YouFarm funding farmers

08 Jul, 2018 - 00:07 0 Views
YouFarm funding farmers

The Sunday Mail

Zimbabwean startup YouFarm is providing collateral-free funding to farmers by allowing users to invest in crops and livestock, and share the profits with the farmer when the produce goes to market.

Launched in October of last year, YouFarm also provides farmers with expert agronomists, access to technologies such as satellite and drone data, and accurate weather forecasting.

“We are trying to introduce precision farming to rural, small scale and commercial farmers in Zimbabwe. By providing access to technology we hope to reduce wastage and increase yields by creating smarter farms and smarter farmers,” founder and chief executive officer Mr John-Paul Matenga told Disrupt Africa, an online publication which specialises in news, information and commentary pertaining to Africa’s tech startup and investment and ecosystem.

The idea for the startup came to Mr Matenga when, at the end of 2016, his mother acquired a farm. She had no funding to make the farm productive.

Upon realising that many young Zimbabwean farmers were in a similar predicament, Matenga built the YouFarm crowd-farming platform, which works in a very similar way to Nigeria’s Farmcrowdy.  Bootstrapped thus far, YouFarm will take a share of profits when produce goes to market. It is still pre-revenue at this point, but has started fundraising for its first official project and will be planting four hectares of cabbage.

“The uptake has been overwhelming. We had to stop advertising to farmers because we cannot keep up with the demand. In June we opened up to crop investors, and again the uptake has been very encouraging, with the majority of investors being Zimbabweans who are based in the diaspora who want to invest back home,” Matenga said.

YouFarm’s local competition comes from organisations that provide alternative ways of financing farmers, such as microfinance institutions (MFIs), savings and credit cooperatives (SACCOs) and contract farming companies.

“We are the first crowd-farming platform in Zimbabwe so we are currently swimming in a blue ocean,” said Matenga. The biggest difficulty faced by the startup so far has been on the issue of legislation.

“Zimbabwe does not have any crowd funding laws,” Matenga said.

“The second issue is credibility. As a startup, asking strangers to trust you with their hard earned money is a hard task, which is why we can’t wait for the results of our MVP.” YouFarm plans to take its platform to Zambia, Mozambique, Malawi and Botswana in the future. — Disrupt Africa.

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