The Alpaca Market,
Back To The Future
By Mike Safley
1995
I was driving down the highway not long ago, looking in the rear
view mirror and thinking about the future of the alpaca business.
I was asking myself, where have we come from and where are we going
to go. It occurred to me that just five years ago, there was no
Alpaca Owners and Breeders Association (AOBA). Four years ago there
was no suri alpaca in the U.S. Three years ago there was no Alpacas
Magazine. Until just recently, the most frequently asked question
in our business was, “What is an alpaca?”
Today, alpacas are more familiar to the general public, thanks
to national exposure from publications such as USA Today and television
programs such as Good Morning America. Yet the alpaca business itself
is still in its infancy. AOBA currently has over 675 members (3000
in 2002), while two years ago they had about 200 members. But
these numbers can be misleading; less than one half of the current
membership actually owns alpacas. This means that if current members
who presently don't own alpacas, did, we would more than double
the number of alpaca ranches in the United States. Put another way,
there are less than 300 alpaca ranches in America.
There are currently just over 5,000 alpacas in America. In December
of 1988 there were only 398. In 1991 there were still only 2,115.
Of the 5,000 alpacas in the U.S. more than 2,000 of these are males.
The population of alpacas is minuscule when compared to any other
livestock breed (there were 35,000 in 2002). This is true
not only in the U.S., but worldwide.
Where will we journey from this small foundation herd of alpaca
that is being nurtured in the U.S.? What lessons can we learn from
the markets that have evolved around other rare breeds such as llamas
and ostriches? What are the alpaca's fundamental strengths and how
should the breeders exploit them in the future?
The alpaca business today is enjoying the same initial success
that was enjoyed by ostriches and llamas over the past 20 years.
Prices have been steady for a long time. Alpacas are easy to sell,
buyers actually solicit the sellers. The Peruvian Elite Sale in
Michigan grossed over $10,000,000 in three days. Three weeks
later, the Celebrity Sale achieved sale averages in excess of $16,000
per alpaca, regardless of sex and in spite of what many observers
felt were, on average, lower quality alpaca.
Things couldn't be better. The big question many buyers ask is,
“how long will it last?” The answer most generally given is, “at
least 5 more years.” I've been saying 5 more years each year for
the last 10 years. The truth is, no one knows.
But I think our industry has far more potential than just 10 more
years. I'm clear that we won't enjoy high average prices indefinitely,
but we can avoid the mistakes made by some other alternative livestock
breeds. Those mistakes include resting on past success and failing
to communicate the benefits of owning a particular breed to an ever
wider population. I've noticed that several of the alternative livestock
breeds and their breeders became closed as they grew larger, they
began preaching to the choir, they failed to continue attracting
new participants to their industry and they became stagnant.
AOBA has had the foresight to develop marketing material which
explains alpaca to the uninitiated. The World's Finest Livestock
Video shows the lay person what it takes to raise alpaca. The Alpaca
color brochure generally answers most of the initial questions people
have about alpaca. The Fleece to Fashion brochure articulates the
advantages of alpaca made into textiles. Alpacas, The World's Finest
Livestock Investment brochure explains the financial benefits of
alpaca ownership.
The next step, if we are to avoid other breeds' mistakes, is to
place this information in the hands of people who are still asking
the question, “What is an alpaca?” There are many dividends to be
accrued by bringing new breeders to our industry: 1) they supply
new capital, 2) they bring fresh ideas and enthusiasm, 3) they become
salesmen for the breed, 4) they bring additional talent to our existing
breeder base, and 5) they will allow us to grow the national herd
to the point of sustained commercial viability. In my opinion, it
is the talent that new breeders supply that will be most important
in building the future market for alpacas.
How can we as an industry insure an ever-increasing audience for
our product? I think the primary condition for continuing success
must be breeder cooperation. We must find more ways to act collectively.
Our industry is small, we are made up of small breeders; even the
so-called big breeders are small when compared to participants in
almost any other endeavor. Our strength can only be developed through
close cooperation. Each example of our current success is founded
in cooperation. Alpacas magazine succeeds because everyone
in the industry contributes. AOBA's marketing material was initially
funded with our collective dues. The regional alpaca festivals,
which build our regional markets, require multiple breeders' cooperation.
As we look ahead to the next 10 to 20 years, we need to develop
additional models for breeder cooperation. More regional groups
need to associate. In Oregon, there have been three small associations
formed in the last two years. The organizing principal for these
groups seems to be the close proximity of their farms. Meetings
are held eight to ten times a year and the breeders have all participated
in “farm day” type promotions. Members of these smaller groups,
in turn, work cooperatively on more regional events such as Alpaca
Fest International.
Another recent example of successful breeder cooperation was the
alpaca “infomercial,” produced by six breeders, Alpacas of America,
Camelids of Delaware, Northwest Alpacas, Maplewood Farms, Pet Center
Incorporated and Stachowski Alpacas. The 30-minute video cost over
$30,000 to produce and another $25,000 was spent buying
airtime both locally and nationally. The total cost of this project
was in excess of what any of the individual contributor could have
afforded.
The video included repeated references to AOBA and frequently displayed
the AOBA phone number. Hobert Services, AOBA's business office,
typically receives about 30 to 60 requests for alpaca information
per month. During the month of August, while the infomercial was
playing, they received almost 300 requests for information and many
new memberships.
The infomercial video is available to be licensed by other breeders
for play in their market area. The breeder who uses the video can
program his own commercials onto the tape at prearranged intervals.
The breeders who originally financed the tape will remove their
commercials, but the AOBA promotion and phone number will remain.
Everyone in the industry can benefit as the infomercial is played
in local markets. Anyone who wishes to use the infomercial should
call me.
