Check this out...Farm Dog podcast

Anyone out there interested in herding dogs and livestock guardian dogs? How about terriers and other farm dogs? Am I (Aaron S.) the only nerd who could talk about breed histories and training and canine farm hands for hours and not get enough? Quite possibly, yes.

But the Farm Dog podcast, which I host, has been out there for the public to download for a couple of months now, and the listener analytics tell me there are literally tens of people in the world like me. I suspect some of you might be also.

There are four, hour-long episodes ready to be consumed on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, and many other platforms, and several more already in the can. Here’s what’s available so far:

Coming soon are episodes about guardian dogs in the land of wolves and mountain lions, border collies as cow dogs with a serious cowboy, and a breed profile on the English shepherd.

Each episode is a labor of love, but also a promotion for Goats On The Go®, so listen, leave a review, and share it with others. Thanks!

How does Goats On The Go® use your information?

You may have noticed that, other than the detailed affiliate agreement you signed, we here at Goats On The Go® are not big on contracts and formal policies. We like to avoid “legalese” whenever we can. There are no “end user agreements” for you to not read and acknowledge by checking little boxes after scrolling through 10 pages of text.

Nonetheless, it’s probably time that we put together a policy of sorts as to how Goats On The Go, LC will use and not use your information. So, here goes…

Your contact information:

  • We will connect potential customers to you using the phone number and email address you’ve given us for your profile page on the GoatsOnTheGo.com website;

  • We will give your contact information to Premier 1 Supplies to make you eligible for the affiliate discount;

  • You will receive the “Affiliate Notes” newsletter at your email address, but you may unsubscribe at any time;

  • Until you unsubscribe, you will continue to get promotional emails intended primarily for recruiting new affiliates (you can decide if these are still useful to you or not);

  • We will not sell any of your contact information.

Your photos posted on the Goats On The Go® Affiliate Facebook Group (or other internal forum):

  • We operate under the assumption that if you post a before/after photo set on the forum, you’d like to have it promoted, and Goats On The Go, LC may use it in its own promotions and will give you credit for the photo;

  • For photos that are not before/after pics, we encourage all affiliates to seek permission from the poster before using them, and always credit the owner;

  • We encourage everyone to be sensitive to the fact that some photos that are posted inside the forum are not intended for broad public consumption — we want everyone to be comfortable sharing their bad days as well as their good days;

Your public posts on all social media platforms:

  • If they are public, we follow the rules of the platforms for sharing affiliates’ posts.

Your family/staff photo you submitted for your profile page on GoatsOnTheGo.com:

  • If you designated a photo to accompany your profile page on our website (which we recommend), we make the assumption you want it to be part of the promotion of your targeted grazing business;

  • Unless you tell us otherwise, we may use your profile photo in promotional emails, social media posts, etc. with the intent of driving customers to you.

That’s it. Simple, short and sweet. If you would like the 10-page legalese version, or if you have any questions, contact Aaron Steele.

To solar graze or not to solar graze? Think like a farmer.

If you’re reading this you’ve been through the Goats On The Go® basic training, and many of you have been profiting from your goat grazing service for years. If there’s one thing you should know by now, it’s that your service is worth far more than the value of the food your goats get from your customer’s properties. Right? Right?! (Crowd responds with a resounding, “Yes!!”)

You’ve learned to not think like a farmer even though you are a livestock caretaker. A farmer would say, “I have livestock to feed, livestock feed costs money, so if you give me livestock feed (weeds and brush on your property), it’s like you’re giving me money!” We know better, don’t we? Providing our goat grazing service is hard and too valuable to give away for free.

But when it comes to deciding whether you want to offer grazing on solar fields in your territories, you should think like a farmer — sort of.

How does a farmer think?

Here’s some farmer-think that can help us with decisions about solar grazing:

  • Farmers think at scale. They deal with large expenses and large revenues all the time, and instead if being intimidated, they ask, “How do we get this done?” Their solutions are also big.

  • Farmers think in seasons and years, not days and weeks. They tolerate inconsistent cash flow in exchange for fewer, but larger payoffs.

  • Farmers covet land, buying or leasing every acre they can get their hands on so long as they believe they can make a profit by producing crops or raising livestock on it.

Suppose a landowner said to a farmer, “I have 500 acres of pasture you can graze your livestock on, and you don’t have to pay me anything to lease it.” Would the farmer say, “That’s mighty generous of you, but I don’t currently have enough animals to make use of it. I’ll pass.”? Um, no. The farmer would have his/her banker on the phone so fast your head would spin, asking to borrow money for an additional 100 cows, or 200 feeder steers, or a new hay rake and baler, or…800 sheep.

