies upon several key assumptions
that are currently reasonable (as of August 2012):
Political stability in Ethiopia and continuing positive Ethiopia-U.S. relations
Continuing tax breaks for foreign agribusiness investment. This plan relies on
obtaining a corporate tax-exemption for at least the first 5 years of operation.
Low labor costs in Ethiopia
The ability to attract philanthropic angel “investors” who are willing to make
interest-free loans as a form of sponsoring Ethiopian farmers
Ability to qualify for a low-interest, Overseas Private Investment Corporation
(OPIC) development loan
While these assumptions may seem optimistic, in fact they are reflective of current
realities. This is an once-in-a-lifetime window of business opportunity in Ethiopia in
terms of the Ethiopian government’s favorable attitude toward agribusiness investment
and the need for such investment. There is also an enormous market for teff in Ethiopia
(as well as expanding global demand) and labor costs will remain low. These conditions
almost ensure profitability. Obtaining the proposed funding for Horn of Plenty may be
the one aspect of the plan that is overly optimistic. Given the global recession, finding
interested philanthropists may be difficult and/or another source of startup funding than
OPIC may need to be identified. However, review of the plan by competent business
advisors may yield new sources for funding.
12
Given the distance from Ethiopia and the relative difficulty of obtaining detailed
information about Ethiopian agriculture, this business plan is as accurate as can be
expected. Calculations for teff production, seed and labor prices, land needs, irrigation
system and farm equipment, legal and tax costs are accurate. Accurate shipping costs
were difficult to obtain and are estimated. Financial projections were calculated with
Business Plan Pro software which is normed on U.S. businesses. These can be taken as
viable estimates for identifying startup funding needs. Horn of Plenty’s projected profit
before interest and taxes is quite high compared to NAICS ratios for grain farming. This
is probably due to the extremely low labor costs in Ethiopia and the plan to utilize
philanthropic investment rather than rely solely on commercial loans. These unusual
circumstances, coupled with the favorable Ethiopian tax exemption, allow Horn of Plenty
to see a very high return on equity from Year Three forward.
Obviously, the litmus test of this business plan would be actual implementation in
Ethiopia, which would reveal the true strengths and weaknesses of the plan. It is
encouraging to note that a similar business model has been used with some success in
Mali (Cotula, 2010). Therefore, the business plan for Horn of Plenty can be viewed as
fairly accurate and potentially transferable.
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RECOMMENDATIONS
This business plan for Horn of Plenty reflects the best effort at accurate research and
forecasting that can be made at distance from Ethiopia. In order for this plan to be truly
workable, extensive on-site research in Ethiopia should be conducted. For example,
interviews with Ethiopian agricultural experts, agribusiness experts and subsistence
farmers about the realities of teff farming in Ethiopia would sharpen the plan and test its
feasibility. It would also be important to submit the plan to American business advisors,
venture capital consultants and farm advisors for review and revision before seeking to
implement the plan. Information about the boom in Ethiopian agricultural development
is continuously expanding; therefore, successful implementation would require staying
up-to-date on the latest developments through more research and reading.
REFERENCES
Araya Elleni. 2012. Teff: Ethiopia’s ancient grain not immune to rising food inflation:
Addis Fortune. Quoted in Transforming Ethiopia: TE. Available at:
http://transformingethiopia.wordpress.com/2012/04/02/teff-ethiopias-ancient-
grain-not-immune-to-rising-food-inflation-addis-fortune/. Accessed 10 July 2012.
Berry, Tim J. 2006. Hurdle: The Book on Business Planning: a Step-by-step Guide to
Creating a Thorough, Concrete, and Concise Business Plan. Eugene, OR:
Palo Alto Software.
CIA.2003. Country Comparison to the World. The World Factbook. Available at:
https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-word-factbook/fields/2003.html.
Accessed March 17 2011
Cotula, Lorenzo. Deals Can Be Good News When Not Made Behind Closed Doors.
The Observer: 6 March 2010. Available at:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2010/mar/07/africa-land-grab-food-
water?intcmp=239. Accessed 26 July 2012.
Curtis, Kynda R., Carol Bishop and Jay Davidson. 2008. Reno, NV: Northwestern
Nevada Teff Production Costs and Returns, 2008. University of Nevada
Cooperative Extension. Available at:
http://www.unce.unr.edu/publications/files/ag/2008/sp0813.pdf.
Accessed 20 June 2012.
DiGiacomo, Gigi, Robert King and Dale Nordquist. 2003. Building a Sustainable
Business: A Guide to Developing a Business Plan for Farms and Rural
Businesses. College Park, MD: Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education
(SARE).
15
UPI. 2012. Ethiopia: Thousands Driven Out in Land Grab. United Press International.
Available at: http://www.upi.com/Business_News/Energy-
Resources/2012/01/18/Ethiopia-Thousands-driven-out-in-land-grab/UPI-
60071326912191/#ixzz21m6tn2hF.
Accessed 26 July 2012.
Hoering, Uwe. 2007. Ethiopia: Water for Private Sector Development. Available at:
http://www.internationalrivers.org/files/WorldBankandWater-Casestudy.pdf.
Accessed 12 February 2011.
IFAD. 2005. Enabling Poor Rural People to Overcome Poverty. Ethiopia, Special
Country Program Phase II. April 2005. Available at:
http://www.ifad.org/evaluation/public_html/eksyst/doc/profile/pf/ethiopia.htm.
Accessed 10 February 2011.
Macdonald, Nancy. 2010. What’s the New Global Source for Fresh, Shiny Produce?
Macleans.CA: 19 August 2010. Available at:
http://www2.macleans.ca/2010/08/19/out-of-africa/2/. Accessed 26 July 2012.
Ofcansky, Thomas P. and LaVerle Berry, editors. 1991. Ethiopia: A Country Study.
Washington: GPO for the Library of Congress. Available at:
http://countrystudies.us/ethiopia/91.htm. Accessed 10 February 2011.
Ethiopia Investor. 2012. The Rise of Teff on the World Market: Why Ethiopia’s Next
Gift to the World is a Likely Boom for Business. Ethiopia Investor. Available at:
http://www.ethiopiainvestor.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&
id=2100:the-rise-of-teff-on-the-world-market-why-ethiopias-next-gift-to-the-
world-is-a-likely-boom-for-business&catid=95:precise-insights. Accessed 10 July
2012.
Rapp, Galen and Gerald Ely. 1996. How to Start a Cooperative. United States
Department of Agriculture. Available at:
http://www.rurdev.usda.gov/rbs/pub/cir7/cir7rpt.htm. Accessed 10 March 2011.
Rice, Xan. 2010. Ethiopia: Country of the Silver Sickle Offers Land Dirt Cheap to
Farming Giants. The Guardian: 15 January 2010. Available at:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/jan/15/ethiopia-sells-land-farming-
giants?intcmp=239. Accessed 10 March 2011.
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Tekleberhan, Meron. 2012. Ethiopia Has 4 Million Hectares Available for Investment.
2Merkato.com. Available at: http://www.2merkato.com/201205101201/ethiopia-
has-4-million-hectares-available-for-investment. Accessed 26 July 2012.
Tiruwha Melese, Ayelech. 2010. Contract Farming in Ethiopia: An Overview with Focus
on Sesame. Netherlands Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Wageningen UR.
