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Business skills · Course 3 of 8 · AgriSETA aligned

Agripreneurship 101

7 modules  ·  2 hours  ·  All levels  ·  Free  ·   AgriSETA aligned

Farming is not just growing. It is a business. This course teaches you the business skills that turn a productive garden or small farm into a sustainable enterprise — from understanding your costs to building buyer relationships to registering your business and accessing funding. No accounting degree required.

By the end of this course you will be able to

Calculate your cost of production and know whether your farming activity is financially viable
Set prices that cover your costs, pay you fairly, and remain competitive in your target market
Build and maintain buyer relationships — with community markets, specialty grocers, and restaurants
Keep simple farm financial records that allow you to track profitability and access formal financing
Understand the registration requirements for a formal farming business in South Africa
Identify the funding opportunities available to smallholder farmers in Gauteng — grants, loans, and blended finance
Develop a simple one-page business plan for your indigenous crop enterprise
Agripreneur Module 1
1
The agripreneur mindset — farming as a business
16 min
The single biggest shift in thinking for most small-scale farmers is from "I am growing food" to "I am running a food business." The farming activities are the same. The records you keep, the decisions you make, and the way you think about time, land, and money are completely different.

What makes an agripreneur different from a farmer

A farmer grows a crop. An agripreneur grows a crop, tracks the cost of growing it, calculates whether the selling price covers those costs plus a profit, finds buyers before the crop is ready, negotiates pricing, records income and expenses, reinvests profit into the next season, and plans for the season after that.

The farming activities are identical. The business thinking is what separates a viable enterprise from one that produces food but doesn't sustain the farmer.

This distinction is not about scale. A backyard plot can be a business if managed properly. A large farm without records is just hope.

The three questions every agripreneur must answer

Cost of production: Seeds, labour, water, transport, packaging.

Profit price: Market price must exceed cost + margin.

Buyer: No buyer = donation, not business.

Indigenous crop advantage

Indigenous crops face less competition in formal markets. The barrier is knowledge, not scale or capital.

Mindset exercise

Do you know your cost per kg? Do you know your buyer before planting? Do you know your selling price?

If not, this is your starting point.

Check your understanding

Module 1 · 3 questions + reflection

1. Main difference between farmer and agripreneur?
A) Size
B) Crops
C) Business mindset
D) Land ownership
2. Advantage of indigenous crops?
A) Faster growth
B) Less competition
C) No water needed
D) Cheaper seeds
3. “No buyer = donation” means:
A) Market must be known before planting
B) Donate surplus
C) Quality irrelevant
D) Farming is not business
Reflection

What is your biggest gap: cost, buyer, or pricing?

Agripreneur Module 2
2
Understanding your costs — what it really costs to grow
18 min
Most small-scale farmers underestimate their cost of production — because they do not count their own labour, because they do not track small input costs, or because they only count cash costs and ignore in-kind inputs. This module teaches you to calculate your true cost of production — the number that tells you whether your farming is financially viable.

The full cost of production — what to include

Direct costs: seeds, water, compost, fertiliser, pest control, packaging, transport, hired labour.

Indirect costs: your own labour, land cost (real or notional), infrastructure depreciation, post-harvest losses.

Your own labour is the most commonly forgotten cost. If you work 20 hours per month at R30/hour, that is R600/month of real cost — even if unpaid.

Infrastructure also matters. A R5,000 structure lasting 5 years = R83/month cost. Losses also count — if 20% of produce is lost, that input cost is still real.

A worked example — jute mallow (10m² bed)

Seeds: R25
Compost: R50
Water: R30
Packaging: R20
Transport: R60
Labour: R720
Tunnel share: R50

Total cost: ± R955

Expected yield: 8–12kg over 3 months = 32–48 bunches.
At R20/bunch → R640–R960 income.

This shows a key insight: at low market prices, small beds barely break even. Profit requires higher prices, better efficiency, or scaling.

Cost of production worksheet

Choose one crop. Calculate all costs (direct + indirect). Estimate yield and income.

