Owner Eschews Huge Cash Windfall as Riverford Organics handed over to 650 staff


Photo (CC BY-NC 2.0)  by Neil Alexander McKee Life on the Veg – Riverford Organic

“What does surprise me, given all the evidence to the contrary, is that anyone would think £30m would make you happier than £3m.”

So said Guy Singh-Watson of Riverford Organics, back in 2014. On the first day of June, Singh-Watson handed over almost ¾ of the business- known primarily for its organic veg box deliveries in the UK – to its employees.

Singh-Watson is well known for his honesty, his passion and indeed his rants (his word!). He has strong positions on a number of organic and business-related issues. See below for a thoughtful take on industralisation of organic farming and its impacts, including on how naturally  – or otherwise – kale can grow with increased mechanisation. That this is made in a field of kale he is trying to decide whether its worth harvesting or now makes it all the more pertinent.

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Riverford has a turnover of £56.6 million annually, delivering veg and fruit boxes to up to 50,000 customers weekly.

There are five farms in the Riverford set up – in Devon, Cambridgeshire, Hampshire, North Yorkshire and France. There is also a restaurant, an on-site eatery at their Buckfastleigh base, and a certified organic gastropub, The Duke of Cambridge, in London. A number of local organic farms also supply Riverford for their deliveries.

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650 staff now own 74% of the company, with Singh-Watson retaining the remaining 26%. Employees were benefiting from sales, to the tune of a 10% share in annual profits, since the 1990s. The 74% is managed by an Employee Trust, where shares are held in trust for all staff equally – rather than a direct ownership model. The Trust is initially made up of Singh-Watson, two staff members and two external trustees.

This trust model Riverford has adopt maintains certain structures and values, with regard to staff, organics and long-term producer-supplier relations.

The employee-ownership model is often described, in the UK, as the John Lewis model, named after the department store which also owns Waitrose. With John Lewis, all 75,000+ staff are partners in the business.

According to Riverford:  “John Lewis is a good model of how employee ownership can be combined with conventional management structure to achieve both commercial success and accountability to founding values. Riverford will continue to have a conventional board, recently strengthened by the appointment of its first two non-executive directors. In a few months an employee council will be elected. Two members will also become Trustees.”

Singh-Watson was motivated into action by two things: the sale to venture capitalists of rival veg delivery business Abel and Cole, and the fact that his family showed no interest in carrying on with the business.

In 2014, the now 58 year old wrote about succession planning. He said the following:  “The sale of Abel & Cole to venture capitalists in 2007 precipitated a plague of oily suits from the city, snaking their way to my door and promising to lubricate my passage into well-heeled retirement. The prospect felt like selling one of my children to a brothel, plus, all the entrepreneurs that I have met who sold up are depressed…”…adding  “the appalling situation at the Co-op bank shows that ideology and values can never be a substitute for competence and good management.”

He thinks a growth rate of 7 or 8% annually is necessary: “With this we can do new things and generate new opportunities for staff; but venture capitalists would want 30-40% growth” he told his local Devon newspaper.

The change of model is part funded by ethical bank Triodos. Singh-Watson will receive his own pay out over six years from this loan.

Undoubtedly outspoken – known for his pro-organic rants on youtube – Singh-Watson has, with this move, also emerged as something of a business innovator.

Announcing the change on his blog from 1st June, the Devon man said “I am convinced most people are kinder, less greedy, more creative, more thoughtful and can contribute more and be more productive than our institutions allow them to demonstrate. The best indication of business efficiency (and most valid prediction of future success) is getting the best out of people while giving the most back; return on capital is a poor, short-term proxy.”

This vision is laudable – to prioritise the type of business it is over personal gain is impressive. Its one thing professing this sort of approach – its quite another actually doing it when you are looking at 30 million pounds.

Its also the case that, while it is supplied by 40 organic producers in the region, and it function as  the central hub and customer for the South Devon Organic Producers co-op, both of which make it affordable for local small producers to operate, other small to mid sized organic producers have a mixed opinion of Riverford. Privately, producers have told this author of how difficult it is to survive as an independent in the shadow of such a huge, comprehensive, well-financed organisation.

This has always been a point of discussion among organic producers and academics who study the area – do big initiatives like Riverford, or Able and Cole – develop markets or smother smaller producers? Does supplying a big reach player, which then sells on your veg, make more sense than supplying customers yourself directly? Riverford is, after all, both core to a co-op and a middle man for smaller producers. And who has stopped growing veg, who has stopped supplying local markets, because they were not willing to compromise, or to become merely a supplier? What is the local impact in this context?