Available at: http://www.dgis.wur.nl/NR/rdonlyres/B002ABCB-94CE-43C6-
AD7C-94B8F7E81434/111384/Report5Tiruwha28062010a.pdf.
Accessed 10 February 2011.
USDA. 2003. Production Estimates and Crop Assessment Division of the Foreign
Agricultural Service. Available at:
www.fas.usda.gov/pecad2/highlights/.../india_web_update.pdf.
Accessed 17 March 2011.
USDS. 2011. Background Note: Ethiopia. U.S. Department of State: Bureau of African
Affairs. Available at: http://www.state.gov/r/pa/ei/bgn/2859.htm.
Accessed 25 March 2011.
17
APPENDIX A
The ASM senior project must include a problem solving experience that incorporates the
application of technology and the organizational skills of business and management, and
quantitative, analytical problem solving. This project addresses these issues as follows.
Application of Business and/or Managerial Skills. Business and managerial skills are
employed in this project through the drafting of an effective business plan including the
outlining of vision, values, mission and business strategy. Identifying startup costs,
production and labor costs and outlining sales and other financial projections also employ
business skills.
The ASM senior project must incorporate knowledge and skills acquired in earlier
coursework (Major, Support and/or GE courses). This project incorporates
knowledge/skills from these key courses.
BRAE 142 Agricultural Power and Machinery Management
BRAE 203 Engineering Economic Analysis
BRAE 340 Irrigation and Water Management
BRAE 418 and 419 Agricultural Systems Management I & II
BRAE 438 Drip/Micro-irrigation
BRAE 532 Water, Wells and Pumps
AGB: 321 Financial Accounting
AGB: 310 Credit and Finance
AGB 301 Food Marketing
AGB 212 Economics
AGB 401 Managing Cultural Diversity in Agricultural Labor
19
ASM Approach
Systems Approach. Throughout the project a systems approach was employed, weaving
business and management skills as well as agricultural expertise and perspectives
together to solve a specific human problem, namely food insecurity and poverty among
rural Ethiopian farmers.
APPENDIX B
CONFIDENTIALITY AGREEMENT
The undersigned reader acknowledges that the information provided by Ephrem Teklu
Phifer-Houseman in this business plan is confidential; therefore, reader agrees not to
disclose it without the express written permission of Mr. Phifer-Houseman.
It is acknowledged by reader that information to be furnished in this business plan is in
all respects confidential in nature, other than information which is in the public domain
through other means and that any disclosure or use of same by reader, may cause serious
harm or damage to Mr. Phifer-Houseman.
Ephrem P-H
Signature
TABLE OF CONTENTS
PAGE
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
Since the 1970's Ethiopia has been a byword for extreme poverty and recurrent famine,
in spite of the country's abundant natural resources and impressive history. As a leader
among African nations, Ethiopia should be not only food-sufficient but a cornucopia of
resources for sub-Saharan Africa. However, lack of access to capital and subsistence
farming methods keep Ethiopian farmers in vulnerable poverty and create food insecurity
for the country as whole.
Horn of Plenty is a commercial teff-farming venture that aims to elevate the standard of
living for subsistence farmers, enabling them to obtain capital while improving food
security in Ethiopia. Horn of Plenty re-envisions Ethiopia as a land of plenty.
The Problem
Food insecurity and high prices for staple grains (e.g. teff) in Ethiopia
90% of Ethiopian teff farmers use ancient, subsistence methods with extremely poor
yield. Few have access to modern farming equipment, irrigation technologies or the
capital to obtain these.
All land in Ethiopia is government-owned. Consequently, small-scale farmers cannot
use land equity to obtain loans for farm expansion that would allow them to become
self-sufficient.
The Solution
Horn of Plenty will employ former subsistence farmers at a living wage, educating
them to use commercial farming methods and providing them with the equipment and
capital to create a profitable commercial farm.
Through its Tom-to-Tesfaye sponsorship/loan program, Horn of Plenty will link
American philanthropic investors with individual farmers to enable them to acquire
company equity in exchange for labor.
Through the use of commercial farming methods and an innovative packaging and
marketing strategy, Horn of Plenty will generate a high-quality teff product that is an
industry leader in quality, price and convenience.
Horn of Plenty's profitability will allow it to invest in the general welfare of the
community, supporting schools, medical clinics, HIV-Aids organizations.
25
The Market
Teff is used by the average Ethiopian on a daily basis. It is the staple grain for
creating injera, Ethiopia's signature bread. There will always be a market for teff in
Ethiopia. Additionally, teff is becoming an attractive new grain for health-conscious
consumers in other parts of the world and thus has potential as a profitable export.
The price of teff has sky-rocketed in the past ten years as an increasing amount of
Ethiopian farmland is being used to grow crops for export rather than domestic use.
Teff prices will remain steady or rise.
Traditional ways of processing and obtaining teff are inconvenient and laborious for
the consumer. As a result, there is a great deal of room for innovation in the teff
market in Ethiopia.
Almost 4% of the Ethiopian population lives in the capital city of Addis Ababa,
within proximity to Horn of Plenty’s proposed growing area, making this an
ideal region in which to begin marketing Horn of Plenty teff.
Labor costs in Ethiopia are quite low. Even with providing generous salaries and
benefits to its employees, Horn of Plenty will be able to reach profitability by Year
Three and expand our operations by Year Five.
The Ethiopian government is currently creating a very favorable environment for
foreign investment, especially agribusiness investment.
o No duty is charged on imported equipment and corporate tax exemptions
are available for up to eight years.
o Ethiopian products destined for export are exempted from the payment of
any export tax.
o The Ethiopian government has recently created the Agricultural
Transformation Agency, staffed by agricultural experts from around the
globe. This agency is focused on resourcing organizations that seek to
increase Ethiopian agricultural effectiveness.
o Foreign investment is protected by law. The Ethiopian government
guarantees prompt compensation for the prevailing market value of
property if it is expropriated or nationalized.
Investment Required
$1.7M in funding estimated for start-up in order to reach profitability within the first
year
$1.3M loan is secured with agricultural equipment that can be easily liquidated in
Ethiopia if necessary
Owner-operator will invest $200,000 of deferred salary over five years to fund initial
operations
$200,000 of interest-free loans needed from philanthropic “angel” investors who are
committed to helping subsistence farmers come out of poverty
26
Investor Discussion
$1,000,000
$900,000
$800,000
$700,000
$600,000 Sales
MISSION
Core Purpose
Horn of Plenty exists to transform the Horn of Africa into a land of plenty.
Our Mission
Keys to Success
Service. Improving the lives of our smallholder farmers and contributing to the local
community's growth and development are our first priorities. We will lead as servants of
the community.
Community. Working together we will do far more than any one of us could do
alone. Horn of Plenty provides a bridge for resources and partnership between American
investors and Ethiopian farmers.
Stewardship. Our growth must not come at the cost of future generations. We will farm
using sustainable, healthy practices----leaving a legacy of health in the land, water, air
and animals around us.
Integrity. Our business practices will be transparent, honest and fair. We will not
participate in under-the-table deals, corruption or excessive debt. "Money is a tool to
serve people."
Trust. The strength and guidance for our venture comes from our faith in God.