Then ask: Is the margin positive? If not, what must change — price, scale, or inputs?

Check your understanding

Module 2 · 3 questions + reflection

1. Which is an indirect cost?
A) Seeds
B) Water bill
C) Your own labour
D) Packaging
2. Why include post-harvest losses?
A) Inputs were used but no income earned
B) Tax benefit
C) Government refund
D) Only large farms need it
3. Best way to improve jute mallow profit?
A) Less watering
B) Higher-value buyers (restaurants)
C) Cheaper seeds
D) Smaller beds
Reflection

What cost did you previously ignore that most affected your profit?

Agripreneur Module 3
3
Pricing — how to set a price that works
15 min
Pricing is one of the most uncomfortable parts of farming for many small producers. Taking money for something you grew feels personal. But pricing is not personal — it is mathematics. This module gives you a clear, simple pricing framework that covers your costs, pays you fairly, and remains competitive.

The three-part pricing formula

1. Cover your cost of production: This is your minimum floor. You cannot go below it sustainably.

2. Include profit margin: 30–50% margin allows reinvestment, growth, and sustainability.

3. Match your market: Different buyers = different prices for the same crop.

Pricing for different markets

Community market: R10–25 per bunch. Compete on freshness and relationships.

Specialty grocers: R20–60 per bunch.

Restaurants: R60–150/kg. Weekly supply contracts, 30-day payments.

Health food / processed: R40–120 per pack. Drying and packaging increases value 5–10×.

Never price below your cost of production

Pricing below cost is not a strategy — it leads to loss and exit. Many farmers do this unknowingly due to lack of cost awareness or pressure from buyers.

Knowing your cost floor protects your business decisions and confidence.

Pricing exercise

Using your cost of production, calculate minimum price per kg with 40% margin.

Compare it with market prices. If community price is too low — switch channels (restaurants or specialty buyers).

Check your understanding

Module 3 · 3 questions + reflection

1. Pricing floor is:
A) Market price
B) Cost of production
C) Half restaurant price
D) Neighbour price
2. Value addition increases price by:
A) 1–2×
B) 2–3×
C) 5–10×
D) No change
3. Restaurants care most about:
A) Lowest price
B) Consistent supply
C) Variety
D) Certification
Reflection

Have you ever sold below fair value? What changed after learning cost-based pricing?

Agripreneur Module 4
4
Building buyer relationships — finding and keeping customers
16 min
A buyer relationship is the most valuable asset in your farming business. It is more valuable than your land, your infrastructure, or your seed collection — because without a buyer, none of the rest generates income. This module teaches you how to find buyers, make a first approach, and build relationships that sustain your business over time.

The three buyer channels for indigenous crops

Community markets: Show up consistently, talk to buyers, understand demand. This is your live market research space.

Specialty grocers: Visit directly, bring samples, be specific about supply and pricing.

Restaurants: Contact chefs/owners with a clear value proposition and sample offer.

The first sale is a conversation, not a transaction

Your first contact with a buyer is not about closing a deal — it is about understanding needs: volume, quality, frequency, packaging, and payment terms.

Listen first, take notes, and return with a clear proposal that matches their requirements.

Protecting buyer relationships

The biggest risk to buyer relationships is inconsistency — missed deliveries or unpredictable quality.

Communication is critical. If you cannot deliver, inform the buyer early.

Action exercise

Identify one buyer in each category: community market, specialty grocer, and restaurant.

Prepare your first visit or message this week — with samples or a short introduction.

Check your understanding

Module 4 · 3 questions + reflection

1. Main cause of lost buyer relationships?
A) High price
B) Inconsistency
C) Crop type
D) No certification
2. Best first approach to a restaurant?
A) Low price offer
B) Specific crops + sample
C) Ask them what they want
D) Price list first
3. Community market value?
A) Highest price
B) Export access
C) Income + market research
D) Guaranteed contracts
Reflection

What is one consistent action that would make you a reliable supplier?