That said, suppliers often like the stability of having multiple routes to market – a solid one where you sell on, and other more local or bespoke routes enabled by this steady income.

Nevertheless, supplying 50,000 people a week makes you a very big player by organic standards. Inevitably, the broader localised positives of mixed agroecologcal landscapes, of a flourishing of small to mid-sized independent producers, are impacted by mega distribution a la Riverford. Just how connected can the 50,000 consumers be to local producers, if these producers are known primarily as suppliers to Riverford?

And yet, by bringing in the 650 staff, Guy Singh-Watson has shows that he is thoughtful enough to reject aspects of standard conventionalisation in organic farming. After all, the 74% ownership these 650 workers now have de-concentrates and decentralises power – and the economic democracy of this chimes well with agroecological approaches. While it should not be down to the philanthropy of one especially driven and unusual individual to make these decisions, at least from now on, in the case of Riverford, it won’t be.

Agroecological approaches are not just about the field – the whole agri-food provisioning system is relevant when it comes to democratisation.

Meanwhile Guy intends to work more on permaculture and on developing no till practices in organics.

We’ll soon find out how his vision, like the one that led him to organics in the 1980s, will bear fruit (and veg).

A shorter version of this article also appeared in the Irish Examiner’s Farming supplement.

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About Oliver Moore 214 Articles

Dr. Oliver Moore is the communications director and editor-in-chief with ARC2020. He has a PhD in the sociology of farming and food, where he specialised in organics and direct sales. He is published in the International Journal of Consumer Studies, International Journal of Agricultural Resources, Governance and Ecology and the Journal of Agriculture, Food Systems, and Community Development. A weekly columnist and contributor with Irish Examiner, he is a regular on Countrywide (Irish farm radio show on the national broadcaster RTE 1) and engages in other communications work around agri-food and rural issues, such as with the soil, permaculture, climate change adaptation and citizen science initiative Grow Observatory . He lectures part time in the Centre for Co-operative Studies UCC.

A propos d'Oliver Moore
Oliver voyage beaucoup moins qu’auparavant, pour ce qui concerne son activité professionnelle. Il peut néanmoins admirer par la fenêtre de son bureau les mésanges charbonnières et les corbeaux perchés au sommet du saule dans le jardin de sa maison au cœur de l’écovillage de Cloughjordan, en Irlande. L’écovillage est un site de 67 acres dans le nord du Tipperary. Il comprend d’espaces boisés, des paysages comestibles, des lieux de vie, d’habitation et de travail, ainsi qu’une ferme appartenant à la communauté. Les jours où il travaille dans le bureau du centre d’entreprise communautaire, il profite d’une vue sur les chevaux, les panneaux solaires, les toilettes sèches et les jardins familiaux. 

Ce bureau au sein de l’écovillage constitue en effet un tiers-lieu de travail accueillant également des collaborateurs des associations Cultivate et Ecolise, ainsi qu’un laboratoire de fabrication (« fab lab »). 

Oliver est membre du conseil d’administration de la ferme communautaire (pour la seconde fois !) et donne également des cours sur le Master en coopératives, agroalimentaire et développement durable à l’University College Cork. Il a une formation en sociologie rurale : son doctorat et les articles qu’il publie dans des journaux scientifiques portent sur ce domaine au sens large.

Il consacre la majorité de son temps de travail à l’ARC 2020. Il collabore avec ARC depuis 2013, date à laquelle l’Irlande a assuré la présidence de l’UE pendant six mois. C’est là qu’il a pu constater l’importance de la politique agroalimentaire et rurale grâce à sa chronique hebdomadaire sur le site d’ARC. Après six mois, il est nommé rédacteur en chef et responsable de la communication, poste qu’il occupe toujours aujourd’hui. Oliver supervise le contenu du site web et des médias sociaux, aide à définir l’orientation de l’organisation et parfois même rédige un article pour le site web. 

À l’époque où on voyageait davantage, il a eu la chance de passer du temps sous les tropiques, où il a aidé des ONG irlandaises de commerce équitable – au Ghana, au Kenya, au Mali, en Inde et au Salvador – à raconter leur histoire.

Il se peut que ces jours-là reviennent. Pour son compte Oliver continuera de préférer naviguer en Europe par bateau, puis en train. Après tout, la France n’est qu’à une nuit de navigation. En attendant, il y a toujours de nombreuses possibilités de bénévolat dans la communauté dans les campagnes du centre de l’Irlande.