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Long and Winding Road

rpixton

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Hi All,

I've been a big fan of MJ's for years now first reading the Millionaire Fastlane back in 2012 and recently finishing up Unscripted last month.

A bit of background on me, I grew up on a potato farm in rural Washington State. Raised cattle and crops the whole time growing up. Saw some really rough times financially with the family farm as I hit HS and the farm had to be liquidated. Swore at that time I'd do anything but farming. After graduating from college, I weighed my options and did exactly what I swore I wouldn't do and got right back into agriculture.

For the next seven years, I ran my own farm; securing financing, raising crops, and buying equipment. As things often do in agriculture I was hit with two tough years in a row and went through the same thing my folks did a decade earlier (to a lesser degree albeit). And just like that I wasn't sure where to go with my life. Got into irrigation sales, and had my first taste of a hopeless hourly wage and terrible commisions.

My wife and I decided to change things up after two years of marriage and moved across the country to Massachusetts to be closer to her family. Had the exciting new prospect of moving to a new area and breaking into a new industry. Got a job with a well known software company as an account executive, and felt things were heading in the right direction.

About six months in however I started feeling that entrepreneurial itch again. Knowing that my time was not my own and never would be on my current path, has really lit a fire under me.

Really excited to be a part of this community and putting my plans into action. I'm specifically interested in eCommerce and building a scalable business through physical products. I have a fair amount of experience in sales and inbound marketing, so if you have any specific questions fire away.
 
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MJ DeMarco

I followed the science; all I found was money.
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Welcome @rpixton and thanks for the intro.

Curious, was there any alternative uses for your farm when u lived back in Washington State? Cannabis? GMO free stuff?

I've been thinking that that agriculture is due for a disruption, considering it's all mega-corps / big-ag running roughshot over it.
 

rpixton

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Nov 19, 2017
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Welcome @rpixton and thanks for the intro.

Curious, was there any alternative uses for your farm when u lived back in Washington State? Cannabis? GMO free stuff?

I've been thinking that that agriculture is due for a disruption, considering it's all mega-corps / big-ag running roughshot over it.

Yeah, there are plenty of things you could do if the conditions are right. There were a number of folks that are doing Cannabis and organics. The problem was often two-fold needed to have a market and needed to be able to meet economies of scale. A 5 acre patch of organic peas couldn't sustain a business, not to mention the miles of red tape for both Cannabis and Organics.

What I was doing was what would be called "Industrial Ag" growing commodity crops on 350 acres. This wasn't land that I owned and the capital expenditures necessary to get a crop off were crazy.

To your point, it is ripe for disruption in a number of ways pertaining to technology and allowing the individual farmer to better manage a large and diverse crop load.
 

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