The response I received from the video was amazing. We had over
one hundred visitors to our farm as a result of airing the program
over one weekend at a cost of less than $500. I've filled two
alpaca investment seminars as a result of the broadcast and sold
over $100,000 worth of alpacas to purchasers who had never before
heard of alpacas. I have many more people currently looking into
buying alpacas as a result of viewing this infomercial. Not only
did I experience tremendous interest as a result of airing the video,
but many breeders from my local areas commented that they also received
inquires from people who saw the tape. I am convinced, the single
most effective thing that breeders can do to market their own animals
is to join together with others to market alpacas generally, to
the general public. A large portion of our ad dollars can best be
spent promoting alpacas to the uninformed. We need to be advertising
in the in-flight magazines published by airlines such as American
or United. We need to advertise in magazines like Southern Living
and Sunset. We shouldn't spend all of our dollars advertising
in magazines which are mailed to people who already know who we
are and what we are selling.
The problem with the approach I'm suggesting is the cost. It is
expensive to advertise in the weekend edition of USA Today.
The solution, cooperation. We need to pool our dollars and promote
alpacas generally to a much larger market, as opposed to exclusively
promoting our individual ranches specifically to a much smaller
market.
AOBA should consider funding an ad-coop, together with individual
breeders who can afford to assist a larger, more expensive effort.
There will be more than enough benefits for everyone involved to
justify the cost. The local breed associations can also pool their
ad dollars to everyone's benefit.
We need more programs like those being created by Jim Faiks and
Alpacas Magazine. Jim has created a sponsorship promotion,
which encourages breeders to sponsor subscriptions to Alpacas
Magazine for their accountants, vets, doctors and local feed
stores. Jim is working on having the magazine sold in bookstores.
Copies of the magazine will also be sent to other people in the
alternative livestock business who do not currently own alpacas.
The second condition necessary to our future success is the development
of our domestic fiber industry. I recently attended the Taos Wool
Festival with my wife, Julie, who as looking for fiber artists who
could create products for her country store. We also went specifically
to meet with the owners of the Taos Woolen Mill, a specialty fiber
processor.
For Alpaca breeders in the U.S. to effectively market their fiber
production, they must first convert it into a universal product,
such as machine spun yarn. Yarn can be made into sweaters, sold
to knitters or woven into blankets. Raw fleece, on the other hand,
is currently only saleable to hand spinners. There is no central
commercial market place which buys and sells fleece in the grease.
Robert Donnelly, a partner in the Taos Woolen Mill, says, “For
any specialty fiber breed to establish itself commercially, it must
move beyond the cottage.” His mill is ideally suited to assist the
alpaca industry in doing just that. They scour, card, spin and ply
specialty fibers into yarn at a reasonable price, in most cases
for less than $20 per pound.
Julie and I were delighted to see alpaca from our ranch spun and
plied into beautiful, even yarn. The mill currently cards and spins
sheep's wool into yarn for the blanket-weaving industry, which has
been located in and around Taos and Sante Fe, New Mexico for generations.
Once Alpaca breeders can determine a dependable means of production,
which will convert their raw fleece into commercial products, a
strong domestic market will evolve. Each breeder will become the
salesman for products, such as yarn and sweaters, which are universally
understood by the consuming public. Alpaca products are easy to
sell, they are unique. The public enjoys them.
We all know that alpaca fiber is stronger and warmer than sheep's
wool, that it's softer than most specialty fiber and that it's relatively
easy to process. But, the distinguishing characteristic of alpaca
fleece in the future will be its relative fineness.
The value of specialty fiber is largely predicated on fineness.
In Australia, triple A fine merino sheep's wool sells for four times
as much as run-of-the-mill coarser fiber. Cashmere in Australia
sells for over $100 a kilogram. Vicuna cloth, currently being
processed in Peru, will sell for more than $1,000 per square
meter. Added value is closely related to fineness.
Alpaca has traditionally been purchased by the pound. Peruvian
breeders are paid little or no premium for fine fleece. As a result,
the average Peruvian alpaca is most often bred for high density.
Historically, fiber fineness has not been a priority. Australian
breeders have already recognized the alpaca's potential for fineness,
and they routinely have their fiber micron tested. They use this
information to guide their breeding programs.
The future value of the American alpaca can be enhanced by selectively
breeding for fineness, in addition to high yield. Alpacas which
produce fine fiber will sell for more simply because the product
they produce will be more valuable. Prize merino bloodstock in Australia,
capable of producing fine fiber, still sells for thousands of dollars,
while coarser wool sheep are hardly worth the cost of feeding them.
Alpacas are uniquely able to produce large volumes of fine fiber.
AOBA needs to take the lead in developing a fiber marketing plan.
They need to design and establish an alpaca industry trademark which
symbolizes high quality, fine fiber products. We need to promote
alpaca textiles to fashion designers. If we can establish alpaca
as a high quality, brand-name commodity, our select breeding stock
will return high values indefinitely. Breeders who concentrate on
exploiting the alpaca's natural ability to produce high volumes
of fine fleece will be amply rewarded. Looking ahead, our industry's
destiny is in our collective hands. We can cooperate, promote and
aggressively build on our initial successes, or we can take the
easy approach, sit back and clip coupons for a few more years. I
for one don't want to see our present momentum dissipate. The market
is young and strong, we need to tend it with care. Maintaining a
high rate of speed, requires far less work than moving an object
from 0 to 60.
Reproduced with permission from:
Alpaca
Breeding Farm: Northwest Alpacas: raising suri and
huacaya alpacas for sale, alpaca investment, and alpaca business
plans for alpaca breeders and owners worldwide. Find more useful
information at the Alpaca
Library.
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