Agri-Insights Issue 15 | Page 12

in the Sandhills Traveling through the Sandhills of Nebraska to reach longtime client Farmers Ranchers Cooperative is a pleasure. The drive to the co-op’s headquarters in Ainsworth, NE, takes you through undulating hills of mixed-grass prairie growing atop sand dunes. Yucca plants greet you, with old-fashioned windmills filling the cattle watering holes fed by the aquifer below. As you near Ainsworth, you find yourself in the midst of irrigated fields of corn and soybeans—a place where farming meets ranching and the sky seems to extend forever. It’s a unique and beautiful place. It’s also very real, with people who greet you warmly and quickly offer a firm handshake; a place where community extends miles beyond a town’s official border. Few clients capture that sense of “real” in their print newsletter better than Farmers Ranchers Co-op. It’s not that the newsletter, called Trailhead, doesn’t include promotional articles. Open up any issue of this four-page quarterly and, depending on the season, you’ll find details about cattle minerals, tire specials, or seed discounts. DRAWING THE READER IN What distinguishes this newsletter are the treasures that draw the reader in: stories about real people and places unique to the territory served by this mid-size cooperative. According to the co-op’s president and CEO, the newsletter is about building relationships—not just selling product and services. “A relationship is the most important thing in any business association,” says Kent Taylor. “Money doesn’t last but people do, and the people we’re dealing with are farmers and ranchers who have been here for two, three, maybe four generations or more. These are people you go to ball games with and sit beside in church. In a big city you might expect traffic to just walk in off the street. Here they come because they have a relationship with you.” That’s why telling stories that relate to their customers’ lives makes a difference. “We definitely want to showcase our company in the newsletter,” explains Taylor. “Our cooperative exists to make their business run better, and we want to let them know about the products and services we offer. But if a newsletter is nothing more than a sales tactic, we haven’t done our job. We like to include a story or two that has a larger meaning.” Stories include Treasures in Our Backyard, chronicling three premier golf courses in the area and a rancher’s prize-winning vineyard; Where Would We Be Without Water, the story of how the local irrigation district has impacted the region; or What a Difference FFA Makes, about an award-winning high school FFA program. The list goes on, including stories that bring directors and employees to life for the reader. UNCOVERING THE REAL STORIES Story ideas primarily originate from Taylor or the administrative programs coordinator, Matt Sheehan, and assistant Bryce Hasenohr. “We keep our ears open as to what’s going on in the area and what would be a good feature article,” says Taylor. “The ideas are then fed to VistaComm journalist Connie Smith, who takes it from there, conducting interviews, taking photographs that help tell the story graphically, and then bringing that story to life.” The most recent issue of Trailhead highlighted Bridging the Ag Gap With Kids, a story about co-op member and rancher Anita Keys’ involvement with the Ag in the Classroom pen pal program. Keys brought that story idea to Kent, knowing that the co-op’s newsletter devotes space to articles that can make a difference to members, the community, and agriculture, as a whole. “I get a lot of newsletters but Farmers Ranchers is the one I read,” says Keys. “I like the fact that it isn’t all commercial. It’s not just about the co-op’s profitability, but about agriculture and personal development, stories about improving our ability to compete in the world market and contribute back to the community.” She says she also appreciates the features about people. “It makes the newsletter more personal, more real,” says Keys. There’s that relationship factor again. “If we don’t strive to find a connection with our potential readers I think our newsletter runs the risk of becoming irrelevant in today’s over-saturated media market,” says Taylor. “We have to have information about what we’re doing for our patrons, but also stories that nobody else is writing— stories that connect. We’re trying to tell real stories about where we live and the people who live here. It’s all about people, and I think our readers notice.” The term “Reality TV” is a misnomer. There is nothing real about pitting people against one another in an unrealistic setting concocted to create drama. So-called reality shows like Survivor, The Bachelor, or The Real Housewives of Orange )