28
OBJECTIVES
Horn of Plenty is the company known for re-visioning and re-creating Ethiopia as a land
of plenty.
10-Year Objectives
5-Year Objectives
COMPANY SUMMARY
In keeping with Horn of Plenty's stated mission to improve the lives of Ethiopian farmers,
the company will enable its Farmer Associates to acquire company stock while earning a
living wage. We will accomplish this through our Tom-to-Tesfaye Sponsorship program
in which American angel investors (i.e. “Toms”) sponsor our Ethiopian farmers (i.e.
“Tesfayes”) through their interest-free startup loans to Horn of Plenty. These loans will
enable the company to begin operations and essentially provide working capital that the
subsistence farmers could not obtain on their own. The farmers then contribute their labor
to Horn of Plenty’s mission and over time obtain equity in the company as a benefit of
employment.
At inception, 10% of the company will be divided into 150 shares with each Farmer
Associate receiving one company share per year over the first five years of operation as
part of their yearly benefits package. Shares may not be sold until Year 5 (without board
approval), at which time the Farmer Associates may sell one or more of their shares back
to the company at the current valuation of those shares. Depending on the success of this
stock distribution program, more shares may become available for Farmer Associates
after Year 5. Therefore, by Year 5, 10% of the company would be held by Farmer
Associates. The remaining 90% would be held by Mr. Phifer-Houseman.
Startup Summary
Horn of Plenty's startup expenses include incorporation and licensing fees in Ethiopia and
the set up of a modest, temporary office space in Addis Ababa. The company's
combination central office and distribution center will become operational in the third
month after planting; consequently these expenses are not included in startup costs.
The majority of startup expenses will be incurred on our farm site and include the first
month's land lease payment (to allow for two months of site preparation before planting),
well drilling and irrigation system setup, as well as shipping costs for farm equipment
and supplies that cannot be bought in-country. These expenses are estimated at
$223,748.
Startup assets comprise the lion's share of Horn of Plenty's startup costs and include
$100,000 in cash on hand, $1,253,740 in equipment assets (office equipment and supplies
for the company's headquarters/distribution center, as well as farm machinery and
31
irrigation equipment that will be shipped from the U.S. to Ethiopia) for a total
of $1,379,106 in assets at startup. See Appendix C for a detailed list of proposed
equipment purchases.
Horn of Plenty will fund the purchase of equipment with a $1,300,000 loan from the
Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC), the U.S. Government's development
finance institution. http://www.opic.gov/what-we-offer/financial-products. Additional
financing will include $200,000 in short-term loans from individual investors or
philanthropists who are interested in partnering with Ethiopian farmers in our
Tom-to-Tesfaye program. The final $200,000 in financing will will be provided by the
investment of $50,000/year over five years of deferred salary from the CEO.
32
Startup Assets
Cash Required $100,000
Startup Inventory $0
Other Current Assets $25,366
Long-term Assets $1,253,740
Total Startup Assets $1,379,106
$1,600,000
$1,400,000
$1,200,000
$1,000,000
$800,000
$600,000
$400,000
$200,000
$0
Expenses Assets Investment Loans
PRODUCTS
Horn of Plenty will grow, process, package and sell teff grain and flour for Ethiopian
consumption. We will package our teff products in 10, 25 and 100 kilogram reusable
sacks containing the Horn of Plenty logo. Management will rely on customer feedback,
suggestions and sales reports to improve our teff quality and packaging sizes and
distribution networks.
34
Market Segmentation
Horn of Plenty will appeal to predominantly female customers who are the primary
bakers of injera for home and commercial use. Our focus is on consumers who are
socially conscious, health/quality conscious and motivated by convenience. By offering
high-quality, chemical-free teff, we appeal to the housewife who wants healthier food for
her family. We also appeal to the small business injera-bakers who supply injera to
restaurants and stores. These bakers may or may not be as health conscious as individual
housewives, but as high-volume producers of injera they are in need of support services
(like door-to-door delivery) and concerned about the quality of pre-milled teff flour.
Horn of Plenty's focus on empowering subsistence farmers and ensuring that food is
grown in Ethiopia for Ethiopians (versus for export) appeals to the consumer who is
concerned about food security in Ethiopia, price controls on food staples and the
empowerment of "the little guy" (like these small business owners themselves). We want
our customers to know that they can contribute to bettering the lives of their fellow
citizens by purchasing high-quality healthy teff products from our company. With the
support of our customers, Horn of Plenty strives to transform Ethiopia into a land of
plenty. The value on Ethiopians helping Ethiopians is integral to our business model.
35
Currently, housewives and injera-bakers feel they must inspect the raw teff grain at the
mill before it is milled to ensure quality. This puts the burden of quality control and
transport of grain and/or flour on the individual consumer. Horn of Plenty will do this
work for the consumer by ensuring the quality of our teff flour and providing a delivery
service to regular customers who buy sufficient quantity.
Younger Housewives. Since most teff is bought by women (either housewives or house
workers) Horn of Plenty's primary target will be women between the ages of 20 to 40
years old. We will focus on this younger generation of women since they will be the most
health conscious and open to the innovation of purchasing pre-ground teff and
establishing a new brand loyalty. Most of these housewives/house workers don't have the
time to buy raw teff and then take it to the local teff mill (the standard current practice).
Consequently, providing reasonably-priced, high-quality pre-processed teff flour (versus
just raw teff) in packaging that is sized for home use will appeal to these housewives as
a unique combination of convenience and quality.
36
Industry Analysis
Teff is the staple grain of Ethiopia and is predominantly grown in the states of Oromo,
Amhara, Tigray and on the outskirts of Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. Most teff is produced by
subsistence farmers who can only market their teff locally because they have very limited
means of transportation (e.g. by donkey or cart). Those who do not possess livestock for
transportation might contract trucks and take their teff to a local market, but few actually
bring their teff to a broader regional market. The Ethiopian supply chain for teff
primarily involves small holder farmers selling their grain to wholesalers who distribute
the raw grain to a whofchobeit (grain mill) that then allows consumers to select the teff
they want, clean it and grind it themselves on the premises. Since Horn of Plenty would
be grinding and distributing its own teff, its primary competitors would be these
wholesalers and grain mills.
Consistent availability and quality at a reasonable price are the factors that matter most
for our customers. When purchasing teff, both retail and wholesale consumers want
friendly, helpful and knowledgeable salespeople to guide them to the proper kind of
teff (white, brown and mixture teff). Ethiopian culture is very relational; consequently
consumers will tend to look for a teff supplier (usually a wofchobeit or grain mill) that
they can trust that is located in close proximity to their neighborhood. Consumers
identify their wofchobeit either through word of mouth or television/radio advertising.
If a wofchobeit provides a quality product and treats them well they will become repeat
customers for that supplier. Horn of Plenty's primary competition is with these
independently owned wofchobeits that are located in almost every neighborhood
throughout the city.
Rather than modeling our distribution on this traditional system, Horn of Plenty will
attract customers to its initial distribution center by offering fresh injera (traditional
Ethiopian bread made of teff) samples, pre-processed and packaged teff flour, multiple
teff sack sizes (10, 25, and 100 kg), well-trained sales associates, and customer support
personnel who can help our customers transport their purchase. For wholesale customers
who buy in sufficient bulk, we will provide a delivery service. Excellent service,
convenience, consistent teff availability and quality, affordable pricing, and
our commitment to give back to Ethiopian society will help Horn of Plenty attract and
retain a loyal customer base.
