2SCALE Thematic Papers Not By Technology and Money Alone | Page 5
Cross-cutting themes of the stories
A common perception in development programmes is
that if farmers get access to improved technologies (for
example better seeds, fertilisers, and modern agricul-
tural practices) and finances, this will automatically lead
to them being able to improve their farming livelihoods.
However, this is not the end of the story. What the au-
thors in this collection discovered through their facili-
tation and coaching work in the 2SCALE project is that
in addition to access to better technologies and money,
smallholder farmers and related business actors need a
deeper understanding of how value chains and markets
work, as well as strong networks and business relation-
ships. For this, they need to develop functional capaci-
ties that give them the needed skills, confidence, mind-
set and attitude to achieve improvements that last.
These 15 stories take place in four countries and focus
on ten commodities. In spite of this diversity, certain
major themes emerge, that cross over countries and
commodities. The main themes are: how building re-
lationships and strengthening functional capacities (or
soft skills) are necessary pre-requisites to technical im-
provements; the importance of organisations becoming
more empowered; how to sustain support services be-
yond the project life; and a focus on gender and youth
issues. These themes are explained further below.
Relationships are key
All the 15 stories reveal the importance of building busi-
ness relationships to get better business results. Rela-
tionship-building among farmers and providing support
to the formation and strengthening of producers’ organi-
sations (POs) and cooperatives allow farmers to collec-
tively buy agricultural inputs and equipment, negotiate
better prices, organise financing of inputs and equip-
ment with lower interest rates for loans. This theme
comes out clearly in the Rice-Nigeria and Vegetables-
Benin stories. Strengthening these horizontal relation-
ships also allows POs to pool agricultural produce and
to negotiate better prices (see the Sorghum-Nigeria,
Maize-Mali, Cassava-Nigeria stories). The Soya-Ghana
and Rice-Benin stories highlight strong organisation
and leadership development of female-headed SMEs,
and how they improved the processing, branding and
marketing of their soya and rice products.
Most stories show the importance of local networking
and the construction of vertical business relationships
at the level of the ABC. The Soya-Benin, Soya-Ghana,
Rice-Nigeria and Rice-Benin stories reveal the impor-
tance of strong business relationships between produc-
er and processor groups to ensure marketable quality.
The vegetable value chain stories from Benin and Gha-
na focus on building trustful relations between farmer
groups, input providers and credit services. Clusters
are not only important for producers’ organisations to
5
develop reliable and sustainable market outlets, but
also for larger-scale companies that want to source
raw materials from smallholder farmers, as witnessed
in the Sorghum-Nigeria story. Firms often start their
sourcing activities in a rather centralised way, providing
inputs and credit, as in the Sesame-Mali and Maize-Mali
stories, but then gradually discover the need for de-
centralised business, which requires professional POs
networking with other local-level business actors and
support services (including local input providers, trac-
tor services and financial i nstitutions). The Maize-Benin
story on the other hand shows that in the absence of
a clear interest in decentralised business development,
success can prove elusive.
Functional capacity strengthening enables
technical improvements
Several stories draw our attention to the fact that techni-
cal (hard skills) training alone does not necessarily lead
to technological changes and business breakthroughs.
There is often a very important ingredient missing and
that is organisational and functional capacity develop-
ment of the cluster actors to make it happen. In the
Vegetables-Benin, Vegetables-Nigeria, Maize-Nigeria,
and Sorghum-Nigeria stories, for example, training on
good agricultural practices - including the use of certi-
fied seed, optimal fertiliser practices, but also mecha-
nised planting and the use of irrigation devices – would
not have resulted in wide adoption had farmers not also
been coached in functional capacities (or soft skills),
such as how to analyse production costs, identify op-
tions for cost reduction and efficiency, develop produc-
tion, marketing and business plans, build good busi-
ness relations, negotiate with other players, develop
contracts, etc.
Initially, firms are generally interested in sourcing
enough quality products. They often respond to this
need by offering producers technical support only. Yet,
as the HPW-Ghana and Pineapple-Benin stories show,
firms can gradually discover the importance of function-
al capacity development, as a valuable complement to
technical changes, leading to more sustainable, trusted
partnerships and consequently larger volumes of qual-
ity produce. Agribusiness coaches, supported by the
trainer-mentor, emerge in these stories as important
contributors to strengthening functional capacities in
terms of cluster and cluster-firm relationships.
Organisational empowerment is crucial
That such functional capacity strengthening can lead to
empowered organisations is highlighted in the Maize-
Nigeria and Vegetables-Benin stories. The Cassava-Ni-
geria story then makes very clear that strengthening
these capacities leads to improved access to informa-