When robot chicken startup Mimictec was trying to get off the ground, a little bit of support from local government and agricultural associations would have gone a long way, according to founder and chief executive Eleanor Toulmin.
Founded in 2016 by Toulmin and co-founder Sarah Last, Mimictec creates robot chickens to help rear chicks on poultry farms, increasing productivity and reducing stress among the real chickens.
Speaking at LaunchVicโs Thrive conference in Geelong today, Toulmin told an audience of local council representatives the first year of running Mimictec was primarily spent trying to break into the poultry industry, โwhich is a sentence no one has ever said beforeโ.
Getting in touch with the startupโs target market was unexpectedly difficult, she says. Chicken farmers are typically very private and donโt necessarily want to be found.
โThe only way Iโve been able to break into it is through introductions,โ she said.
Toulminโs father works in irrigation, she explained, and so he reached out to his contacts who reached out to their contacts, and eventually she was put in touch with the right people.
โThat speaks to how friendly Aussies are, especially in spaces like agriculture,โ she said.
โPeople want to see innovation coming through, and they want to have a home-grown success story,โ she added.
However, all of these contacts were made through personal networks, with no help from farming association bodies, which Toulmin has found to be โalmost uniformly unhelpfulโ.
She acknowledges these associations โdonโt want every Tom, Dick or Harry who has hairbrained ideas about robot chickens to break into their networks and call al their farmers upโ.
However, a lot of farmers are already struggling with challenges like this yearโs drought and very small margins, and if startups like Mimictec are not able to reach them, theyโre not able to help them.
She challenged local government representatives in attendance to try to find a way to open those networks. Itโs not about opening up their entire contact book to anyone who asks for them, but about putting startups in touch with one or two businesses they could really help, and giving them a small in into the industry.
โFind ways to get approval from your constituents or association members to enable innovation connections to happen,โ Toulmin said
โIf youโre able to find a way you can leverage your own brand, whether thatโs as a local council or as an industry body, to break down those barriers and make introductions, thatโs incredibly helpful and important,โ she added.
For a lot of startups, they donโt need local governments to understand the technology, Toulmin added, they merely need someone who is willing to have a conversation about it.
Even if its โan old fuddy-duddy who isnโt entirely sure how to use a computerโ, if theyโre willing to have a conversation and a meeting with an entrepreneur to talk through the solution, โthatโs where really exciting things start to happenโ.
In Mimictecโs most recent trials, the technology reduced feed use for chicken farming by 10%, Toulmin said, adding that for most farmer feed makes up 60% of their expenses.
โIf youโre able to write off 10% of that, that goes straight to their bottom line,โ she said.
โWhile they may not get the robot chicken part, they really get the savings part,โ she added.
โAnd thatโs why support and investment is so important.โ
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