38
Horn of Plenty will develop a basic informational website in Year One. As of 2012, the
majority of our Ethiopian customers do not regularly use the internet for shopping or
informational purposes since internet access in Ethiopia is costly and unreliable.
However, our expectation is that this reality will shift dramatically in the next ten years as
Ethiopia becomes increasingly web connected. Consequently our long-term web strategy
will focus on being a step (but not several steps) ahead of the Ethiopian market in terms
of web-based commerce.
Initially, the primary focus for our website will be providing information and motivation
in the form of human interest stories that provide our internet-savvy stakeholders
(primarily investors and interested friends in the U.S. and Europe) with a way to connect
to our mission. We recognize that investors and interested stakeholders need a way to see,
hear and support Horn of Plenty's success in the critical first years of operation. Our
informational website and founder's blog will enable these stakeholders to learn more
about Horn of Plenty and stay connected to our mission.
The focus of Horn of Plenty's web presence is the creation of a global community of
interested stakeholders that believe in our mission of re-envisioning Ethiopia as a land of
plenty. Therefore, our web marketing strategy will target the following groups:
Investors
The web-connected Ethiopian Diaspora
Socially-conscious professionals who may become investors/partners
Governmental, NGO's and faith-based organizations who share our interest in
Ethiopian development
In some sense, our website will be Horn of Plenty's real presence outside of Ethiopia.
However, since our focus is primarily informational and our web budget is limited, we
will not purchase expensive banner ads, etc. Rather, we will focus on creating links in
social networks (Facebook, LinkedIn, and Twitter), on-line reviews/articles and the
websites of development organizations and faith-based groups that are already working in
Ethiopia. Eventually we may purchase banner ads on websites and on-line magazines
focused on the Ethiopian Diaspora (e.g. Tadias.com, ethiopianreview.com, nazret.com) in
order to facilitate word-of-mouth in the international Ethiopian community that would
then influence our customer base in Ethiopia.
Development Requirements
Horn of Plenty's mission is to create prosperity for former subsistence farmers and
an abundant food supply for the Horn of Africa. The current scarcity and high price of
teff ensures a high demand for our product. Thus, our marketing and sales strategy is
simple: build loyal relationship with teff end-users by providing a conveniently accessed,
high-quality product at a reasonable price. Our strategy for raising the agricultural
productivity and standard of living of subsistence farmers is more complex and depends
upon creating a viable commercial-scale farming operation that enables farmers to obtain
equity in the company while earning a living wage.
SWOT Analysis
Horn of Plenty is entering the Ethiopian marketplace at a critical juncture. Ethiopia has
one of the fastest growing economies in the world with an annual growth rate of 7.5% per
year according to The World Factbook (CIA, 2003). At the same time, due to global
climate change and the agricultural land grab by Chinese, Indian and Saudi companies,
Ethiopia faces serious, recurrent food shortages and increasing prices on staples like teff.
The need for a consistent, affordable supply of food is great and the opportunity to
become a major player in the production of that food is also significant. Horn of Plenty is
poised to take advantage of this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity by entering the teff
marketplace with a new vision for Ethiopian agriculture.
The major shifts in the Ethiopian economy created by globalization also pose serious
threats to new ventures. The Ethiopian government is increasingly welcoming of foreign
investment, but continues to hold title to all Ethiopian land. Foreign investors therefore
enter the agricultural market at the risk of losing their land if the government suddenly
shifts or decides to seize land that has been leased to investors. Ethiopian government
and business is not known for its transparency; consequently, dealing with corruption,
tedious bureaucracy and nepotism is a real threat to any business' success. Horn of
Plenty will need to find a way to navigate in this environment without compromising its
stated values.
Horn of Plenty's greatest strengths are found in its innovative approach to empowering
Ethiopian farmers while meeting basic needs for food stability. Fresh ideas that re-
envision Ethiopia as a land of plenty, assistance from American agricultural experts and
investors, as well as the dedication and cross-cultural skills of its founder, are what
position Horn of Plenty to make a difference at this time of significant opportunity in
Ethiopia.
41
Strengths.
Low costs for land and labor in Ethiopia
This decade is a critical juncture in Ethiopian economic development, the
Ethiopian government is providing strong incentives to foreign investment as well
as resources for agricultural development
Ethiopian-American founder is highly motivated, well-trained, bicultural and
trilingual.
Strong relationships with American venture capitalists, agricultural and business
mentors
Horn of Plenty's business plan is unique, offering an innovative approach to a
staple product as well as a way for both our Ethiopian customers and our
American investors to contribute to bettering the lives of subsistence farmers.
Weaknesses.
No capital in hand.
Lack of direct experience in Ethiopian agriculture
Will take time to educate and train subsistence farmers to farm using modern
agricultural methods
Forging an American-Ethiopian corporation may prove to be more difficult than
expected.
Opportunities.
Increasing political stability in Ethiopia. The Ethiopian government is eager to
foster development partnerships with expatriates.
The Ethiopian government is eager to replace subsistence farming with
commercial farming
The improved infrastructure system in Ethiopia will make it possible to transport
our product efficiently.
Profound need for food stability in Ethiopia
Animosity of local farmers toward foreign agricultural land-grab makes them
more open to cooperation that will allow them to scale-up production. Horn of
Plenty is positioned to help these farmers direct their sense of outrage into
positive efforts.
No prepackaged teff currently available on the market.
Threats.
Bureaucracy and corruption in Ethiopian government could cripple efforts
Crop loss due to natural disasters (drought, hail, etc.)
Potential difficulties obtaining water rights, land and/or equipment in Ethiopia.
Difficulties obtaining and retaining honest employees who have sufficient
education to participate in the complexities commercial-scale agriculture.
Copycat producers may take our model and sell it with lower quality teff,
potentially ruining our reputation.
42
Competitive Edge
Reliability and convenience are Horn of Plenty's primary competitive edges. We provide
customers with reliably high-quality teff flour at a reasonable price (a feature that our
customers can not currently count on from their local wofchobeit). Our packaging of teff
(an innovation in the teff market), our strategic location in major shopping areas and our
delivery service all make Horn of Plenty a convenience leader. By emphasizing customer
convenience we achieve a significant competitive edge over our more traditional
competitors who put the burden of choosing, milling and transporting teff on the
customer.
Horn of Plenty's other competitive edge is its unique dedication to Ethiopia's overall
development. Our goal is incrementally increase our percentage of gross sales donated to
NGO's in Ethiopia that feed the needy (while maintaining profitability for our corporation
and a living wage for our Farmer Associates) with a target of 10% of gross sales donated
each year by Year Ten. Horn of Plenty's unique approach to food security allows
consumers to amplify their impact for good while providing for one of their own basic
needs.
