10 apps that will help you practise farming in a modern way (in Nigeria)
Taiwo Ayandeyi
- Post By Taiwo Ayandeyi
- 1 week ago
farming in Nigeria is now becoming fashionable and profitable that it even has its own celebrities and young millionaires like Rotimi Williams, Tomato Jos lady, AfricanFarmer Mogaji, Cynthia Umoru as well as several other “agricprenuers”.
Curated list of must-have tech innovations and apps for modern-day farmers.
1. Hello Tractor
For farmers that want to practice farming at a commercial scale, getting access to tractors and modern agric tools is one of the biggest problems. Hello Tractor provides a modern, Uber-style way to rent tractor. With a simple SMS booking platform or mobile app, you can join their network of farmers paying for tractor services.
2. ProbityFarms
This is a FREE all-in-one farm management and accounting platform to manage your farm operations, book-keeping and connect your goods to a ready-to-buy market. Currently in beta, the platform offers farmer insights about farming activities powered by machine learning at each stage (e.g, alert can tell farmer that they should not apply fertilizer on particular days if the weather forecasts that it could rain).
3. FarmCrowdy
Do you want to farm by investing in farming projects? FarmCrowdy helps you to invest in any farming initiative of your choice by sponsoring a farmer. It is Nigeria’s first digital agriculture platform. It recently got accepted to 2017 batch of Techstars Atlanta, a US-based tech accelerator . Farmcrowdy is able to leverage the “wholesale” pricing it can get from its partnership with insurance firms, communities of farmers, as well as fertilizer and other agro-allied companies to give its subscribers up to 50% guaranteed returns.
4. Releaf.NG
Releaf wants to help you get trusted buyers for your agric products. The company is run by Nigerian-American graduates from the most prestigious schools in US. They recently got funded by Ycombinator. Other notable startups in this space include OgaFarmer , Farmoly and Farmly (owned by AgriHub)
5. Compare-The-Market
This is a simple platform designed to compare the daily market prices of food crops and animals in Nigeria. A key part of their mission is to track, forecast and monitor price trends of agricultural commodities in Nigeria. The site is updated daily with both retail and wholesale prices to ensure that farmers can price their goods at competitive rates. It is owned by Rotimi Williams, the young agric millionaire with the 2nd largest rice plantation in Nigeria.
6. Cellulant.
In Nigeria, Cellulant worked with the Federal Government to launch an e-wallet programme to aid Nigerian farmers directly redeem government subsidized seed and fertilizer vouchers from retail shops and in effect double their income.
7. AgroData
Many will agree that there is a huge gap between research institutes like IITA or FIIRO and farmers. This is making it difficult to commercialize agric research initiatives. AgroData is poised to be the link between agricultural research and the farming populace. Farmers can now have at their finger tips new knowledge on farming activities that can improve their yields.
8. WhatsApp
It is worth mentioning that “mobile messaging is the new internet” and platforms like WhatsApp, Line, Telegram and WeChat are leading the pack. Many farmers’ group are leveraging the group chat features of WhatsApp to create informal groups to facilitate discussions and share intelligence about farming practices.
9. VoguePay.
Sending and receiving payment is a fundamental part of every business and VoguePay makes it easy for farmers to do so. Instead of asking your buyers to pay to your “hard-to-find, one-branch-per-city bank that might be too difficult to find”, you can send a“request to pay” digital invoice which you can share via simple link on social media or WhatsApp to your customer to get paid.
10. Other useful tools
In addition to above, other tools which are super useful to the modern farmer is Google (you can always use it to find answers to any question or information)