Regional Marketing Practices in US Nursery Production

被引:11
|
作者
Behe, Bridget K. [1 ]
Dennis, Jennifer H. [2 ,3 ]
Hall, Charles R. [4 ]
Hodges, Alan W. [5 ]
Brumfield, Robin G. [6 ]
机构
[1] Michigan State Univ, Dept Hort, E Lansing, MI 48824 USA
[2] Purdue Univ, Dept Hort & Landscape Architecture, W Lafayette, IN 47907 USA
[3] Purdue Univ, Dept Agr Econ, W Lafayette, IN 47907 USA
[4] Texas A&M Univ, Dept Hort Sci, College Stn, TX 77843 USA
[5] Univ Florida, Dept Food & Resource Econ, Gainesville, FL 32611 USA
[6] Rutgers State Univ, Dept Agr Food & Resource Econ, New Brunswick, NJ 08901 USA
关键词
marketing; survey; woody plant; floriculture;
D O I
10.21273/HORTSCI.43.7.2070
中图分类号
S6 [园艺];
学科分类号
0902 ;
摘要
Nursery production contributed $18.1 billion to the U.S. economy in 2002 and created nearly two million jobs. A U.S. Department of Agriculture multistate research committee on economics and marketing has conducted The National Nursery Survey four times at 5-year intervals (1988, 1993, 1998, and 2003) to help fill the void of publicly available information on production, marketing, and management for the nursery industry. In 2003, the committee conducted the National Nursery Survey using a standard sampling methodology targeting 15,588 total firms representing 44 states with 2,485 nurseries responding. The objective of this analysis was to provide a regional profile of the marketing practices of nursery producers. Regional differences were present in several areas of sales management, selling practices, pricing, and advertising. Generally, the coastal regions had a higher percentage of wholesale sales, whereas interior regions had a higher percentage of retail sales. Newsletters and yellow pages were the most important form of advertising in the Great Plains; trade journals were the most important method in the south central and southeast regions; and catalogs were the most important advertising method for all other regions. The percentage of sales to repeat customers varied from a low of 65.6% in the Great Plains to a high of 76.2% in the southeast. The Appalachian (26.9%) and southeast (26.8%) regions had the highest percentage of negotiated sales, whereas the northeast had the lowest. Although significant differences generally existed among regions in the percentage of sales spent on various transaction methods, nurseries in all regions used in-person, telephone, and mail order as their three most important sales transaction methods, except for the southeast where trade shows were the third most important method of sales transactions. Landscape professionals, rewholesalers, and single-location garden centers were the major market outlets in all regions. Respondents in all regions identified production, personnel, and marketing as limitations for expansion.
引用
下载
收藏
页码:2070 / 2075
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Principles and Practices OF NURSERY EDUCATION
    Almy, Milly
    EXCEPTIONAL CHILDREN, 1954, 21 (01) : 18 - 21
  • [22] Direct marketing channel choices among US farmers: evidence from the Local Food Marketing Practices Survey
    Plakias, Zoe T.
    Demko, Iryna
    Katchova, Ani L.
    RENEWABLE AGRICULTURE AND FOOD SYSTEMS, 2020, 35 (05) : 475 - 489
  • [23] Adoption of technology, management practices, and production systems in US milk production
    Khanal, A. R.
    Gillespie, J.
    MacDonald, J.
    JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE, 2010, 93 (12) : 6012 - 6022
  • [24] REGIONAL EDUCATION AT NURSERY SCHOOL
    Klim-Klimaszewska, Anna
    6TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE OF EDUCATION, RESEARCH AND INNOVATION (ICERI 2013), 2013, : 5422 - 5429
  • [25] Genomic Analysis and Prediction within a US Public Collaborative Winter Wheat Regional Testing Nursery
    Rife, Trevor W.
    Graybosch, Robert A.
    Poland, Jesse A.
    PLANT GENOME, 2018, 11 (03):
  • [26] Production and Marketing Practices of Ginger Cultivation in Karbi Anglong District, Assam
    Bordoloi, Jayashree
    Bhuyan, Anjan
    INDIAN JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS AND DEVELOPMENT, 2022, 18 (02) : 313 - 321
  • [27] A regional econometric model of US apple production.
    Roosen, J
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS, 1999, 81 (05) : 1296 - 1296
  • [28] The impact of ethanol production on US and regional gasoline markets
    Du, Xiaodong
    Hayes, Dermot J.
    ENERGY POLICY, 2009, 37 (08) : 3227 - 3234
  • [29] Evaluation of a 3 year intervention to increase adoption of safer nursery crop production practices
    Chapman, Larry J.
    Newenhouse, Astrid C.
    Karsh, Ben-Tzion
    APPLIED ERGONOMICS, 2010, 41 (01) : 18 - 26
  • [30] Nursery production practices affect survival and growth of tropical hardwoods in Quintana Roo, Mexico
    Mexal, JG
    Rangel, RAC
    Negreros-Castillo, P
    Lezama, CP
    FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT, 2002, 168 (1-3) : 125 - 133