JuliGerm
The specific problem we are working to solve within the MIT Solve's 2023 Global Challenge is the lack of access to financial services and credit for smallholder farmers in rural communities. This problem affects millions of farmers globally, particularly in developing regions where agriculture is a primary livelihood.
According to the World Bank, around 500 million smallholder farmers contribute significantly to global food production and employment. However, many of these farmers lack access to formal financial services, such as loans, insurance, and savings accounts. This limited access hampers their ability to invest in their farms, adopt modern agricultural practices, and mitigate risks associated with weather, pests, and market fluctuations.
Several factors contribute to this problem, including:
Limited Financial Infrastructure: Rural areas often lack physical bank branches and financial institutions, making it challenging for farmers to access financial services.
Lack of Collateral: Smallholder farmers often lack traditional collateral, such as land titles, which hinders their ability to secure loans from conventional financial institutions.
Information Asymmetry: Financial institutions may have limited information about farmers' creditworthiness and risk profiles, making it difficult to assess their eligibility for loans.
High Transaction Costs: The cost of processing small loans for individual farmers can be high for financial institutions, making it less economically viable for them to serve this market segment.
Our solution addresses these challenges by leveraging technology and data to provide financial inclusion for smallholder farmers. By collecting and analyzing data on farmers' profiles, crop performance, and the agricultural supply chain, we can create a comprehensive view of farmers' creditworthiness and risks. This data-driven approach enables financial institutions to make more accurate lending decisions, design customized financial products, and mitigate risks effectively.
By bridging the information gap and providing financial institutions with valuable insights, we aim to empower smallholder farmers and enable them to access the financial services they need to improve their livelihoods, invest in their farms, and build resilient agricultural practices. Ultimately, our solution has the potential to positively impact millions of farmers globally, contributing to poverty reduction, food security, and sustainable agricultural development.
The solution for financial institutions in your platform involves collecting and analyzing data related to the agricultural supply chain and farmers' profiles. This data helps financial institutions make informed decisions when providing financial services to farmers. Here's a simplified explanation of the solution:
The platform gathers information on various aspects of the agricultural supply chain, such as crop production, harvesting, transportation, and storage. It also collects data on individual farmers, including their cultivation practices, land size, yields, and financial histories. This data is processed and analyzed to create valuable insights.
Financial institutions can utilize this data to assess the creditworthiness and risk profiles of farmers. It helps them determine the eligibility of farmers for loans and design tailored financial products. By understanding the flow of agricultural commodities and market conditions, financial institutions can make more informed decisions regarding financing, risk assessment, and investment opportunities.
The solution employs technology such as data analytics and machine learning to process and analyze the collected data. These technologies help identify patterns, trends, and correlations in the agricultural sector, enabling financial institutions to make data-driven decisions. The platform also incorporates image recognition technology to validate the quality of the produce.
By providing financial institutions with comprehensive data and insights, the solution supports better risk assessment, loan management, and sustainable financing practices. It enhances financial inclusion for farmers and contributes to the overall growth and stability of the agricultural sector.
Our solution directly serves small-holder farmers who are financially excluded and have access finance being one of the biggest barriers between them and commercialization of their agribusinesses. These farmers have no professional means of managing their agribusinesses and no data on their supply-chains. These farmers are unable to access finance because financial institutions like banks (credit providers) and insurance houses (insurance providers) have no credible data on their supply-demand chains and their agribusiness performances. These farmers have no digital identity of their businesses. Because of lack of such data, these financial institutions find it hard designing products and packages for these farmers. This makes it hard for them to be able to access finance from banks to scale their farms and agribusinesses and also, crop insurance from insurance houses which would come in handy in their businesses to be able to insure their crops in cases of bad yields causes by harsh weather and also, unstable market conditions.
Our solutions looks to aggregate and process this data; the supply-demand chain data, yield performance by weather conditions and agribusinesses performances. With this data accessible to financial institutions and a sustainable and credible digital presence for these small-holder farmers and their agribusinesses, partnerships with the financial institutions will be in favor to these farmers since it will break barriers to access to finance.
The team lead, Mr Qoane Mothibeli, was self-employed as a small-holder farmers before building JuliGerm. He is building this solution from a farmer's point of view and what pain-points these farmers face. Having worked and talked with a lot of farmers during this time, he was able to aggregate that these pain-points small-holder farmers face with lack of access to finance was steep. Further on, we have experienced software developers in our team to help build the product. The team is very keen on keeping networks and communication with these small-holder farmers to better build a product fitting for them, knowing that a majority are digitally illiterate, we make it a priority to not lose any contact with them to be able to serve them efficiently.
We have developed relationships with farmer's unions to be able to get inputs and insights on what we want to offer. We have farmers as our ambassadors to make sure they give us the right reach.
We believe we are highly suited to deliver this solution because we have in-house experience of what being a farmer is and the problems that come with being financially excluded. We have a team-lead who has come out of the very community he is trying to solve for, with knowledge, insights, networks and credible data on what the problem is, what the solution could be and how to offer it.
