Mosaic Agriculture
I am passionate about including smallholder farmers in the 21st century agrarian economy. The idea for Cinch came from living with smallholder farmers in west Africa and learning that farming at small scale is a poverty trap. Cinch takes a new approach to addressing this problem: transferring all risk associated with growing crops away from smallholders and providing a guaranteed income.
Before Cinch, I was the Director of Policy and Outreach at Tala, a financial technology company providing access to credit for the globally underserved. At Tala, I co-founded the Digital Lenders Association of Kenya (DLAK) to advocate for responsible digital credit products. I also launched Tala's operations in the Philippines, building a local team of 100+ employees and monthly revenue of over $10MM.
Prior to Tala, I was a Consultant at Dalberg Global Development Advisors, and served as a Peace Corps Volunteer in Cabo Verde.
Cinch solves two problems:
- Smallholder farmers cannot invest to generate a reliable income on less than 10 acres of land
- Because smallholders collectively own large percentages of arable land in emerging markets, the agricultural sector is under-productive in these countries
In 2019, we built a model farm to solve both of these problems. Cinch worked with a community of internally displaced persons (IDPs) in central Kenya to pilot a new approach to agriculture. Dozens of families agreed to lease their land to Cinch and we invested in irrigation systems and a professional farming team. Cinch ran these 53 small plots as one commercial "mosaic" farm, growing high value horticulture products like French Beans and garlic.
Selling crops at a high margin allows Cinch to provide three immediate income opportunities to poor farmers:
- Guaranteed monthly income from their lease
- Job opportunities on Cinch's farm
- A quarterly dividend whenever Cinch is profitable
Cinch is creating a path for smallholders to transition out of farming, while building long-lasting wealth. More than 2 billion people live in smallholder households with little prospect of escaping poverty. This poverty trap exists because making a stable income through farming requires investment, and poor farmers can't afford to invest.
Helping smallholder farmers means addressing poverty, as they comprise 75% of the world's poor. Many organizations believe the solution is to help smallholder farmers access to capital. We believe that only a complete risk transfer, giving farmers guaranteed incomes, can help farmers build prosperity.
How does Cinch transfer risk? We grow produce for farmers, including installing infrastructure and bringing a professional agronomy team. Those investments only make sense at scale, which Cinch reaches by aggregating plots together to create a "mosaic" farm comprised of many smaller parcels. Farmers bear no responsibility for these costs, nor do they suffer if yields are below expectations; that's Cinch's responsibility.
With a guaranteed income from Cinch's monthly lease payment, farmers can afford to live differently. As Cinch manages their land for them, farmers save their income and make transformative investments, like sending their children to school and improving their home.
Cinch is a land transformation company that constructs commercial farms. Our commercial farms are unique: rather than a single tract of land, they are the aggregate of dozens of small plots. Farmers who previously farmed these plots themselves instead lease the land to Cinch. We call this "mosaic agriculture".
Our approach functions as a risk transfer: Cinch absorbs the costs associated with installing irrigation and buying inputs to grow higher value crops, while also bearing responsibility for selling those crops. The farmers who previously had highly volatile earnings from farming at small scale now earn guaranteed income in the form of a monthly lease payment. These farmers also have access to job opportunities on the large scale commercial farm Cinch has created with their land, and receive dividends according to how much land they contributed.
The impact is clear: farmers earn five times more than they did before, land is dramatically more productive and the agriculture sector in underdeveloped markets has taken a large step forward toward realizing its commercial potential. Farmers continue to own the land, while Cinch increases the value of the farmer's primary asset.
Village 2 in Solio, Laikipia County, Kenya has 2000 households. Last year, each earned an average of $400 USD. In some ways, Village 2 is remarkable: its residents were forcibly relocated in 2008 from a nearby forest. For leaving behind their entire lives, the government gave them 1/2 acre to live on, and another 4 acres to farm.
In other ways, they are unremarkable: like 2 billion others globally, they earn much of their income from farming a small parcel of land and fight a constant struggle to cover expenses.
Farmers who joined Cinch are older, generally over 50, and rely on their children to financially support them. They live without running water, in houses that with dirt floors and no electricity. Virtually none have access to Kenya's NHIF healthcare insurance or NSSF social security fund.
We know who they are because we spend hours sitting in their homes, discussing their families and understanding their challenges. We also meet outside their homes, in the fields and sometimes at our office, and ask what they like about Cinch, and what they would change. We always listen and search for a middle ground to meet their needs, while building a sustainable business.
- Elevating understanding of and between people through changing people’s attitudes, beliefs, and behaviors
Why is agriculture in Africa underproductive?
Two key reasons are that land is fragmented, and fragmentation inhibits investments that make agriculture profitable. Smallholder farming drives land fragmentation and has existed for millennia. For a smallholder to stop farming, she needs to know there is a better alternative.