Agripreneur Module 5
5
Record keeping — simple systems that work
14 min
Good records are the difference between knowing your business is profitable and hoping it is. They are also the primary evidence that funders, banks, and formal buyers require before they will engage with you. This module gives you a simple, practical record-keeping system you can start today with a notebook and a pen.

The four records every farming business needs

1. Income record: Every sale, date, product, quantity, buyer, price, total.

2. Expense record: Every input cost, supplier, and amount spent — keep receipts.

3. Production record: What you planted, harvested, yield per bed, losses.

4. Customer record: Buyer names, contacts, orders, prices, payment status.

The monthly review — 30 minutes that change your business

At the end of each month, compare income vs expenses and identify: profit, best crops, highest costs, and losses.

This short review gives you real business insight for better decisions next season.

Start today

Create four simple notebook sections: income, expenses, production, customers.

Record everything for the next 7 days and calculate totals at the end.

Check your understanding

Module 5 · 3 questions + reflection

1. Why is production record important?
A) Government requirement
B) Improves yield and cost accuracy
C) Organic certification
D) Market prediction
2. Why are financial records important?
A) Lower tax
B) Required by buyers/funders
C) Legal farming rule
D) Replace business plan
3. Monthly review time?
A) Full day
B) 30 minutes
C) Week
D) Year end only
Reflection

What record are you currently missing that would improve your decisions most?

Agripreneur Module 6
6
Registering your business — formal and legal in South Africa
14 min
Most small-scale farmers operate informally, and this is understandable at the very early stages. But formal registration opens significant doors: access to government grants, formal buyer accounts, business bank accounts, and legal protection. This module explains your options simply.

Your registration options

Sole proprietorship: No registration needed. Simple, but limited access to funding and formal systems.

Co-operative: Minimum 5 members. Shared ownership and access to government support programmes.

Pty Ltd: Registered via CIPC. Best for growth, funding access, and formal business operations.

Tax registration

Register with SARS once income exceeds R83,100/year. VAT registration applies above R1 million turnover.

Most small farmers can operate below these thresholds in early stages without complex tax burdens.

What formal registration unlocks

Access to GDARD programmes, IDC funding, NEF support, SEDA mentorship, AgriSETA training, and formal buyer contracts.

It also enables business bank accounts and structured growth.

Start simple

A Pty Ltd registration costs around R300 and takes 5–10 working days via CIPC.

This small step can unlock major financial and market opportunities.

Check your understanding

Module 6 · 3 questions + reflection

1. Cost of registering a Pty Ltd?
A) R5000
B) R1500
C) R300
D) Free
2. Minimum co-operative members?
A) 2
B) 3
C) 5
D) 10
3. Formal registration enables:
A) Market selling only
B) Grants and formal funding access
C) Farming permission
D) Seed access only
Reflection

What is stopping you from formal registration today — and what is your first step?

Agripreneur Module 7
7
Your one-page business plan
17 min
A business plan does not need to be a 40-page document. For a small indigenous crop enterprise, a one-page plan that covers the essential questions is more useful than a long document that never gets read. This module walks you through creating yours.

The seven questions your plan must answer

What do you grow? Be specific about crops and location.

How much land? Current area, tunnel vs open field, and growth plan.

Who are your buyers? Named buyers or clearly defined market channels.

Monthly costs: From your cost of production calculations.

Monthly income: Expected sales volume × price.

First year plan: What you will plant, harvest, build, and sell.

What you need: Land, capital, skills, infrastructure, or connections.

Your one-page plan — write it now

Use the seven questions above and write your draft immediately — even if incomplete.

A 60% complete plan is more powerful than a perfect plan that never exists.

Share your draft for feedback and refine over time.

Check your understanding

Module 7 — Course completion

1. Main purpose of a one-page business plan?
A) Impress funders
B) Create clarity and structure
C) Replace records
D) Guarantee funding
2. Gap analysis helps because:
A) Request more money
B) Identifies what you must build or learn
C) First thing funders read
D) Shows humility
Final reflection

What is the most important insight from this course, and what will you do in the next 7 days because of it?