- Help gather, synthesize, or use relevant data to inform the design of insurance products tailored to populations at greater risk of facing shocks such as climate disasters, health-related shocks, and unstable markets
- Lesotho
- Prototype: A venture or organization building and testing its product, service, or business model, but which is not yet serving anyone
We have built the initial product for our customers and are now looking to iterate it to meet specific needs. We would have a product in the market but with the special case of small-holder farmers in the country not being very digitally literate, we are iterating to make the product ore intuitive, functional and easy to use and understand. We have not yet launched our product but have built a its first version using both the secondary and primary market research we collected and talked to stake-holders that would implement it and have moved from concept stage which would be trying to define our problem and solution statements and then trying to find the best way to offer a solution.
We have not yet launched our solution, we have scheduled it for July 2023. We have a prototype in place which we have been working with stake-holders to iterate to meet our customers where they are. We are introducing a digital solution in a country with a very low digital literacy index, especially among small-holder farmers who are our primary target market. We are trying to work with them to make the product more simple for them to use and thus, we iterate on what we have.
We believe the program will be of great help. First, the financial support with come in handy because we are still a very early-stage venture and need financial support to be able to iterate and modify our product, hire experts in certain fields and keep tracks with our customers and strategic partners. Our business strategy focuses on building a great fly-wheel of growth model and which would call in for financial support. Our business is very capital intensive, especially in these early-stages when trying to build a brand and find product market fit. Secondly, we believe that being young and and early-stage startup, we need as much professional and technical support as possible to be able to deliver the best product to our customers and run an economically viable business. We are first time founders with expertise in different fields that are needed in these early-stages of the business and are looking to connect and network with as many advisors as possible to help shape our vision, strategy and business for utmost success. We are introducing a digital solution in a country that has very low digital literacy and internet penetration indexes and we need great visionaries and experts to help advice on the right routes to take to reach adoptability and all the necessary support. We believe that if we get it right, our solution will revolutionize farming in our country., We need legal support in terms of how to structure of business accordingly and stay compliant, technical support on how to refine our business strategy and financial support to be able to carry out the necessary tasks.
- Business Model (e.g. product-market fit, strategy & development)
- Financial (e.g. accounting practices, pitching to investors)
- Human Capital (e.g. sourcing talent, board development)
- Legal or Regulatory Matters
- Monitoring & Evaluation (e.g. collecting/using data, measuring impact)
- Public Relations (e.g. branding/marketing strategy, social and global media)
- Technology (e.g. software or hardware, web development/design)
Our solution approaches the problem of financial inclusion for smallholder farmers in a new and improved way by leveraging advanced technologies and data analytics. Here's how our approach stands out:
Data-Driven Decision Making: We collect and analyze comprehensive data on farmers' profiles, crop performance, and the agricultural supply chain. By utilizing data analytics and machine learning, we provide financial institutions with actionable insights for better risk assessment and lending decisions. This data-driven approach improves the accuracy and efficiency of financial services for farmers.
Technology-enabled Access: Our platform leverages digital technologies to connect financial institutions with farmers in remote and underserved areas. Through mobile applications and online platforms, farmers can access financial services conveniently, reducing the barriers of physical distance and limited financial infrastructure.
Customized Financial Products: By understanding the unique needs and risks faced by smallholder farmers, our solution enables financial institutions to design customized financial products tailored to the specific requirements of farmers. This approach ensures that the financial services provided are relevant and effective in addressing the challenges faced by farmers.
Our solution has the potential to catalyze broader positive impacts in the agricultural finance space. By demonstrating the viability and benefits of serving smallholder farmers, it can inspire other financial institutions and stakeholders to prioritize this underserved market segment. This could lead to increased investment, innovation, and collaboration in the agricultural finance space, ultimately changing the market dynamics.
Moreover, our approach can promote sustainable agricultural practices and contribute to broader positive impacts in the agricultural sector. As financial institutions gain better insights into farmers' practices and performance, they can incentivize and support sustainable farming practices, such as climate-smart agriculture and resource-efficient techniques. This, in turn, can drive environmental sustainability, improve food security, and foster resilient farming communities.
By introducing a data-driven and technology-enabled approach to financial inclusion for smallholder farmers, our solution has the potential to transform the market by making it more inclusive, efficient, and responsive to the needs of farmers. It can unlock economic opportunities, empower farmers, and create a positive ripple effect throughout the agricultural value chain.
Our impact goals are very simple. Currently, small-holder farmers are very unserved financially and thus, without financial support, cannot scale their agribusinesses and thus, Africa and Lesotho to be more specific, still imports a large quantity of their vegetables. In Lesotho, this is as high as 80% of fresh fruit and vegetables yet there is enough arable land. This leads to food insecurity and malnutrition that causes the country approximately US$ 200 million a year. We look to have created a reliable data-base and partnered with financial institutions to offer financial packages to agribusinesses, thus farmers able to scale their agribusinesses, meet the quality and quantity demands and thus, Lesotho to produce it's own food, and then scale up to the rest of Africa. We have a goal of having Lesotho produce at least 80% of its fresh fruits and vegetables, reduce imports, create employment through agriculture and thus win the fight against food insecurity and combat malnutrition.
