3 Trends that Will Drive the Food System of the Future

The food system is being reimagined today and farmers can benefit by thinking about how to improve their ability to take advantage of opportunities in the process, says Rob Dongoski with Ernst and Young.
The food system is being reimagined today and farmers can benefit by thinking about how to improve their ability to take advantage of opportunities in the process, says Rob Dongoski with Ernst and Young.
(Top Producer)

These three tenets will drive the industry and impact farms

The food system is being reimagined today and farmers can benefit by thinking about how to improve their ability to take advantage of opportunities in the process, says Rob Dongoski, partner and food and agribusiness leader at Ernst and Young. He says the food system will be based around the following three tenets. 

1. Consumer Centric
This transition was underway and received a big boost from the COVID-19 pandemic. Dongoski anticipates the transformation will be significant in the next five to 10 years.

Consumers are increasingly listening to what product marketers are telling them rather than scientists. 

“Marketers are winning the communication battle because they are better funded,” he says.

Part of what’s at play is significant changes in consumer demographics. Dongoski says the most populous generations in the workforce today are Millennials and Gen Z.

“While Boomers and Gen Xers think about cars and houses as status symbols, Gen Z and Millennials think, ‘I grocery shop at Whole Foods. I cook at home. I go to the farmer’s market.’ Their experience with food is very different,” he says.

2. Planet Friendly

“Farmers are land stewards as land continues to be the largest asset on their balance sheet,” Dongoski says. “As their stewardship practices become more understood by consumers, I think it will bring new light to the definition of sustainable food.” 

Still, he does believe farmers have opportunities to be more conscious of practices that are planet friendly. 

“There are many opportunities to care for livestock differently, for example,” he says. “The pendulum can shift to extremes, but I do think we can be smarter.”

3. Connected System

“When I think about the future of food, I believe the food system will look retro,” Dongoski says. “The future is a place farmers and consumers have been before.”

Decades ago, he says, consumers had a butcher and a baker on the corner, and milk was delivered to their home. Consumers knew their food producers and processors. 

In the future, that personal connection won’t be based on geography, instead it will be based on data.

Today consumers get glimpses of farmers’ production practices in grocery store aisles and on menus, as stores and restaurants feature names, photographs and information on the farmers who produced the food.

“That’s how consumers will have insights into your operations and practices, which will influence consumers,” he says. 

Listen to Rob Dongoski share trends on the “Farming the Countryside” podcast:


Read more stories from the 2023 Top Producer Summit:

Preventative Maintenance for Your People: How to Reduce Turnover and Boost Morale

How to Run An Innovation Sprint on Your Farm

Nominate Outstanding Farmers for Awards from Top Producer

Take Time to Celebrate Accomplishments

5 Business Principles That Define Success

Farming Boom or Bust in the Decade Ahead? How to Manage Price Cycles

Be Inspired by Five Remarkable Farm Operations

Ideas Big and Small: Create a Culture of Creativity on Your Farm

Save the Date - Top Producer Summit

 

Latest News

A Margin Squeeze is Setting in Across Row-Crop Farms, and 80% of Ag Economists Are Now Concerned It'll Accelerate Consolidation
A Margin Squeeze is Setting in Across Row-Crop Farms, and 80% of Ag Economists Are Now Concerned It'll Accelerate Consolidation

There's an immense amount of pressure riding on this year’s crop production picture, and with a margin squeeze setting in across farms, economists think it could accelerate consolidation in the row-crop industry. 

How Do Wind, Solar, Renewable Energy Effect Land Values?
How Do Wind, Solar, Renewable Energy Effect Land Values?

“If we step back and look at what that means for farmland, we're taking our energy production system from highly centralized production facilities and we have to distribute it,” says David Muth.

UPL Acquires Corteva’s Mancozeb Business
UPL Acquires Corteva’s Mancozeb Business

Mancozeb is a highly effective fungicide used to prevent plant diseases across a range of crops.

University of Nebraska Professor Leads RNAi Research Targeting Western Corn Rootworm
University of Nebraska Professor Leads RNAi Research Targeting Western Corn Rootworm

Research underway at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln is showing promise by targeting western corn rootworm genes with RNAi technology.

DJI Launches New Ag Spray Drones
DJI Launches New Ag Spray Drones

Building on the Agras drone line, the T50 offers improved efficiency for larger-scale growing operations, while the lightweight T25 is designed to be more portable for smaller fields.

New Jersey Woman Receives Pig Kidney and Heart Pump in Groundbreaking Surgery
New Jersey Woman Receives Pig Kidney and Heart Pump in Groundbreaking Surgery

A New Jersey woman fighting for her life received an incredible gift from a pig last month at Massachusetts General Hospital.