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ISET Economist Blog

XXI Century Arrives to Kakheti, with soplidan.ge
Tuesday, 05 April, 2016

Have you ever had a problem buying healthy products or being lazy to go shopping in the open-air bazaar? Wouldn’t it be wonderful to be able to order natural and fresh food that gets delivered straight to your door that is not of the fast-food, take-away variety? There might just be the reason for optimism with the story of soplidan.ge (“from the village”). 

This is a story of a small business with an innovative idea. Soplidan is the first Georgian internet portal to offer online shopping for agricultural products. Consumers can choose goods they want to buy and it will take one day to reach the buyer. It offers a great way to get fresh, healthy, natural fruit and vegetables delivered straight to your door. Indeed, “Soplidan” was named the best startup of 2015. 

Two young ladies are behind this beautiful business idea. Nino Mgebrishvili and Natia Ninikelashvili from the Kakheti region have been friends for 10 years. As young mothers, both Nino and Natia faced the common challenge of shopping for healthy food products for their children. To find natural and healthy products they often had to travel to different villages or bazars—a time-consuming exercise. They soon realized that not everyone has the opportunity to travel for a couple of hours and buy products from villages. They thought that if people can shop and buy clothes online, then why not do the same for agricultural products? Thus their business idea was born.

Nino and Natia started with market and price research. They had contacts in various Kakhetian villages and could easily buy local products from different small and family farmers. They then registered soplidan.ge, created a very beautiful website for online shopping and organized a delivery system that would bring orders directly to customers.

Understanding how important the appearance of their products is to consumers, Nino and Natia ensure that everything is washed, packed, and branded properly. This gives them a distinct advantage over the option of Bazar shopping, where there is very little assurance as to the quality and origin of most food items. Despite this, the prices offered on soplidan.ge are not very different from those found in the bazaars. This is because Nino and Natia are buying directly from the small farmers and not from intermediaries.

Table 1.


THIS IS NOT A GEORGIAN INVENTION!

Not surprisingly, online shopping for agro products has a relatively long history in Europe. In Germany, Veggie/Organic Boxes have been offered since the early 1990s by various regional suppliers. Nowadays this is a very popular business that supplies not only households but kindergartens, schools, businesses, and restaurants with organically-grown products. There are more than 110 such suppliers in Germany, with most of the products coming from regional farms. This is a popular business in India as well. 1.4 million farmers in India are selling their products online – without worrying about middlemen. 

In the US, in addition to the usual Veggie Boxes, there is a system called Community Supported Agriculture (CSA). This is a concept designed to encourage direct relationships between consumers and growers and for consumers to become more knowledgeable about the way their food is grown. Unlike many Veggie Box models, CSA involves consumers who support a farmer financially by paying for a share of the farm's production prior to each growing season. This arrangement allows farmers to buy the seeds, plants, and other inputs they need for the growing season and pay their farm labor without waiting for the harvest to generate revenue.

WIN-WIN FOR FARMERS AND CONSUMERS

A central issue in food marketing is the so-called “value chain”, a multitude of parties standing between the farmer and the final consumer. A value chain may consist of many “value-adding” parties performing such functions as collection, lab testing, (cold) storage, transportation, packaging, processing, wholesale and retail sales. In most cases, farmers, who only sell raw materials, stand at the lowest stage of the chain and consequently have the lowest share of value-added among all other actors. 

The majority of Georgian farmers are smallholders who have a hard time bringing their products to the lucrative Tbilisi market. In many cases, these farmers have no choice but to sell their products in local bazaars. The cost of transporting small quantities of agricultural products to Tbilisi may be prohibitively high. Moreover, the option of selling to Tbilisi-based wholesale traders is not all that great either. 

Online shopping offers Georgian farmers the opportunity of capturing a higher share of the value by cutting out most middlemen and selling directly to the final consumers. The internet can be the key to marketing produce instantly, and directly connecting consumers with farmers. When farmers hear the online shopping or “web marketing,” they usually think of large businesses and fancy websites. However, many of Europe’s online selling systems are run by small farmers or groups of farmers without the help of any intermediaries. 

If expanded, the opportunity to directly market agricultural products to households, kindergartens, restaurants, or supermarkets should incentivize many Georgian farmers to engage in commercial operations (and become real farmers in the process). For many of them becoming real farmers would indeed by a long process of learning how to improve both product and service quality, how to communicate properly, as well as getting used to the idea of delivering on time. The option of online marketing may also encourage farmers to create formal or informal cooperatives in order to co-brand their products, invest in critical pieces of equipment, and reduce post-harvest losses and transportation costs. 

There are lots of people in Tbilisi who don’t always have the time to make a weekly trip to a mall or an open-air market to pick up fresh items for their kitchen. The advent of online agro shopping will save them the hassle of shopping while providing access to healthy locally-produced goods. By connecting consumers with their food sources and vice versa, Nino and Natia from soplidan.ge, and other Georgian pioneers of online agro shopping, make all parties win: farmers, rural communities, urban consumers, and the Georgian nation as a whole. A better life starts with better, healthy food from the village.

Bon Appétit!

The author would like to thank Nana Moutafidou for her valuable insights.

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The article was produced with the assistance of the European Union through its European Neighbourhood Programme for Agriculture and Rural Development, Austrian Development Cooperation, CARE Austria, or CARE International in the Caucasus. The contents are the sole responsibility of the authors and can in no way be taken to reflect the views of the European Union, Austrian Development Cooperation, CARE Austria, or CARE International in the Caucasus.

The views and analysis in this article belong solely to the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the international School of Economics at TSU (ISET) or ISET Policty Institute.
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