establishing a dairy farm

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A NEPALI BARN NEPSHIRE Himosh

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Page 1: Establishing a Dairy Farm

A NEPAL I BARN

NEPSHIRE

Himosh

Page 2: Establishing a Dairy Farm

INDEX

• Company Introduction

• Environment

• Changes in Environment

• Opportunity Due to the changes

• Business concept

• Marketing Strategy

• SWOT

• Feasibility

Page 3: Establishing a Dairy Farm

COMPANY INTRODUCTION

• Name: NepShire (The Nepali Barn)• Location: Dhading, Nepal• Industry: Organic Dairy industry• Philosophy: Work to Excel.

• Mission: Work, Maximize and Grow.

• Vision: Reputed name and happy stakeholders.

Page 4: Establishing a Dairy Farm

ENVIRONMENT

• Co-operative collection of milk.

• Not much verity of dairy products.

• No breeders of Holstein Cows

• Pipeline milking system not used.

Page 5: Establishing a Dairy Farm

CHANGE IN ENVIRONMENT

• Consumers seek verity in dairy products (high demand but low supply)

• Seek replacements for Jersey cows.

• Government have increased subsidies for farmers.

• Electricity is a problem and people seek cheap Electricity.

• Milking pipelines are available that would increase the milking speed.

Page 6: Establishing a Dairy Farm

OPPORTUNITIES

• A new market: Due to the lack of verity in dairy products.• Cheaper to import Holstein Cows: Government

subsidies made it cheaper to import from Germany.• Market for Holstein Cows: Quantity of milk

produced by Holstein cows attract farmers.• Electricity is a problem and bio electricity with a

locality could be a good start.• Milking pipelines increase the production and

assist in achieving economies of scale.

Page 7: Establishing a Dairy Farm

BUSINESS CONCEPT

• It is simply dairy farming along with breeding and providing bio electricity.

• Comparatively low investment.

• Change the traditional cattle farming method.

• Use the best breed of Dairy cows- better production

• Managing is comparatively easier.

Page 8: Establishing a Dairy Farm

• We provide new verities of dairy products.

• Have our own distribution channels and retail outlets (elimination of the middle men)

• We consume and provide electricity which is produced by the waste from our cattle.

Page 9: Establishing a Dairy Farm

TARGET MARKET

Market Segment Selection Product

Age NA NA

Gender NA NA

Location Kathmandu, Pokhara, Chitwan, Bhairawa, Butwal, Birgunj, Mahendranagar, Biratnagar

NA

Income Level NA NA

Social Class and Occupation

NA NA

Page 10: Establishing a Dairy Farm

B TO B CUSTOMERS (DEALERS WILL NOT BE INVOLVED WITH NEPSHIRE)

Particulars Deals

Industry Food oriented: 4-10% discount depending upon order and location.Firm Café: 5% discount on yogurtsFirm Functions: 5% on all products.Retailers: 10- 15% depending upon the quantity and location.

Location Metro and Sub-Metro: 15% for retailers, 5% for Food oriented businesses. Villages: 10.5% for retailers, 8% for Food oriented business.

Size of the firm Larger the firm, larger the discounts (according to order)

Page 11: Establishing a Dairy Farm

SWOT (STRENGTH)

• Livestock products i.e. Milk & Meat are major source of food.

• Dairy sector has enormous potential for sizeable earnings

• Dairy sector in Nepal has a really low cost of production compare to competitive milk producing countries

• Plenty of human resource and manpower availability in dairy farming

Page 12: Establishing a Dairy Farm

STRENGTH

• The villagers do have long tradition of cattle and livestock rearing

• Large base of cattle for milk production

• Use of different breed of cow, the Holstein

• Introduction of new product in Nepali market

• Introduction of new technologies in the market

Page 13: Establishing a Dairy Farm

WEAKNESS

• Relatively small dairy cattle milk production market

• Unorganized sector, unaware of basic farm management practices including sanitary practices.

• Nutrition is still a problem and would increase the cost if the cow is sick.

Page 14: Establishing a Dairy Farm

WEAKNESS

• Enormous production losses due to endemic diseases every year (according to the research)

• Farmers lack education, technical skills, initiative and experience in modern dairy farming

Page 15: Establishing a Dairy Farm

OPPORTUNITIES

• Increasing demand of value added dairy products

• Local and global dairy products needs are much higher than supply

• Govt. of Nepal provides subsidies and tax cuts in dairy farming

• Commercially viable sector with great credit potential and absorption capacity

Page 16: Establishing a Dairy Farm

OPPORTUNITIES

• Cooperatives can play a big role for development of dairy sector in Nepal

• Dairy sector provides raw material for food industries

• Government provides technical support for the government

Page 17: Establishing a Dairy Farm

THREATS

• Implementation of WTO will result in open & competitive commodity pricing

• High risks of diseases in live stock

• Unorganized sector in Nepal, needs a lot of cleaning

Page 18: Establishing a Dairy Farm

THREATS

• Lack of media projection, non-recognition of problems and the stand of the government company-DDC

• Lack of coordination towards common causes & goals

• Lack of understanding of the farmers can make the farmers lose track of what they are doing.

Page 19: Establishing a Dairy Farm

FEASIBILITY

• Competition:Currently, there are not many dairy processing plants operating in the country. The major market players are as follows:DDCSitaramKathmandu Dairy

Page 20: Establishing a Dairy Farm

SUPPLY FOR MILK IN GLOBAL MARKET

RANK COUNTRY PRODUCTION(BILLION KG/Y)

1 India 114.4

2 United States 79.3

3 Pakistan 36

4 China 32.5

5 Germany 28.5

Page 21: Establishing a Dairy Farm

THE PRICE

• In Nepal, price of milk increases by one rupee per liter at every stage of production.

• Growing demand for dairy products in Asia is driving global milk prices.

• Before 2009 the milk prices went up to 46 US$/100 kg.

Page 22: Establishing a Dairy Farm

THE PRICE

• Market price dropped to below 20 US$/100 kg at the beginning of 2009.

• The milk price varies according to its quality and the season.

• In an average, it is sold at NRS. 48 per liter in the direct consumption, but varies at the Business to Business levels.

Page 23: Establishing a Dairy Farm

SALARY PLAN/ MONTH

• Total of 11 employees

• 3Managers: NRS 30, 000

• 4Production Staffs: NRS 15, 000

• 5Sales/Distribution: NRS 10, 000

• 2Care Takers: NRS 5,000

Page 24: Establishing a Dairy Farm

PRODUCTION

• Production TechniqueFarmer-Storage-Test-Purification-Package

• Quality controlLab test/ISO standards for dairy products to be followed

• Inventory controlLoad cold storage wagon and transport to respective warehouses immediately.

Page 25: Establishing a Dairy Farm

PROFITABILITY

• Milk price in Nepal per liter is NRS 48 in an average. The estimated sales of 10,000L/Month will generate NRS 480,000 • The sales of the other products at the rate of NRS

50 (average selling price) for estimated sales of 6,000 units would add NRS 300,000• Purchase of milk NRS 15/unit, workforce: 14/unit,

transportation: 4.2/unit, others: 2.2/unit= NRS 35.4/unit• GP forecast at given scenario: NRS12.6/unit (avg)

Page 26: Establishing a Dairy Farm

THANK YOU