Marketing strategy
Sales Strategy
Sales Forecast
The following table shows Horn of Plenty's five-year sales forecast. Given the price and
scarcity of teff in Ethiopia at this time, we estimate that we can sell as much teff as we
can produce. The numbers for our sales forecast were determined using data from the
Ethiopian Ministry of Agriculture (MORAD), University of Nevada Cooperative
Extension (UNCE), and reported by Elleni Araya in Addis Fortune magazine. According
to the UNCE study, teff grown with modern methods should yield 1 ton/acre. Estimated
production is based on working 300 acres of farmland for the first four years.
A 300 acre farm yields 300 tons (272,155 kilogram) of teff per season with three growing
seasons per year for a total of 816,466 kilos per year. We calculated our teff price at the
current market price for first and second grade teff. We will be selling our first grade teff
at $ .90 per kilogram and second grade teff at $0.78 per kilogram. The table uses an
average cost of production and the varied sales price for two grades of teff (white and
brown), assuming 150 acres per grade. We estimate the growth rate of sales at 5%
annually based on inflation (which is currently quite high in Ethiopia). In Year Five
the price of teff is estimated to be $1.15 for first grade teff and $1.03 for second grade
teff based on inflation. During this year, Horn of Plenty will acquire a total of 50 more
acres which accounts for our increased production and sales.
44
$1,000,000
$900,000
$800,000
$700,000
$600,000 White Teff
$500,000 Brown Teff
$400,000
$300,000
$200,000
$100,000
$0
Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Year 4 Year 5
$210,000
$180,000
$150,000
White Teff
$120,000
Brown Teff
$90,000
$60,000
$30,000
$0
Month 1 Month 3 Month 5 Month 7 Month 9 Month 11
Month 2 Month 4 Month 6 Month 8 Month 10 Month 12
Month Month Month Month Month Month Month Month Month Month Month Month
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
Sales
White Teff $0 $0 $0 $122,164 $0 $0 $0 $122,164 $0 $0 $0 $122,164
Brown Teff $0 $0 $0 $106,141 $0 $0 $0 $106,141 $0 $0 $0 $106,141
Total Sales $0 $0 $0 $228,305 $0 $0 $0 $228,305 $0 $0 $0 $228,305
Direct Cost of Month Month Month Month Month Month Month Month Month Month Month Month
Sales 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
White Teff $10,672.00 $10,672 $10,672 $10,672 $10,672 $10,672 $10,672 $10,672 $10,672 $10,672 $10,672 $10,672
Brown Teff $10,672 $10,672 $10,672 $10,672 $10,672 $10,672 $10,672 $10,672 $10,672 $10,672 $10,672 $10,672
Subtotal Direct
Cost of Sales $21,344 $21,344 21,344 $21,344 $21,344 $21,344 $21,344 $21,344 $21,344 $21,344 $21,344 $21,344
46
47
MANAGEMENT SUMMARY
Horn of Plenty is founded and operated by Ephrem Teklu Phifer-Houseman as the CEO.
Mr. Phifer-Houseman is responsible for oversight of the entire organization and the
interface with American investors. The organizational chart for Horn of Plenty is found
in Figure 6 below.
Horn of Plenty's mission depends upon the success of its Farmer Associates (former
subsistence farmers who wish to join Horn of Plenty in order to raise their standard of
living while learning modern farming techniques). We project an initial group of thirty
Farmer Associates who will work as members of the Horn of Plenty farming team and
receive a living wage, medical and educational benefits, and a yearly share of company
stock as compensation.
Farmer Associates will be trained to participate in all aspects of farm construction, design
and planning of the new crop season, harvesting, as well as milling and packaging. Two
Farmer Associate Team Leaders will report to the CEO as part of Horn of Plenty's
Management Team and be primarily responsible for managing farm production. As
CEO, Mr. Phifer-Houseman will work closely with these leaders and the whole farming
team in the management of the farm and mill. A mill foreman will be primarily
responsible for the full-time milling team of five mill operators and two truck drivers.
He will oversee milling, packaging and transportation of teff in coordination with the
Distribution Center. The Mill Foreman will report to the CEO as a member of the
management team.
Our initial distribution center in Addis Ababa will have four employees (two sales
associates and two stock workers) managed by our Distribution Center Manager, another
member of the management team. The Distribution Center Manager is primarily
responsible for inventory management, sales and marketing of Horn of Plenty's product
line. The final member of the management team will be Horn of Plenty's Chief Financial
Officer/Accountant who will be supported by an administrative assistant/bookkeeper and
responsible for record keeping, cost containment, tax filing and all the financial concerns
of the company. An additional administrative assistant will support the CEO. As Horn of
Plenty grows, we will add additional departmental roles as needed.
Personnel Plan
Horn of Plenty's personnel plan is included in the following table. Salary standards for
the CEO are based upon modest American salary standards (the CEO is investing $50K
of deferred salary in the company each year for the first five years). Salaries for Ethiopian
staff reflect a generous Ethiopian salary standard and include health benefits, education
benefits and a retirement plan. Sales associates will also receive a commission on cold-
call sales and repeat customers. In Ethiopia these benefits are rare for farmers, mill
workers, office assistants, drivers, etc. This reflects Horn of Plenty's stated purpose of
raising the standard of living of its employees and associates. The salaries for the
accountant and office assistants were determined through an interview with Ruth
48
Table 5. Personnel
Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Year 4 Year 5
CEO (1) $10,200 $10,200 $10,200 $10,200 $10,200
Accountant(1) $4,200 $4,200 $4,200 $4,200 $4,200
Mill Foreman (1) $1,100 $1,200 $1,200 $1,200 $1,200
Mill workers (5) $3,375 $3,375 $3,375 $3,375 $3,375
Distribution Center $1,100 $1,200 $1,200 $1,200 $1,200
Manager
Distribution Center $2,700 $3,600 $3,600 $3,600 $3,600
Employee (4)
Truck Driver (2) $1,350 $1,800 $1,800 $1,800 $1,800
Farmer Associates (30) $36,000 $36,000 $36,000 $36,000 $36,000
Office assistant (2) $4,200 $4,200 $4,200 $4,200 $4,200
Maintenance worker (1) $900 $900 $900 $900 $900
Total Employees 23 23 23 23 23
Total Payroll $65,125 $66,675 $66,675 $66,675 $66,675
CEO
Office
Assistant
CFO/ Distribution
Farm Team Farm Team
Mill Foreman Center
Accountant Leader 1 Leader 2
Manager
49
50
FINANCIAL PLAN
Horn of Plenty's financial plan is optimistic but dependable, given its distance from the
facts on the ground in Ethiopia. It begins as a conservative, small-scale operation in order
to test feasibility, but has the potential for exponential growth. The plan depends upon
obtaining development-oriented and humanitarian loans from the Overseas Private
Investment Corporation (OPIC) and private philanthropists (see Startup Funding) as well
as the favorable tax and tariff conditions in Ethiopia for foreign investment. Given the
once-in-a-lifetime opportunity (and need) for development and food security in Ethiopia,
the plan is both realistic and optimistic. In the next decade, the explosive land-grab in
Ethiopia will be used either for the good of the Ethiopian people or for their exploitation.
Horn of Plenty proposes to use this opportunity to foster development rather than
economic colonization.
