Solution for farmers, Household
Dairy Launches Initiative to Help Dairy Farmers

Trevor Tomkins, Ph.D. and recently retired chief executive officer of  Milk Specialties Global, looked outside  the traditional aid and  assistance models to create an enterprise-based development organization  - venture | dairy - whose mission is to work with partners  around the globe to build and sustain these enterprises for the benefit  of individual producer families and their communities.
The launch of venture | dairy comes as the global demand for milk  continues to rapidly increase, outpacing supply in much of the  developing world.  Promoting social entrepreneurship and international  development, Tomkins and the venture | dairy organization is  working to increase the efficiency and productivity of small-scale dairy  production in emerging markets. This in turn, is expected to  demonstrate significant residual benefits not just for the producers and  their communities, but also for long-term economic stability and for  the environment.

"venture | dairy was founded to empower dairy entrepreneurs to establish sustainable business practices that can improve their lives, the lives of their families and their communities," said Tomkins. "This is the driving force behind our organization."
What is venture | dairy?
Structured to produce measurable outcomes, venture | dairy is  both a not-for-profit organization and a for-profit social investment  fund.  The not-for-profit operation prepares dairy enterprises to thrive  by supporting technology advancement and training in dairy production,  and coaching those involved through the fundamentals of business and  value-chain development.  
The social investment fund provides access to affordable, patient  capital in the form of loans or equity that can be used to procure  equipment, purchase feed, build infrastructure and oversee operations.   Combining the strengths of a not-for-profit organization and an  impact-driven social investment fund, venture | dairy allows  donors and investors to support the organization's initiatives in ways  that best meet their financial and philanthropic goals.
"venture | dairy's impact component is in the quantifiable  returns it will provide for investors and the entrepreneurs it helps,"  explained Tomkins.  "Our fund is designed to benefit both the  entrepreneurs in the developing economies and the investors in the fund  who will see real and measureable results."
The organization's inaugural project is the formation of a Cattle Hub in  Nicaragua that will work with farmers to provide services and products  to improve milk production and farm profitability. The Nicaraguan dairy  company, Centrolac, is one of the partners in the project. And Tetra  Laval Food for Development Office, who works in close partnership with  governments, development agencies, NGOs, local dairies and farmers to  deliver 6.7 billion packages of milk and other nutritious drinks to 51  million children in schools in over 50 countries around the world, will  serve as an advisor.
venture | dairy is also undertaking a feasibility study in Rwanda  to determine whether that country's developing dairy industry can be  helped by construction of a dairy processing plant.
How Did venture | dairy Come to Life?
The idea for venture | dairy came from Tomkins' years of business travel and living in other countries, including South Africa.
"My wife and I had planned to stay in South Africa for one year, but we  ended up staying four," he said. "The experience was really an  incredible opening of eyes in terms of the world, and understanding  people don't have the same opportunities. Some don't have anything close  to the same standards of living; we saw poverty up close and personal.  And it started to trip a trigger that there has to be a way of helping  these smaller farmers by finding opportunities to improve their dairy  production."
In 1996, Tomkins became the president of Milk Specialties. Though the  company was in a tough financial position, he assumed the challenge of  rebuilding it. By 2006, Milk Specialties had seen healthy growth and a  new equity group came in - Stonehenge Partners, based in Columbus, Ohio,  USA. 
"Stonehenge helped 'boost the rocket ship' by bringing in new capital  and new ideas," he said. "In the last six years, we built one of the  largest specialty milk protein processing companies in the world in  terms of processing whey proteins for the health and wellness and sports  nutrition industries. Last December, Milk Specialties was sold to the  management team and a new private equity group, and I was ready to start  my second career in this new development role."
For the last 20 years, Tomkins has been heavily involved with Heifer  International, serving as Chair of the Board of Trustees of Heifer  International Foundation and on the Board of Directors of Heifer  International itself for several years. 
"It was during that time that I got to travel into a number of rural  economies in Eastern Europe, China, Central and South America," he said.  "I saw how extraordinarily potent Heifer International's livestock is  in terms of helping change lives. You can give to people and help them  get off the bottom rung through the gift of livestock. Lives were  changed."

How to Create Change?
Tomkins started to realize that in order to see growth and change,  there needed to be ongoing access to the kind of technology and capital  that's been missing in much of the developing world.
"Very simply, local banks and institutions don't have the appetite for  the risk that's involved with the dairy industry," he said. "The dairy  industry requires relatively sophisticated technology and financial  instruments if it's going to be successful, because investment in a milk  processing plant, for example, costs several million dollars. But a  milk processing plant can totally change the lives of a small dairy  community. But where do they come up with $3 to $4 million dollars?" 
Two years ago, the board of Milk Specialties agreed to establish venture | dairy  when Tomkins stepped down as CEO to concentrate on development of the  organization. Stonehenge also saw the benefits that the concept of  social entrepreneurship with impact investing and philanthro-capital  offered through venture | dairy. 
"When you look across the world, there are many NGO's and governments  that pour a lot of money into particular regions, hoping to change the  direction of lives," said Tom Utgard, principal at Stonehenge Partners,  at the official launch of venture | dairy in Chicago.  "Historically, those changes have only lasted as long as the capital has  because they have not built sustainable systems."
Utgard said the concept behind venture | dairy is to put capital  to work, but that capital has to be smart capital. The capital has to  build a sustainable economic system within a region, because if you  don't have a sustainable economic region, there is nothing for people to  build around. 
"In the financial community today, food and agriculture are a pretty  stable environment, and generally are a growing business area for  investment," Tomkins said. "When you connect all of this, we've found  our purpose: taking technology that is appropriate into the developing  communities and also taking in capital."

How Does It Work?
"venture | dairy is a 501(c)(3), not-for-profit, but it is a  general partner in the investment fund, as well," he said. "This is a  unique structure, but one that the developing world is going to see more  and more."
A 501(c)(3) works well because grants are still needed to help  developing organizations get to the stage where they're really ready to  receive capital, he said. With social philanthropy, the big problem is  that there's a lot of money out there, but there aren't many  opportunities to invest because organizations aren't set-up for it.  
A 501(c)(3) will be the grounded organization, offering grants,  technology, training and assistance, and the investment fund will take  in the capital-informed loans or formal equity.
"It's not necessary to turn it in three to five years," he said.  "Because it's slower, and we're not looking for the venture capital  returns that one might typically look for in a sort of classic startup.  We're looking for a reasonable investment; it may well be better than  the standards for the stock markets. If you get 7 to 10 per cent return,  you're doing quite well - if you can get 15 per cent, you're doing very  well." 
Those sorts of returns are quite possible because of the whole demand  for the end product - meat, milk and milk products, he said.
Who Should Invest?
venture | dairy is looking for investment from organizations,  high net-worth individuals, family foundations, and people who value the  concept and share its ideals. He said investors interested in  agriculture are also connecting with them.  
"Some people prefer to give some money to the 501(c)(3), because they've  really got a philanthropic bent, but we think that more and more people  in today's environment are looking for an investment," he said. "They  want to see something really tangible. So they'd be able to invest, for  example, specifically in our projects in Nicaragua or Rwanda." 
This article is the first in a three-part series. Watch for future articles about how venture | dairy is building a Cattle Hub in Nicaragua and its plans for Rwanda and other countries. To go to the venture | dairy website, click here.   





