Finding an alternative for smallholders to prosper should not require a leap of faith. Farmers choose Cinch to manage their land because we deliver immediate value: when a farmer joins Cinch, she starts earning within minutes.
Farmers change their behavior because Cinch gives them a choice, but the choice is always theirs.
At Dalberg Global Development Advisors, I led a project for USAID to understand whether smallholder farmers in Mozambique would be willing to buy climate resilient maize seed.
The value of this seed seemed clear: regardless of drought, farmers could expect above-baseline yields. This would directly translate into more income.
Yet, while interviewing hundreds of smallholder maize farmers in Tete, Nampula and Mocuba, a few paradoxes emerged. First, farmers rarely had a clear understanding of their costs. For example, the government routinely sold traditional seeds on subsidies, or farmers reused their own seed. Second, whenever farmers could share their past annual revenue, there was a boundless optimism about how much they would earn next year, regardless of whether that was consistent with the past. Finally, the idea of growing their maize differently, particularly if it required an up-front investment was unconscionable: if something went wrong, their families would starve.
My core insight from these conversations was that, while farmers were aware that their existing practices were keeping them poor, being poor is better than starving. That realization was both heartbreaking and an invitation to consider the root problem: how can we eliminate risk so these farmers could try something new?
I lived with a family of smallholder farmers, Tellis and Anna Andrade, as a Peace Corps Volunteer in Cabo Verde. As with millions of farmers globally, they are caught in the poverty trap of smallholder, semi-subsistence farming. They can neither afford to stop farming (they would starve) nor invest in their land for it to generate a durable income. By farming alongside Tellis and Anna on the island of Santiago, I learned that poverty perpetuates itself because it denies the fundamental tenet of capitalism: reward requires a risk. When you're a poor farmer, you can't afford to take any risks, like taking loans to install irrigation, because if you fail, your family can't eat.
We've built a model farm to demonstrate that our concept works. On 200 acres, we've recruited nearly a hundred farmers and are on track to deliver annualized revenue of over $15,000 USD per acre. That represents a >1000% increase in productivity of the land, and allows us to multiply farmers' incomes by at least 5x. We've recruited farmers, aggregated and transformed their land, and delivered produce to our buyers. We are excited to replicate these results with a second (and third) farm in Kenya.
That progress is a testament to my efficacy as an operator. Beyond analytical skills that I built as a consultant for the UN Foundation, USAID and WFP, I can achieve results in low resources environments. This skillset, which I first developed as a Peace Corps Volunteer working on an arid island in west Africa, helps my teams convert strategy into action.
I work effectively with a diverse array of stakeholders to achieve results together, as evidenced by Cinch recruiting dozens of farmers, raising money from global investors and partnering with high impact organizations across Kenya. I am tactical, constantly evaluating how our team can achieve the most impact relative to our limited time and budget. We built a fully irrigated 200 acre farm out of idle pasture land in 10 weeks, while navigating all of the official processes around registering our business, compensating our workers and sourcing water and power sustainably.
In 2019 and 2020, Kenya has had some of the worst flooding in decades. Between November and April of this year, central Kenya experienced over six times the annual rainfall on a monthly basis. In February, Cinch lost our entire first garlic harvest to Downey Mildew, an inoculum that proliferates in flooding conditions.
Losing over $400,000 in revenue within five months of launching our business was a tremendous setback. The constant threat of the worst swarms of locusts in East Africa in 75 years made the situation even more precarious.
Cinch is resilient. We combated these environmental challenges by developing a comprehensive land preparation strategy to counter inevitable floods to come. Our teams now prepare beds 45 cm tall to lift seeds above flood waters, and cut sloped drainage channels to wick waters away. We've also partnered with a subsidiary of Swiss Re to insure our crops with multi-peril protection, including total losses due to flooding and its effects.
Cinch has overcome tremendous adversity to deliver on our promise of transformative incomes for some of the world's poorest people.
My core responsibility as a Peace Corps Volunteer in São Nicolau, Cabo Verde, was teaching students aged 12-20 at the local high school. I continue to admire teachers for their incredible impact in a highly challenging role, but also now appreciate how teaching is a wonderful platform to have broader impact in the community.
Through my students, I met their families. By visiting their parents at work, or having dinner in their homes, I quickly deepened my understanding of their daily lives and challenges they faced. We built trust. That trust, which started by teaching their children and grew by spending time with siblings, parents and grandparents, became a foundation for many more projects we built together in the community.
To reduce the incidence of drowning, we opened a swim school. Farmers in the community worked with me to found the country's first seed bank to improve maize quality. In our village, I worked with a local entrepreneur to open a laundromat, which helped save precious water lost while hand washing clothes. Businesses I co-founded created dozens of jobs in an economically depressed community; all of these businesses still exist nearly ten years later.
- For-profit, including B-Corp or similar models