You see where this is headed, right? Suppose you’re offered 500 acres of solar farm to graze and, low and behold, the landowner wants to pay you $300 - $500 per acre for the season. You stand to make at least $150,000 just for the act of grazing. You might also be able to add 60 pounds each to 800 feeder lambs on that solar farm. That’s 48,000 pounds of lamb at — let’s be very conservative here — $1.80 per pound. That’s $86,400 (current market prices are $3 or more per pound, by the way). These are big numbers, and they demand big upfront investments and likely the help of a bank or backer. But, put those numbers into a decent business plan and your banker will smile.

None of this is meant to imply that solar grazing is simple, or that it doesn’t require more from the Sheep On The Go® affiliate than it would a farmer in a purely agricultural context. It may call for employees, haulers, and the solving of serious logistical problems. And, you’ll have to be the same expert targeted grazing professionals that you are when solving weed and brush problems with goats. But don’t let the size of the perceived obstacles stop you.

But I don’t own sheep!

The biggest obstacle for most of us is simply that we don’t own sheep, or not enough sheep, or don’t know where to get sheep and couldn’t afford them anyway. Let me share a secret with you: NO ONE HAS ENOUGH SHEEP. That’s right. And there’s really not much sense in starting your flock now thinking you’ll grow it to the right size by the time your first solar grazing project comes along. Get some sheep now to learn how to raise and care for them if you want, but there’s no way the 10 or 20 you buy today will grow to the 800 - 1000 you’ll need for solar grazing when your first contract comes around. And solar sites of meaningful size may not even pop up in every affiliate’s territory, and even if they do, you may not get the gig.

Instead, prepare by being listed as a solar grazing affiliate on the Goats On The Go®/Sheep On The Go® website and become a member of the American Solar Grazing Association. Learn everything you can about solar grazing, and work on your business plan in preparation for the day when you need to go looking for a huge number of sheep and other assets all at once.

And think big! We’re talking about hundreds of thousands of dollars of revenue here! For that kind of money you’ll be searching all around the country for your sheep, not all around the county. Semis, livestock brokers, and big checks will probably be involved. You’ll also need to be creative. Do I need to keep 800 ewes through the winter and breed and lamb them, or could I buy weaned feeder lambs every spring? Could I lease the sheep I need? Could I strike a deal to raise sheep for someone else who is in need of more pasture? Could I get paid by the sheep owner for this “custom grazing” based on the pounds of lamb I return in the fall? Big problems, big solutions.

It’s probably crossed your mind by now that managing nearly a thousand (or more!) sheep would turn you into a full-time farmer/rancher who also offers a targeted grazing service, rather than a targeted grazing pro who takes a few animals to market every now and then. For some of you, that’s your dream and you’re champing at the bit to get started. However, some of you may love your goat grazing business just as it is, and you’re not really interested in growing an agricultural livestock operation beyond what’s necessary to do your goat projects. That’s awesome! Keep at it. No need to change.

But if your dream is to grow a livestock farm in parallel with your grazing business, there’s not a more profitable way to do it than solar grazing, and no one is better positioned to do it than Goats On The Go®/Sheep On The Go® affiliates! Don’t let solvable problems discourage you from chasing this opportunity.

Sheep On The Go® resources page available

As you know, FarmLaunch.me is now the place to go for all support information for your Goats On The Go® business. If you haven’t yet created an account there, please do.

What you may not know is that Sheep On The Go® resources are also available at FarmLaunch.me. If your affiliate agreement grants you access to the SOTG brand package (all newly signed agreements for 2021 include it), or if you requested and signed the free addendum to your agreement, your FarmLaunch account should now grant you access to the SOTG portion of the site. If it doesn’t, or if you want to be added, contact Aaron.

The SOTG resources are still pretty sparse, but we’ll be building them out in the coming months. However, there is something very valuable to be found in the SOTG portion of FarmLaunch.me — the discount link for the American Solar Grazing Association. Click it and you’ll be able to become an ASGA member at a substantially discounted price, allowing you to create a listing as a solar grazing provider and be placed on the ASGA map.

Even if you’re not ready to do a solar grazing project right now, you should create an ASGA listing if you’re interested in solar grazing projects in the future. Solar farms take time to plan, design, and build so you don’t have to be ready now. You just need to be ready to pitch yourself as the future solution to solar developers’ vegetation management needs!