- 1. No Poverty
- 2. Zero Hunger
- 8. Decent Work and Economic Growth
- 12. Responsible Consumption and Production
- 15. Life on Land
With our solution, some few indicators we will be focusing on are how many small-holder farmers get access to finance and scale their production. We will be looking at the volume of production and how it meets the demand in terms of quality and quantity and the consistency of these farmers.
We will be looking at the scale of growth of fresh fruit and vegetable production in the country and the decline in imports.
We will be looking at how healthy the agricultural sector is getting and yhe growth in revenue and jobs created.
The theory of change for our solution revolves around three key components: access to finance, data-driven decision-making, and sustainable agricultural development. Here's how the theory of change unfolds:
Access to Finance: By providing financial institutions with reliable data and risk assessment tools, we enable them to extend tailored financial products and services to smallholder farmers. This increases farmers' access to affordable credit, working capital, and insurance, which in turn helps them invest in their farms, purchase quality inputs, and manage risks effectively. Access to finance empowers farmers to expand their operations, adopt modern farming techniques, and improve productivity.
Data-Driven Decision-Making: Through our data analytics and machine learning capabilities, we generate actionable insights for both farmers and financial institutions. Farmers receive personalized recommendations on crop selection, farming practices, and financial management, enhancing their decision-making abilities. Financial institutions can assess creditworthiness accurately, mitigate risks, and design customized financial solutions that align with farmers' needs. Data-driven decision-making promotes informed choices, reduces uncertainties, and improves outcomes for farmers and financial institutions alike.
Sustainable Agricultural Development: Our solution contributes to the broader goal of sustainable agricultural development. By empowering smallholder farmers with access to finance and data-driven insights, we enable them to adopt more efficient and sustainable farming practices. This includes optimizing resource utilization, minimizing environmental impact, and improving overall productivity. Sustainable agricultural practices help safeguard natural resources, mitigate climate change effects, and ensure long-term viability of the farming sector.
Through this theory of change, our solution aims to create a positive cycle of impact. Access to finance and data-driven decision-making empower farmers, leading to increased productivity, improved livelihoods, and reduced poverty. The adoption of sustainable farming practices promotes environmental stewardship, resilience, and food security. Ultimately, our solution catalyzes positive change in the agricultural sector, fostering economic growth, social well-being, and environmental sustainability.
The core technology that empowers our solution is a combination of data analytics, machine learning, and digital platforms. Here's how each component contributes to the effectiveness of our solution:
Data Analytics: We leverage data analytics techniques to collect, process, and analyze large volumes of data related to farmers, crop performance, market trends, and supply chain dynamics. This data includes information such as farmers' profiles, land size, crop yield, weather patterns, market prices, and financial transaction history. By extracting valuable insights from this data, we can identify patterns, trends, and risk indicators that help financial institutions make informed lending decisions and tailor financial products to the needs of farmers.
Machine Learning: Our solution utilizes machine learning algorithms to develop predictive models and risk assessment tools. By training these models with historical data, we can generate accurate predictions and risk profiles for individual farmers. This enables financial institutions to assess creditworthiness, predict repayment capacity, and mitigate risks associated with lending to smallholder farmers. Machine learning also powers personalized recommendations for farmers, providing them with guidance on crop selection, farming practices, and financial management strategies.
Digital Platforms: We have developed user-friendly digital platforms, including mobile applications and web-based portals, to facilitate seamless interactions between farmers and financial institutions. These platforms allow farmers to access and input their data, receive guidance on farming practices, apply for loans, and track their financial transactions. They also provide financial institutions with real-time updates and reports on farmers' activities, enabling efficient and transparent communication, monitoring, and evaluation of loan portfolios.
The integration of data analytics, machine learning, and digital platforms empowers our solution to provide timely, accurate, and personalized financial services to smallholder farmers. It enables financial institutions to leverage the power of data-driven insights and automation to overcome the challenges of serving this underserved market segment. By harnessing the potential of technology, we can bridge the gap between financial institutions and smallholder farmers, unlocking opportunities for economic growth, poverty alleviation, and sustainable agricultural development
- A new application of an existing technology
- Artificial Intelligence / Machine Learning
- Software and Mobile Applications
- Lesotho
- Lesotho
- South Africa
- Not registered as any organization
We are currently operating as a diverse team in terms of gender, with 30% of our team currently female. We have policies that are inclusive and promote equality and equity regardless of gender. We look to drive for more inclusion and equity in our team. our solution in itself also looks to serve a diverse group of people, being farmers, which also, mostly are women.
CEO