fbpx
Print this page
Friday, 01 July 2016 10:34

Calling paddock to plate start-ups ready to Sprout

Written by 
Dunedin entrepreneurs Andrew Humphries and Tom Rivett created AgriTrack. Photo: Hamish Johnson. Dunedin entrepreneurs Andrew Humphries and Tom Rivett created AgriTrack. Photo: Hamish Johnson.

Sprout is scouting the country to find the next agritech superstar to take part in the second serving of its accelerator programme.

The national agritech business accelerator, is searching the country for eight budding entrepreneurs with embryonic agritech businesses operating in the paddock to the plate space, and using technologies that improve yield, efficiency and profitability.

The chosen eight will receive a cash investment of $20,000 and be placed in a five month part time and remotely delivered programme that will see them flown around the country for mentoring and training from world-class leaders in technology, research and business growth.

The programme will culminate in an opportunity to pitch for investment to a handpicked group of potential investors, corporate partners and potential customers.

Sprout Business strategy advisor Stu Bradbury says Sprout wants to help entrepreneurs grow their start-ups from great ideas into investment-ready early stage companies.

"We know that many early-stage entrepreneurs find it difficult to articulate their ideas and in turn gain support from customers, stakeholders and investors. We've addressed this with the Sprout programme and are happy to report that our first group of eight alumni all experienced strong business growth as a result," he says.

AgriTrack was one of the eight companies that participated in the 2015 programme and that pitched to a broad range of investors from Auckland to Otago.

AgriTrack secured $550,000 of capital and is on track to grow sales by 80% year on year, and has achieved a 100% conversion rate from product trial to sales with Australian farmers this year.

AgriTrack CEO Andrew Humphries says, "When we started out with Sprout, we had a product on the market but we didn't have a coherent plan for growth, talent strategy, working capital or a strong sales and distribution model. Those five months were the hardest I've worked in my life, but the support and advice has allowed us to develop all areas of our business plan and now the capital we've raised means we're well-equipped to take our business to the next level."

Register to apply for the 2016/2017 Sprout programme now. See sproutagritech.com.register. The programme commences on October6.

The specific primary production areas covered in Sprout's definition of Agritech include: agriculture, horticulture, forestry, pipfruit, viticulture and aquaculture.

Sprout is being supported and funded by a mix of public and private sector leaders in agritech and start-up investment, including Callaghan Innovation, Livestock Improvement Corporation, Massey University, Gallagher Group, NZTE, Sir Stephen Tindall's K1W1 fund, Enterprise Angels and Manawatu Investment Group.

More like this

Speed up your agritech venture

Farm to fork agritech start-ups nationally and internationally are being encouraged to come forward for the next cohort of the Sprout Accelerator. 

Featured

Feds make case for rural bank lending probe

Bankers have been making record profits in the last few years, but those aren’t the only records they’ve been breaking, says Federated Farmers vice president Richard McIntyre.

National

Fonterra unveils divestment plan

Fonterra is exploring full or partial divestment options for its global Consumer business, as well as its integrated businesses Fonterra…

Fonterra appoints new CFO

Fonterra has appointed a new chief financial officer, seven months after its last CFO’s shock resignation.

Machinery & Products

GPS in control

In a move that will make harvesting operations easier, particularly in odd-shaped paddocks, Kuhn has announced that GPS section control…