Karen Barnes, co-founder of Venture Winston Grants, says they want farmers evaluating ideas and testing hypotheses and co-creating solutions with these startups. The company is estimating the timeframe to run between two and three years to have concepts commercialized and in the marketplace. “I’m a 1,000% optimist and when I look at the sectors where DMI is concentrating, I see great promise,” Barnes says. “What excites me is this is all coming together as a holistic picture. It’s not about solving just one problem. It’s about taking a 360-degree approach and that’s how you solve problems on a broad scale.”
Peterson is equally as excited not only as a board member for national checkoff, but as a dairy farmer who contributes to checkoff. “Our story with nutrition and sustainability is promising and startups want to put their capital into green efforts, as well as child nutrition.”
With more than 100 years behind the National Dairy Council, the promise of dairy’s sustainable and nutritional benefit is not just a tagline, but something this partnership hopes will propel new ventures to generate a new level of energy towards dairy’s future. “It’s like bringing the next generation back to the family farm. The ideas and energy this partnership can provide are endless,” Peterson adds.