51
Startup Funding
Assets
Non-cash Assets from Startup $1,279,106
Cash Requirements from Startup $100,000
Additional Cash Raised $97,146
Cash Balance on Starting Date $197,146
Total Assets $1,476,252
Important Assumptions
The corporate income tax rate for Ethiopian corporations is normally 30%. However,
profit tax exemptions are given to new investors in agribusiness for at least two years and
potentially up to eight years (if a petition for exemption is accepted). http://www.bds-
ethiopia.net/investment-policy.html. In this plan a 0% tax rate is assumed for the first
five years, in the hope that our petition for tax exemption will be accepted on
humanitarian grounds for at least the first eight years of operation.
52
Break-even Analysis
Assumptions:
Average Percent Variable Cost 37%
Estimated Monthly Fixed Cost $25,806
$20,000
$15,000
$10,000
$5,000
$0
($5,000)
($10,000)
($15,000)
($20,000)
($25,000)
$0 $14,000 $28,000 $42,000 $56,000 $70,000
$7,000 $21,000 $35,000 $49,000 $63,000 $77,000
For the purposes of this plan, initial sales of teff are projected to begin in the fourth
month after planting. Obviously, not all teff harvested in Month Three will be sold by the
end of Month Four, although this is how the figures have been listed in this plan for the
sake of simplicity. However, given the continuing scarcity of teff supplies in Ethiopia we
can confidently project that we will be able to sell all the teff harvested in each of the
three growing seasons before the next season's harvest. In our profit and loss table and
charts, months Four, Eight and Twelve account for all sales of teff during the first year of
operation, though in reality some of those sales will occur from Month Five onward.
Due to low labor costs and the favorable investment environment in Ethiopia, Horn of
Plenty projects a gross margin of almost 63% even in Year One, rising to 72% in Year
Five after our expansion to an additional fifty acres. Coupled with the Ethiopian tax
exemption for new agribusiness investors this allows the company to be marginally
profitable even in its first year of operation, with a net profit of $54,113 or almost 8%. By
Year Five this profit percentage jumps to over 30%, even with an increased charitable
donation rate of 5% of total sales.
54
Expenses
Payroll $65,125 $66,675 $66,675 $66,675 $66,675
Marketing/Promotion $24,000 $24,000 $24,000 $24,000 $24,000
Depreciation $21,936 $10,967 $7,312 $5,484 $4,387
Farm Land Lease $145,692 $145,692 $145,692 $145,692 $147,692
Distribution Center Lease $15,000 $18,000 $18,000 $18,000 $18,000
Mill Lease/Mortgage $1,700 $2,040 $2,040 $2,040 $2,040
Utilities $1,600 $1,800 $1,800 $1,800 $1,800
Insurance $18,000 $18,000 $18,000 $18,000 $18,000
Payroll Taxes $9,769 $10,001 $10,001 $10,001 $10,001
Charitable Donation $6,852 $14,383 $22,602 $31,506 $48,511
Total Operating $309,674 $311,558 $316,122 $323,198 $341,106
Expenses
$180,000
$150,000
$120,000
$90,000
$60,000
$30,000
$0
($30,000)
$300,000
$270,000
$240,000
$210,000
$180,000
$150,000
$120,000
$90,000
$60,000
$30,000
$0
Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Year 4 Year 5
$210,000
$180,000
$150,000
$120,000
$90,000
$60,000
$30,000
$0
$700,000
$600,000
$500,000
$400,000
$300,000
$200,000
$100,000
$0
Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Year 4 Year 5
Cash flow projections are critical to our success. The following table shows cash flow for
the first five years, and the chart illustrates monthly cash flow in the first year. Monthly
cash flow projections are included in the appendix. Adequate start up funding allows
Horn of Plenty to operate with a positive cash balance even during the first three months
of operation before our initial harvest.
Expenditures from
Operations
Cash Spending $65,125 $66,675 $66,675 $66,675 $66,675
Bill Payments $563,654 $552,586 $559,583 $566,195 $599,800
Subtotal Spent on $628,779 $619,261 $626,258 $632,870 $666,475
Operations
The projected Balance Sheet for five years is detailed in the following table. Monthly
projections for the first year Balance Sheet are available for review in the Appendix.
Planned numbers show that liabilities are expected to decrease such that Horn of Plenty
will have a positive net worth by Year Three and a net worth and working capital of
almost $500,000 by Year Five.
Current Assets
Cash $253,282 $311,472 $394,825 $503,623 $759,087
Inventory $64,032 $64,032 $64,032 $64,032 $70,595
Other Current Assets $25,366 $25,366 $25,366 $25,366 $25,366
Total Current Assets $342,680 $400,870 $484,223 $593,021 $855,048
Long-term Assets
Long-term Assets $1,253,740 $1,253,740 $1,253,740 $1,253,740 $1,253,740
Accumulated $21,936 $32,903 $40,215 $45,699 $50,086
Depreciation
Total Long-term Assets $1,231,804 $1,220,837 $1,213,525 $1,208,041 $1,203,654
Total Assets $1,574,484 $1,621,707 $1,697,748 $1,801,062 $2,058,702
Current Liabilities
Accounts Payable $44,119 $45,534 $46,034 $46,582 $49,542
Current Borrowing $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Other Current Liabilities $400,000 $400,000 $400,000 $400,000 $400,000
Subtotal Current $444,119 $445,534 $446,034 $446,582 $449,542
Liabilities
Paid-in Capital $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Retained Earnings ($223,748) ($169,635) ($82,119) $37,216 $185,965
Earnings $54,113 $87,516 $119,335 $148,749 $302,962
Total Capital ($169,635) ($82,119) $37,216 $185,965 $488,927
Business Ratios
Business ratios for the years of this plan are shown below. Industry profile ratios based
on the North American Industry Classification (NAICS) code 111199, All Other Grain
Farming, are the closest available and are shown to give a baseline comparison since data
on business ratios for Ethiopian agriculture is unavailable. Our projected profit before
interest and taxes is quite high compared to the NAICS ratio of 5%. We theorize that this
is due to extremely low labor cost in Ethiopia. Our financial projections also rely on
$200,000 in short term interest-free loans from philanthropic investors who want to see
former subsistence farmers thrive (Tom-to-Tesfaye program). This unusual funding
circumstance, coupled with the favorable Ethiopian tax exemption allows us to see a very
high return on equity from Year Three forward.