Potential customer leads for you!

The GOTG website invites customers to add themselves to a contact list if they believe their area is not served by a Goats On The Go® affiliate. Each year after training we post this list for you to review…but this year there’s a catch. To access the list you will need to create an account on FarmLaunch.me.

FarmLaunch is our new catch-all website for Goats On The Go®, Sheep On The Go®, and future brands. This site will serve as your dashboard for accessing information about your affiliate status and resources to use in your business. If you’ve read this far, you’ve already had to create an account and log-in, so congratulations!

Now, back to that customer list. Whenever someone is convinced they don’t have an affiliate to serve them, double check to make sure there really isn’t one nearby. So, if you’ve been an affiliate for a year or more, there probably aren’t any new leads to be mined in the list, but it’s worth a quick peak anyway. If you are a brand new affiliate, you should definitely download the spreadsheet, sort it by state, and check to see if any of those customers are in your territory. The list can be found in the “Business Tools” page of FarmLaunch.me.

When you find an entry in your territory, definitely reach out to them right away! They wanted to hire us in the past, but we were unable to serve them. Keep in mind, though, that it may have been a couple of years since they originally inquired, so you’ll have to explain who you are to jog their memories.

This list is only posted for a couple of months each year after the Affiliate Training & Conference, so please download a copy ASAP!

Let your customers praise you!

We were asked recently by Guy Masters if there is a good place to direct customers to leave reviews about Goats On The Go®’s targeted grazing services. Turns out, that’s kind of a complex issue. Should customers review Goats On The Go® broadly, or their local affiliate who actually provided the service? What’s the least complicated way to direct customers to the right place to leave a review? What should we do with negative reviews left by pranksters, axe-grinders, and animal rights activists who didn’t even hire us?

It seems best that customers review their own local affiliate who did the goat grazing rather than the overarching brand. Since customers have likely already visited the affiliate’s individual profile page on the GOTG website, they should be able to get back there to leave a review. And, in keeping with our “your business, your decision” approach to things, you should be able to use the review service that you prefer.

So, I’m here to remind you there is space on your profile page for a couple of custom link buttons. Many affiliates use these buttons to connect customers to their Facebook business pages, and each Facebook business page has its own review function. A button can be added to link directly to your Facebook review widget, or to some other review tool such as the one incorporated into a Yelp or Google Business listing, or even to your local chamber of commerce website.

No matter which option you choose, here are some best practices you should consider:

  1. Always use your affiliate descriptor in any business listing, business page, or review service so customers can distinguish you from the brand as a whole. So, “Goats On The Go® Lawrence KC” instead of just “Goats On The Go®”.

  2. Make it easy for your customers to give you a positive review. Send a follow-up email once the project is complete with a direct link to your chosen review service, or to your profile page on the GOTG website (be sure to let us know that you want a review button added, and send us the link it should contain). You might say something like, “Did you love the work our goats did for your property? Click here to leave a review. The herd craves your feedback!”

  3. You will get negative reviews from people who never hired you. Ignore them. By giving the review link directly to actual customers after projects are done, you can be assured that most reviews will be legit — and positive. Facebook’s review tool simply asks if the user would recommend the business or not. Then it uses some magic algorithm to incorporate page “likes” and post “shares” to produce a 1 - 5 star rating. This helps to ensure that one vicious or goofball review will not do much damage.

How do goats kill unwanted vegetation?

We all know there is nothing magic about how goats eat that instantly kills unwanted plants with a single grazing. So how is it that we can tell our customers that goats will help them control their weed and brush problems? By what mechanism(s) do the goats control vegetation?

We touched on this at the Affiliate Training & Conference in March, but here’s a more complete explanation that might help you communicate with your customers and the press.

  1. Goats turn a jungle of vegetation into something much more manageable. Even one pass from a herd will reduce the space taken up by the unwanted vegetation, improving sight lines, reducing thorns that stick and vines that grab, and generally making the area a safer and more pleasant place to be. This allows customers to target their follow-up efforts. They can cut and treat exactly what needs it instead of indiscriminately chopping with machines and spraying herbicides.

  2. Goats reduce competition for the establishment of better vegetation. Each pass from a herd of goats provides more space, sunlight, and nutrients for preferred vegetation trying to get a foothold. People’s “preferred” vegetation is often native vegetation. Plants native to North America (sorry, Amanda, I don’t know if this applies to Tasmania) evolved with vast herds of grazing animals. Consequently, they benefit from an occasional, short-but-intense grazing — the same affect provided by prescribed fire. The problem vegetation we’re called to control with goats is often non-native, invasive brush and weeds, which do not tolerate grazing well.

