Show and tell time for Tiffany
wildlife treats
Editors note: This is the second
installment in a four-part series following one year in the life of Bruce Tiffany, an
entrepreneurial farmer and repair shop owner preparing to market his familys brand
of wildlife treats. Now that he has perfected a blend of agricultural commodities,
pelletized with AURIs help, Tiffany is ready to package and test-market his new
product.
By Cindy Green
Photos by Rolf Hagberg
Redwood Falls, Minn. It was Autumn when
Bruce Tiffany gazed out at the old granary in his backyard. Though time and weather had
turned its once bright red face a wrinkled grey, he didnt see a building that had
lost its usefulness nor did he see it transformed into a lake cabin, as his wife
envisioned. Instead, Tiffany saw conveyors and baggers and sealers filling the old storage
shed with bags of wildlife treats.
A half-year later, hes realizing his dream under the trade
name Tiffany Family Farms.
Hes preparing to bag and test-market wildlife treats, intended
to lure wild game to hunting grounds or to backyards for viewing and photography. The
treats are made from a proprietary blend of crop and food processing ingredients.
For a 43-year-old repair shop owner who also manages a
highly-diversified 1,500-acre farm, the venture is another stubborn move to
self-sufficiency. If you dont take any initiative to improve your lot in life
or affect the outcome, then you really dont deserve the rewards, Tiffany says.
With the help of AURIs Al Doering at the Waseca pilot plant,
Tiffany spent months pelletizing feed formulations for testing on wild deer. In the
meantime, he learned his treats are palatable to wild turkey and possibly bear.
Now that he has a demonstrated product, the real hunt is about to
begin capturing a market niche. Tiffany doesnt want to approach retailers
empty-handed. So before engaging in a full-scale marketing study, hes gearing up to
bag and label packages of his trademarked Trophy Treats and Nature Treats for a retail
show and tell.
I know some people who will research things to death and never
go with it. Im on the other side Ill just try it and see what
happens.
No mental pictures
I want something I can put in (retailers) hands so
Im not having to make promises or draw mental pictures, Tiffany says. I
want to make sure I can deliver on my word, first of all. The most important thing is that
your buyers can trust that what they think theyre buying is what they buy.
To make test packages, Tiffany has set up an on-farm processing
plant on a slim budget. I dont want to incur a huge debt to make this thing
work.
Ive learned some lessons in farming.
Thats where the old granary comes in handy. Tiffanys
torn out interior walls, wired, and added a blender, scale and ingredient bin. He designed
some of his own equipment, including the bagger, and scrounged for used equipment.
Come to think of it, I havent bought anything new, Tiffany says. I
dont know if that is exactly the way to go, but I want my investments to pay off
fast.
Bagging wildlife treats sounds simple but requires many
problem-solving steps size, seal, shelf-life, nutritional label, logo design, price
to get to the final package. I want the product to be seen, so that limits
the kind of bag I can use, Tiffany says. His clear plastic bag requires a clear heat
seal, adding cost. Trophy TreatsTM will be packaged in 10- and 40- pound bags and Nature
TreatsTM in two and five-pound bags.
Tiffany reduced his products moisture content enough to ensure
at least nine months shelf life. One of the ingredients has natural
antioxidants and preserving qualities, so he doesnt have to use artificial
preservatives that wildlife might detect. Wildlife have the ability to smell and
taste things we cant. We dont want to have any mold or off-odors or things
that might deter them.
Pretty packages for people
While hes confident the treats will be palatable to deer,
turkeys and bear, its humans he must attract with the package. For label design, the
do-it-yourselfer took in an outsider a professional graphics designer. I
recognize where my strengths and weaknesses are, Tiffany says, although I
might think my weaknesses are my strengths and muddle into it anyway.
Tiffany and his wife Ann have had debates on what we want on
the label. I want the label to tell the story yet Ive been told youve
got one or two seconds to form an opinion. He settled on a cleaned-up version of a
collage of images he put together a deer, a turkey, a farm setting.
Our major debate is how bright to make the colors,
particularly whether to use a yellow-green or forest green with red lettering. One
thought is its got to be bright enough to catch someones eye another
opinion is you cant make it gaudy.
But if you open the kitchen cupboard, some
of the most recognizable brand names have the worst color combinations.
Some label information is required, such as net weight, usage
instructions and ingredients. Since the product is a treat rather than a complete feed,
only a limited list of nutritional qualities is necessary. Labeling requirements vary by
state and country, however, so Tiffany has to ensure he complies in his target market
region, including Canada.
The final issue to settle before test marketing is price
tricky because Tiffanys production costs are tentative. He doesnt want to
invest in a large inventory before assuring a market, but buying small quantities of
bags and labels gets expensive the per unit price is outrageous. It makes it
difficult to estimate what the retail price should be.
Market expectations
Tiffany expects many marketing questions to be answered once
hes in the sporting goods retailers door. Were going to smaller,
independent retailers the ones with entrepreneurial spirit because I think
they will help us and offer advice. If I find that retailers are saying no, Im
willing to change. If we strike out with one, well learn something if you
strike out with the big guys youre out.
I enjoy the sales process. You go in and find out what you can
help them with and that in turn will help you, Tiffany says. I find it
exciting because to me, each and every one is a challenge and I thrive on
challenge.
Time, on the other hand, is his biggest frustration. When
youre asking other people to send supplies, samples and do some of the work for you,
it just takes longer than you think it should. Everybody has prioritized their time.
You get weekends and holidays
and before you know it another month flies by, Tiffany says. You cant
give up your day job, so I know come spring planting season that allocating my time and
making it all happen is going to be difficult. I also have the repair business; Ive
said no to some things, but I pretty much keep doing what Ive done and
sandwich this in.
We want to grow this business but I dont know how big. I
dont have any expectations on volume. I dont think all the big guys envisioned
where theyd be, and some who thought theyd take the world over found out
differently.
Tiffany is focusing on his new business venture day by day.
The first major success is going to be the first order we get, and after that, how
much success we have, I dont know thats not in my thought process right
now.