Percent of Sales
Sales 100.00% 100.00% 100.00% 100.00% 100.00% 100.00%
Gross Margin 62.60% 64.39% 66.00% 67.48% 72.28% 70.24%
Selling, General & 54.70% 52.22% 50.16% 48.60% 41.06% 11.41%
Administrative
Expenses
Advertising Expenses 3.50% 3.34% 3.19% 3.05% 2.47% 0.32%
Profit Before Interest 17.39% 21.06% 24.04% 26.45% 37.12% 5.07%
and Taxes
Main Ratios
Current 0.77 0.90 1.09 1.33 1.90 1.43
Quick 0.63 0.76 0.94 1.18 1.75 1.03
Total Debt to Total 110.77% 105.06% 97.81% 89.67% 76.25% 57.36%
Assets
Pre-tax Return on Net -31.90% -106.57% 320.66% 79.99% 61.96% 10.63%
Worth
Pre-tax Return on 3.44% 5.40% 7.03% 8.26% 14.72% 4.53%
Assets
61
Activity Ratios
Inventory Turnover 4.00 4.00 4.00 4.00 4.00 n.a
Accounts Payable 13.78 12.17 12.17 12.17 12.17 n.a
Turnover
Payment Days 27 30 30 30 29 n.a
Total Asset Turnover 0.44 0.44 0.44 0.44 0.47 n.a
Debt Ratios
Debt to Net Worth 0.00 0.00 44.62 8.68 3.21 n.a
Current Liab. to Liab. 0.25 0.26 0.27 0.28 0.29 n.a
Liquidity Ratios
Net Working Capital ($101,439) ($44,664) $38,189 $146,439 $405,506 n.a
Interest Coverage 1.83 2.37 2.93 3.50 6.29 n.a
Additional Ratios
Assets to Sales 2.30 2.26 2.25 2.29 2.12 n.a
Current Debt/Total 28% 27% 26% 25% 22% n.a
Assets
Acid Test 0.63 0.76 0.94 1.18 1.75 n.a
Sales/Net Worth 0.00 0.00 20.24 4.24 1.98 n.a
Dividend Payout 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 n.a
Long-Term Plan
This business plan covers five years of activities and an initial expansion to 350 acres in
cultivation and two distribution centers in Addis Ababa by Year Five. This initial farm
plan is intended as a business experiment to see if the model of company ownership
(versus direct land ownership) can enable former subsistence farmers to build equity and
rise out of poverty. If Horn of Plenty's first farm is a success, we will exponentially
scale-up our operations. With our current equipment and manpower we can farm up to
1000 acres. This would be the goal for Years Six through Ten. Expansion to a larger
scale commercial farming operation will enable us to generate the kind of capital that
would allow Horn of Plenty to begin a new farming venture in another area of
Ethiopia. This would benefit more farmers, and raise more teff to improve food security
in Ethiopia. Eventually we may diversify our products to include additional crops for
domestic use and/or export.
SUB-APPENDIX: BUSINESS PLAN TABLES
Accountant(1) $350.00 $350.00 $350.00 $350.00 $350.00 $350.00 $350.00 $350.00 $350.00 $350.00 $350.00 $350.00
Mill Foreman (1) $- $100.00 $100.00 $100.00 $100.00 $100.00 $100.00 $100.00 $100.00 $100.00 $100.00 $100.00
Mill workers (5) $- $- $- $375.00 $375.00 $375.00 $375.00 $375.00 $375.00 $375.00 $375.00 $375.00
Distribution Center $- $100.00 $100.00 $100.00 $100.00 $100.00 $100.00 $100.00 $100.00 $100.00 $100.00 $100.00
Manager
Distribution Center $- $- $- $300.00 $300.00 $300.00 $300.00 $300.00 $300.00 $300.00 $300.00 $300.00
Employee (4)
Truck Driver (2) $- $- $- $150.00 $150.00 $150.00 $150.00 $150.00 $150.00 $150.00 $150.00 $150.00
Farmer Associates $3,000.00 $3,000.00 $3,000.00 $3,000.00 $3,000.00 $3,000.00 $3,000.00 $3,000.00 $3,000. 00 $3,000.00 $3,000.00 $3,000. 00
(30)
Office assistant (2) $350.00 $350.00 $350.00 $350.00 $350.00 $350.00 $350.00 $350.00 $350.00 $350.00 $350.00 $350.00
Maintenance $75.00 $75.00 $75.00 $75.00 $75.00 $75.00 $75.00 $75.00 $75.00 $75.00 $75.00 $75.00
worker (1)
Total People 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23 23
Total Payroll $4,625 $4,825 $4,825 $5,650 $5,650 $5,650 $5,650 $5,650 $5,650 $5,650 $5,650 $5,650
62
Table 13. Profit and Loss
Month Month Month Month Month Month Month Month Month Month Month Month
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
Sales $0 $0 $0 $228,305 $0 $0 $0 $228,305 $0 $0 $0 $228,305
Direct Cost of Sales $21,344 $21,344 $21,344 $21,344 $21,344 $21,344 $21,344 $21,344 $21,344 $21,344 $21,344 $21,344
Other Costs of Sales $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Total Cost of Sales $21,344 $21,344 $21,344 $21,344 $21,344 $21,344 $21,344 $21,344 $21,344 $21,344 $21,344 $21,344
Gross Margin ($21,344) ($21,344) ($21,344) $206,961 ($21,344) ($21,344) ($21,344) $206,961 ($21,344) ($21,344) ($21,344) $206,961
Gross Margin % 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 90.65% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 90.65% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 90.65%
Expenses
Payroll $4,625 $4,825 $4,825 $5,650 $5,650 $5,650 $5,650 $5,650 $5,650 $5,650 $5,650 $5,650
Marketing/Promotion $2,000 $2,000 $2,000 $2,000 $2,000 $2,000 $2,000 $2,000 $2,000 $2,000 $2,000 $2,000
Depreciation $1,828 $1,828 $1,828 $1,828 $1,828 $1,828 $1,828 $1,828 $1,828 $1,828 $1,828 $1,828
Farm Land Lease $12,141 $12,141 $12,141 $12,141 $12,141 $12,141 $12,141 $12,141 $12,141 $12,141 $12,141 $12,141
Distribution Center $0 $0 $1,500 $1,500 $1,500 $1,500 $1,500 $1,500 $1,500 $1,500 $1,500 $1,500
Lease
Mill Lease/Mortgage $0 $0 $170 $170 $170 $170 $170 $170 $170 $170 $170 $170
Utilities $50 $50 $150 $150 $150 $150 $150 $150 $150 $150 $150 $150
Insurance $1,500 $1,500 $1,500 $1,500 $1,500 $1,500 $1,500 $1,500 $1,500 $1,500 $1,500 $1,500
Payroll Taxes $694 $724 $724 $848 $848 $848 $848 $848 $848 $848 $848 $848
Charitable Donations $571 $571 $571 $571 $571 $571 $571 $571 $571 $571 $571 $571
Total $23,409 $23,639 $25,409 $26,358 $26,358 $26,358 $26,358 $26,358 $26,358 $26,358 $26,358 $26,358
Operating Expenses
Profit Before Interest ($44,753) ($44,983) ($46,753) $180,604 ($47,702) ($47,702) ($47,702) $180,604 ($47,702) ($47,702) ($47,702) $180,604
and Taxes
EBITDA ($42,925) ($43,155) ($44,925) $182,432 ($45,874) ($45,874) ($45,874) $182,432 ($45,874) ($45,874) ($45,874) $182,432
Interest Expense $5,417 $5,417 $5,417 $5,417 $5,417 $5,417 $5,417 $5,417 $5,417 $5,417 $5,417 $5,417
Taxes Incurred $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Net Profit ($50,169) ($50,399) ($52,169) $175,187 ($53,118) ($53,118) ($53,118) $175,187 ($53,118) ($53,118) ($53,118) $175,187
