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Maple Country Home & Farm
Since opening their doors, they have evolved from a modest business into a 5,600 square foot retail leader in the agricultural and building supply sector. The business is well-known for its extensive range of high-quality farm supplies, building materials and hardware, and caters to assorted needs with products like bale wrap, tractor parts, feeders, fencing, and an extensive line of feed, seed, and fertilizer.
Since 2017, they have worked with Frontenac Business Services, which has provided financial and business development support to build the new retail space for their expansion. This collaboration enabled the Bovey’s to lay a solid foundation for future business.
Today, Maple Country Home & Farm is an essential supplier in the region, recognized for delivering quality, and practical solutions for agricultural, commercial, and industrial projects. The Bovey’s have a strong commitment to customer service and retail excellence with plans for expanded offerings in the future.
Their business journey was reinforced through their strategic planning, market analysis, and the support they received from Frontenac Business Services. The Bovey’s demonstrate the power of a strong vision combined with practical business strategies. Maple Country Home & Farm’s success is well-defined when you parallel their initial start, to where they are today as a key player in the agricultural retail market, clearly illustrating the impact of support and innovation.
Limestone Organic Creamery
Gossage Excavating
Crimson Cider
Katie Heath co-founded Crimson Cider in an 1850’s stone farmhouse on a picturesque 24-acre rural lot in Prince Edward County, Ontario, where she planted an apple orchard. It was shortly after the female entrepreneur had finished building a new production facility for her craft cider company that the pandemic struck.
Parsons Brewing Co.
The word pivot has become embedded in the lexicon of most successful entrepreneurs. It means making a decisive turn in direction when faced with temporary or permanent impediments to moving forward towards your goals.
Rosehaven Yarn Shop
Empty storefronts and boarded up businesses have long been a blight for many rural towns hit by declines in traditional industries and dwindling numbers of young families. Rebuilding and revitalizing Main Streets has been a slow and steady labour in many places, with progress measured in years, as new enterprises take root and people make their way back downtown.
Topsy Farms
At Topsy Farms, Canada’s top sustainable sheep farm on Amherst Island in Lennox and Addington county, certain things are a given. Sheep are born in the pasture and winter outdoors because happy sheep make better wool. Spraying or fertilizer is strictly forbidden. Land is kept green, a rewilding program proudly exists, and in keeping with the founders’ ethos, a percentage of proceeds keep land open to the public. While core values are being honoured and maintained, business challenges abound. Even though their 100% sustainable wool blankets are highly popular, they’re not always available. As Jacob Murray, co-owner of Topsy Farms, recently shared, “We may have 590 mature sheep, but can’t supply enough wool to meet blanket demand.”
Birch Babe
Nestled amidst the rolling hills and pristine lakes of Lennox and Addington County, Ontario, the remarkable Birch Babe story continues to unfold. A skincare company born from a family's passion for clean living, it’s blossomed from a local gem into a force for good in the skincare industry.
Risk Management for Small Business
When starting out a new business we immediately think of the obvious. We focus on issues such as where we source our product, the cost of acquisition, do we need to rent premises, if we need staff how will we cover payroll and so forth.
Well down on the list, if at all, some thought might be given as to how we can protect ourselves from unforeseen circumstances.
Considering all the things that could harm your ability to manage the business effectively, is referred to as Risk Management.
Growing your home business
When your business is in its infancy, you tend to it with great care. You nurture it. You carefully work out your business plan. For as long as you can, you do everything yourself and as long as everything is getting done, this is the most efficient use of your resources. You may be satisfied with the level of income you make as a one-person, home-based business and decide you don't want it to grow beyond that stage - there's nothing wrong with that. If you do hope to expand your income and grow your business, however, you must go beyond start-up and start thinking strategically about how to move your business toward growth and expansion.