  3. Goats minimize reproduction. Many problem plants reproduce by spreading seeds. When our goats eat the flowers and berries off of targeted plants, they significantly hamper the plants’ ability to produce viable seeds. When goats remove nearly mature seed heads from plants before they drop to the ground, the seeds are destroyed in the goats’ digestive systems. Each year our goats can eliminate the plants’ entire seed crop. There will still be seeds in the soil from previous years, but over time we can “burn out” the seed from the soil by letting the plants germinate and then grazing them before seed-set.

  4. Goats cause plants to “stress out.” From the middle of each growing season until the end, perennial plants are using their leaves to collect sunlight and turn it into energy, storing it in their roots in preparation for the colder, lower-light dormant season. When spring comes, these plants must use that stored energy to produce new leaves so they can start collecting sunlight again. Right after full leaf-out, most plants are at their most susceptible. They’ve used most of their reserves to make new leaves and haven’t had time yet to collect a lot of sun. If we graze these plants in the spring or early summer, the vegetation will have to once again call on its root reserves to recover. Now imagine if we repeat the grazing in the late summer (when the plant should be storing energy for winter, not using it to survive), and then again in the following spring. It’s the repeated stress followed by forced recovery that can eventually kill a plant using goats and only goats with no cutting or herbicide. And, looking back to #3, a plant just worried about recovery and survival is unlikely to reproduce effectively.

So, there you have it — the main four mechanisms for controlling vegetation with goats. Of these, #4 is the least understood and often the hardest to communicate to people, but it’s probably the most important, especially when trying to get conservation-minded customers (who hate invasive plants, carbon monoxide, and chemical herbicides) to commit to large scale, long term projects.

So, you've attended affiliate training. Now what?

Thank you to everyone who attended the 2021 Goats On The Go® Affiliate Training & Conference in early March. Despite the many challenges of trying to hold the event in-person while also broadcasting the content live, it went off without a hitch (mostly)!

So what now? Here are some actions you might want to take — the five P’s of preparing for your first grazing season.

  1. Participate in the affiliate community. You found it really valuable to visit with other affiliates and hear some of their case study presentations at the event right? Don’t let that feeling of community and support end! If you haven’t already, search for the “Goats On The Go® Affiliates” group on Facebook and request to join. Within a day or two you’ll be given access, so you can ask questions, express concerns, share victories, and get encouragement from the entire affiliate network. Also, feel free to reach out to other affiliates directly for help.

  2. Plan a launch party. Peg and Tim Harbaugh started their goat grazing business near Dubuque, Iowa by inviting the community to see their goats in action, eat some food, and hear about their new business. The press loved it! Reach out to the Harbaugh’s for advice on how to organize and publicize your own launch party. Find them on the Facebook Group or here.

  3. Print some business cards. Go to FarmLaunch.me to access all affiliate resources for both Goats On The Go® and Sheep On TheGo®. Navigate to “Goats On The Go® Resources” and select “Promotional Tools,” then click on “Business Card Template”. You’ll be directed to create a free Canva account (always click “Maybe Later” when prompted to upgrade to a paid account — you don’t need it). You can use Canva to customize the business card design for yourself. You can even order prints from Canva to be delivered to your door!

  4. Publish a press release. Planning to do a launch party? You need to publicize it, and writing a press release is a great way to get started. There are several examples you can use at FarmLaunch.me. The trick is to use your press release to write the story for the reporter, then get it in their hands. Use a catchy subject line if you email it to the press. “Goats are entire staff of new Ames company” was the headline of the first press release that launched Goats On The Go, LC back in 2012. The reporter actually said it was a hook he couldn’t ignore. Emails are great, but don’t be afraid to pick up the phone and use any personal contacts you may have with the local print and TV news.

  5. Practice a project. Find a friend or neighbor with a property that could use some goat attention. Visit it. Use the site visit form from FarmLaunch.me. Work up a quote (but don’t send it). Load the goats. Drive to the site. Install the fencing. Unload. Observe. Let them stay overnight (it’s like dropping your kid off at kindergarten for the first time). Load the goats. Pick up the fence. Drive home. Even if your practice project will happen on your own property, pretend it’s a half-hour away. Load the goats in the trailer, drive around for awhile, then drive home and set up your fencing while the goats wait. Try to make it as close to a real project as possible. Then, offer to do the same thing as a demo for a popular, local park. If they agree, publicize it!