Krishi Utsho– Small holder farmers’ one stop solution center
Agriculture remains a key sector of Bangladesh economy, contributing 19.6% to the national GDP and providing employment for 63% of the population. Over 76% of the country's farmers are small and marginal with limited access to agriculture resources and opportunities. The situation is more detrimental for women farmers in rural Bangladesh. At present, 46% of the total farming population in Bangladesh are women. Despite their contribution, women farmers get less access to markets, productive agriculture resources, credit and technology due to discrimination based on lack of recognition and gender inequality, impacting national agriculture output and food security. To mitigate this challenge, CARE Bangladesh has developed an innovative agro supply chain ‘Krishi Uthso’ (KU) that offers quality agro inputs and services from top manufacturers through a network of smallholder input shops. KU supports marginalized farmers, especially women, to increase their yield and income, thus contributing to food security and economic empowerment.
Bangladesh is a densely populated country of more than 163 million people. Over 70% population lives in rural areas and 87% of rural households rely on agriculture. Nearly two-thirds of the labor force are directly employed by agriculture and contribute to the country’s food security, including smallholder farmers. Yet, these smallholder farmers, particularly women, have limited access to productive inputs, assets, formal agro markets and finance that constrain their agriculture output and incomes, and, ultimately, economic growth.
The lack of resources and opportunities impacts a significant number of the population dependent on agriculture. 50 million rural people are suffering from food insecurity and extreme poverty due to low agricultural yield and income. Factors contributing to the problem include:
1)Smallholder farmers are largely overlooked by both private and public sector due to their perceived risks and skepticism about their commercial viability, constraining their productivity and income potential
2)Due to smallholder farmers’ limited purchasing power and market knowledge – they often fall prey to exploitative informal intermediaries, paying higher prices for agricultural inputs in remote areas
3)Agricultural gender inequalities put women farmers at a higher risk of food insecurity Smallholder farmers, especially women, are disproportionately affected by climate change and natural disasters
Krishi Uthso supply chain has been designed to reach rural farmers, especially women, through network of input shops to meet their agro needs on time. CARE Bangladesh established KU using a Human-Centered Design (HCD) model to increase its acceptance. To understand farmers’ needs, KU conducted seminar and awareness sessions at farmers’ doorstep to analyze the gap in availability of agricultural resources. Based on demand from smallholder farmers, customized product and services packages are prepared for delivery at input shops by sourcing from different agro input suppliers. KU is also developing a Customer Relationship Management (CRM) system to monitor farmers’ purchase behavior analysis to further cater to their needs.
Krishi Utsho is a market-based solution that brings agricultural innovations to smallholder farmers by:
1)Providing quality agriculture inputs on time
2)Providing technical knowledge and extension services
3)Offering fair price by acting as the ‘ missing middle’
4)Offering financial services by engaging formal financial institutions and providing loan with climate resilient insurance
5)Recognizing women’s limited mobility and access to markets by delivering to women farmers’ doorstep through home based women entrepreneurs
6)Mitigating the shocks of climate change and natural disasters through maintaining buffer stocks to increase farmers’ resilience
Krishi Utsho is an emerging social enterprise that is serving 63,000 farmers through 279 franchised shops in rural Bangladesh and brought progressive social advancement since 2014. The model essentially comprises of four components, whose functions are managed by KU:
(a) 25 Private and Public Partners who supply quality agro based products to rural markets and provide technical knowledge transfer as well as extension services; (b) 279 agro input shops that are local rural entrepreneurs, or microfranchisees selling private sector products to rural smallholder farmers and providing embedded services such as technical knowledge or access to credit; (c) Smallholder marginalized rural farmers who are benefiting from the purchase and use of improved agro based input products and services from KU franchisees; (d) A Third Party Operator, or business intermediary supporting KU in warehouse maintenance and transportation of products;
KU as the emerging social business that is acting as the Franchiser managing the operations of the franchisee network; adding value to products and services; ensuring quality control; facilitating multi stakeholder engagement; fostering innovation; measuring results; and using ICT based applications to collect and analyze real time data to ensure adaptive management for enhanced enterprise efficiency.
The solution is governed by a Standard Operational Procedure (SOP) to ensure quality of services provided by the project and the input shop owners. The supply chain management is operated through a software based Point of Sales (PoS) and Inventory Management System (IMS) scheme while the procurement and finance is supported by an accounting software. Additionally, KU has piloted a comprehensive Artificial Intelligence (AI) based Customer Relationship Management (CRM) system that is backed by a call center to support smallholder farmers with direct access to the sector specialist team. CRM software is able to collect, store, and analyze data on KU customers to help manage expansion as well as to develop a ‘big data platform’. Proper analysis of this data will allow KU to understand trends in purchasing behavior, support operations, market penetration, and customer segmentation to improve inventory management and planning, and to anticipate and meet the needs of smallholder farmers, particularly women. Improving smallholder access to affordable resources can improve the productivity and livelihoods of smallholder farmers and ultimately stimulate economic growth.
- Agriculture
- Technology

Project Coordinator