The problem nobody in agritech is talking about enough.
I have spent the last two years studying agritech innovations from Oman — watching how technology is applied in desert environments and asking one question repeatedly.
Why are adoption rates for crop protection and precision farming technology still below 20 percent in places that matter most — when the solutions clearly work?
The answer I keep arriving at is not what most founders expect to hear.
Three problems stand between a farmer and profit.
Before I explain the adoption problem, you need to understand the full picture of what a farmer is carrying every single season.
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Problem 1 — Labour**
Clearing land can be done by a tractor. But planting 1,000 banana suckers requires human hands. Finding reliable farm labour is one of the biggest operational headaches a smallholder farmer carries.
This problem is real. But farmers are managing it. They have developed workarounds across generations. It is not the problem that kills the most dreams.
Problem 2 — Crop Survival
Soil sensors. Smart irrigation. AI driven crop monitoring. Disease detection apps. This is where most agritech investment is flowing right now — and real progress is happening here.
Plantix delivers AI disease diagnosis to farmers with a basic smartphone in seconds. AVIX laser deterrents protect rice fields from bird invasions 24 hours a day without human presence. PICS hermetic storage bags eliminate post-harvest losses by up to 100 percent for major pests.
The technology works. The founders building it are real. The results are documented.
This is the problem agritech is solving. And solving it well.
Problem 3 — Market Access
This is the problem that kills the most dreams. And it is the one getting the least attention.
Here is what most agritech founders do not fully account for.
Before a single crop is sold — the farmer is already in debt.
Fertilizer. Weed clearing chemicals. Pest control. Land preparation. Labour. Every season starts with cost before it starts with hope. A smallholder farmer in Nigeria, Kenya or Indonesia is carrying real financial weight from the moment they put a seed in the ground.
Now you want to introduce a drone to that farmer.
He will look at you and smile. Because in his mind the real question is not whether the drone works. The question is — who is going to buy what the drone helped him grow?
I planted yam once expecting to sell the harvest to fund a project. The crop did not fail. The market was not there when I needed it.
I have watched this pattern repeat across farming communities in Nigeria. A farmer works an entire season, produces well, then watches the value disappear because there is nowhere to sell at the right time and the right price.
A farm owner here in Oman said something that stayed with me.
He said the second poorest person in the world is a farmer.
Because the moment a farmer cannot sell at the right time — they sell at any price. Without calculating profit. Without calculating loss. Just to move the harvest.
The adoption problem explained.
When a founder arrives in a farming community with a precision technology product — a soil sensor, a drone service, an AI advisory app — they are arriving in a community where the farmer has already calculated his risk exposure very carefully.
He is not saying no to the technology because it does not work. He is saying no because he cannot afford another cost that leads nowhere.
If the harvest has no market — the sensor that helped him grow a better harvest has only added to his loss. He spent money on inputs. He spent time on adoption. And he still could not sell at a price that covered any of it.
This is rational behaviour. Not resistance to technology.
What this means for SaaS founders building in agritech.
The most important insight I want to leave with every founder building in this space is this.
Your product does not exist in isolation. It exists inside a farming economy where market access determines whether any other investment — including your product — makes financial sense to the farmer.
If you are building precision farming tools, crop monitoring systems or agricultural AI — the most powerful thing you can do alongside your core product is connect your users to market infrastructure. Offtaker relationships. Cooperative networks. Price transparency platforms. Digital marketplaces that show the farmer what buyers are paying before they decide what to plant.
Solve market access and every solution you build becomes easier to sell.
Without it — technology is just another cost a farmer cannot afford to trust.
The opportunity.
This is also where I see one of the most significant untapped opportunities in agritech SaaS right now.
The founders who build seriously in the market access layer — platforms that connect smallholder farmers to verified buyers, provide real-time market price data and help farmers plan what to grow based on what the market actually needs — are building infrastructure that makes every other agritech solution more adoptable.
That is not a small opportunity.
Which of these three problems are you building for?
Adewumi Israel is an Agri-Tech Market Intelligence Writer and founder of Nexus Content Studio. He writes market intelligence reports,serves as a copywriter
and content strategy for agritech founders globally. Visit kayode-writer.github.io
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