Net Profit/Sales 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 76.73% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 76.73% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 76.73%
63
Table 14. Cash Flow
Cash Received Month Month Month Month Month Month Month Month Month Month Month Month
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
64
Table 14. Cash Flow Continued
Expenditures Month Month Month Month Month Month Month Month Month Month Month Month
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
Expenditures from
Operations
Cash Spending $4,625 $4,825 $4,825 $5,650 $5,650 $5,650 $5,650 $5,650 $5,650 $5,650 $5,650 $5,650
Bill Payments $3,592 $105,615 $43,805 $45,521 $45,640 $45,640 $45,640 $45,640 $45,640 $45,640 $45,640 $45,640
Subtotal Spent on $8,217 $110,440 $48,630 $51,171 $51,290 $51,290 $51,290 $51,290 $51,290 $51,290 $51,290 $51,290
Operations
Net Cash Flow ($8,217) ($110,440) ($48,630) $177,134 ($51,290) ($51,290) ($51,290) $177,015 ($51,290) ($51,290) ($51,290) $177,015
Cash Balance $188,929 $78,489 $29,859 $206,993 $155,703 $104,413 $53,123 $230,138 $178,848 $127,557 $76,267 $253,282
65
Table 15. Balance Sheet
Month 1 Month 2 Month 3 Month 4 Month 5 Month 6 Month 7 Month 8 Month 9 Month 10 Month 11 Month 12
Assets Starting
Balances
Current Assets
Cash $197,146 $188,929 $78,489 $29,859 $206,993 $155,703 $104,413 $53,123 $230,138 $178,848 $127,557 $76,267 $253,282
Inventory $0 $64,032 $64,032 $64,032 $64,032 $64,032 $64,032 $64,032 $64,032 $64,032 $64,032 $64,032 $64,032
Other Current Assets $25,366 $25,366 $25,366 $25,366 $25,366 $25,366 $25,366 $25,366 $25,366 $25,366 $25,366 $25,366 $25,366
Total Current Assets $222,512 $278,327 $167,887 $119,257 $296,391 $245,101 $193,811 $142,521 $319,536 $268,246 $216,955 $165,665 $342,680
Long-term Assets
Long-term Assets $1,253,740 $1,253,740 $1,253,740 $1,253,740 $1,253,740 $1,253,740 $1,253,740 $1,253,740 $1,253,740 $1,253,740 $1,253,740 $1,253,740 $1,253,740
Accumulated $0 $1,828 $3,656 $5,484 $7,312 $9,140 $10,968 $12,796 $14,624 $16,452 $18,280 $20,108 $21,936
Depreciation
Total Long-term $1,253,740 $1,251,912 $1,250,084 $1,248,256 $1,246,428 $1,244,600 $1,242,772 $1,240,944 $1,239,116 $1,237,288 $1,235,460 $1,233,632 $1,231,804
Assets
Total Assets $1,476,252 $1,530,239 $1,417,971 $1,367,513 $1,542,819 $1,489,701 $1,436,583 $1,383,465 $1,558,652 $1,505,534 $1,452,415 $1,399,297 $1,574,484
Liabilities and Month 1 Month 2 Month 3 Month 4 Month 5 Month 6 Month 7 Month 8 Month 9 Month 10 Month 11 Month 12
Capital
Current Liabilities
Accounts Payable $0 $104,157 $42,288 $43,999 $44,119 $44,119 $44,119 $44,119 $44,119 $44,119 $44,119 $44,119 $44,119
Current Borrowing $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Other Current $400,000 $400,000 $400,000 $400,000 $400,000 $400,000 $400,000 $400,000 $400,000 $400,000 $400,000 $400,000 $400,000
Liabilities
Subtotal Current $400,000 $504,157 $442,288 $443,999 $444,119 $444,119 $444,119 $444,119 $444,119 $444,119 $444,119 $444,119 $444,119
Liabilities
Long-term Liabilities $1,300,000 $1,300,000 $1,300,000 $1,300,000 $1,300,000 $1,300,000 $1,300,000 $1,300,000 $1,300,000 $1,300,000 $1,300,000 $1,300,000 $1,300,000
Total Liabilities $1,700,000 $1,804,157 $1,742,288 $1,743,999 $1,744,119 $1,744,119 $1,744,119 $1,744,119 $1,744,119 $1,744,119 $1,744,119 $1,744,119 $1,744,119
Paid-in Capital $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0
Retained Earnings ($223,748) ($223,748) ($223,748) ($223,748) ($223,748) ($223,748) ($223,748) ($223,748) ($223,748) ($223,748) ($223,748) ($223,748) ($223,748)
Earnings $0 ($50,169) ($100,569) ($152,738) $22,449 ($30,670) ($83,788) ($136,906) $38,281 ($14,837) ($67,955) ($121,074) $54,113
Total Capital ($223,748) ($273,917) ($324,317) ($376,486) ($201,299) ($254,418) ($307,536) ($360,654) ($185,467) ($238,585) ($291,703) ($344,822) ($169,635)
Total Liabilities and $1,476,252 $1,530,239 $1,417,971 $1,367,513 $1,542,819 $1,489,701 $1,436,583 $1,383,465 $1,558,652 $1,505,534 $1,452,415 $1,399,297 $1,574,484
Capital
Net Worth ($223,748) ($273,917) ($324,317) ($376,486) ($201,299) ($254,418) ($307,536) ($360,654) ($185,467) ($238,585) ($291,703) ($344,822) ($169,635)
66
67
APPENDIX C
SUPPORTING DATA
68
Startup Expenses
Residence Permit $ 600.00
Permit fees 100.00
Consultant fee 600.00
Office space rent 250.00
Total $1,550.00
Office Supplies
Brother MFC-9460CDN $600.00
High-Performance Color Laser All-in-One for Small Business Printer
(6) Brother MFC-9460 Toner Ink Cartridge 310.00
Office supplies: paper, pens, etc. 360.00
(2) Cisco Small Business SPA 504G 200.00
VoIP phone - Silver, dark gray
Office furniture: chairs, desks, cabinets, shelving 1,500.00
2 Cash Registers 432.00
Logo Design 2,000.00
Advertising/week 1,000.00
Stationery etc. 500.00
Miscellaneous 1,000.00
Digital Camera: Canon EOS Rebel 700.00
T3i Digital SLR Camera with Canon EF-S 18-55mm IS II lens
Digital Camera Accessories 200.00
Accounting Software, 250.00
QuickBooks Pro Quicken
Credit Card Software, 299.00
PCCharge Pro Go Software
Retail Management Software,
POS & Inventory Management Celerant ARMS 5,371.00
Equipment Required
5 Used Farm Tractors $500,000
2 Used Combine Harvester 300,000
1 Used Seeder/Planter 80,000
Used Harrow, 22in Disk, 9ft Cutting Width 25,000
Used Field Cultivators 28,000
Used Disc Plows/Rippers 15,000
Used Mulch Finishers 7,000
5 Used Pickup Trucks 150,000
Total Equipment $1,105,000
Total Startup Cost $ 1,140,686
Utilities $1,200.00
1 kilogram = 2.20 pounds Amount of seed needed = 10/pound/acre (10 lb/1AC*1Kg/2.2 lb) = 4.55 Kg/AC seed needed/acre
71
Table 18.Cost of Production continued
Distribution Center and Central Office Cost/Month
Lease 1 distribution 18,000.00
center
Utilities 4,000.00
Tractor and car 150.00
Maintenance
Office Supplies 60
Farm land lease Hectare 121.405 12,140.50
20
Total expense 34,350.50
Total Mill, Distribution Center & Central Office Cost/Month $ 41,670.50
72
73