Create a free account, or log in

More than 50,000 people pledge to boost drought-affected communities and #BuyFromTheBush this Christmas

The NSW government yesterday urged metropolitan Christmas shoppers to buy from drought-affected regional retailers, launching an online Buy Regional hub.
Priscilla Pho
Priscilla Pho
Buy Regional launch
#BuyFromtheBush founder Grace Brennan with NSW Minister for Finance and Small Business Damien Tudehope. Source: supplied.

The New South Wales government yesterday urged metropolitan Christmas shoppers toย buyย from drought-affected regional producers and retailers, launching an online Buy Regional hub to boot.

Although it was launched just yesterday, the online platform is already gaining traction thanks to the success of week-old hashtags #BuyFromTheBush and #OneDayCloserToRain, and the ambassadorship of celebrity chef Matt Moran.

The Buy Regional hub allows customers to purchase directly from regional shops, which register for free, and is a joint effort between Minister for Regional New South Wales John Barilaro and NSW Minister for Small Business Damien Tudehope.

In a statement released at the launch, Barilaro said the initiative is a practical solution for people who โ€œwant to do something to help, but theyโ€™re not sure howโ€.

Tudehope also said Buy Regional addresses current pain points for business owners.

These being that โ€œthere are fewer walk-in customers, that margins are tighter and that owners are under enormous pressure,โ€ he said.

Grace Brennan, founder of the #BuyFromTheBush hashtag, said in a statement yesterday the associated account tipped over 50,000 followers in its first nine days and โ€œis growing by the minuteโ€.

Pecan farmer and author Annabelle Hickson tells SmartCompany her community in Tenterfield has seen this digital campaign convert to physical sales, citing an unprecedented spike in online orders.

โ€œYesterday, I ran into my friend who has an online business at the post office and she was there with a car-load โ€” an entire boot-load โ€” of packages, because sheโ€™d been featured on the #BuyFromTheBush hashtag,โ€ Hickson says.

โ€œSheโ€™s never made so many sales.โ€

Hickson attributes the ongoing success in large part to the relative accessibility of joining the hashtag campaign, as well as ease of use.

โ€œEven some of my most computer-illiterate friends, theyโ€™ve been able to very easily put the hashtag on,โ€ she said, quoting the success of a business run by a woman in her 60s whoโ€™s โ€œnot very good at anything like thatโ€.

โ€œThereโ€™s almost zero [barriers to] entry โ€” you just have to be on Instagram or Facebook.โ€

Hickson says this is a huge contrast to the usual โ€œhelping the droughtโ€ solutions, which amounts to what she describes as โ€œa free barbecue thatโ€™s put on and thatโ€™s meant to help the farmersโ€.

With #BuyFromTheBush, โ€œthereโ€™s no middle man, and it gives city people a direct way to help an actual person living in the bush with a business,โ€ she says.

Having seen an increase in sales of her own book since the hashtagโ€™s launch, Hickson says this is indicative of Australiansโ€™ existing desire to help drought-affected communities.

โ€œPeople could buy my book cheaper through Book Depository, but theyโ€™re choosing to come and buy it through me,โ€ she says.

โ€œSo Iโ€™m assuming thatโ€™s because they want the money to actually go to someone living in the bush.โ€

In a statement, Matt Moran, also the ambassador for the #Thankful4Farmers hashtag, urged consumers to consider buying groceries direct from farmers during this time.

โ€œAs a fourth-generation farmer, I know firsthand the blood, sweat and tears that goes into producing our food during times of drought.

โ€œEvery product purchased will show our farming and rural communities how much they are valued,โ€ Moran said.

NOW READ:ย Regional divide: Aussie businesses pessimistic as drought bites

NOW READ: Australian pubs band together to help drought-stricken farmers through โ€˜Parma for a Farmerโ€™ campaign