The Open Food Network is a worldwide group developing an open source online platform that provides an online marketplace for food producers and distributors. It's very much focussed on supporting independent local farms and allows food hubs to act as umbrella entities for individual producers. The software itself is available on GitHub and the user guide is available here.
There is an existing deployment of OFN serving the UK: Open Food Network UK. There are already people in the Highlands using this platform, including Elphin Green Bowl and Roots, Fruits and Leaves.
This introductory video gives an overview of the platform.
Dylan shared this more in depth discussion (thanks Dylan).
Ana shared this feature list (thanks Ana).
Thanks also to Helen OKeefe from Elphin Green Bowl who's been a wealth of useful advice and information (we may want to pick your brains more laterBasic requirements
Customer can place orders through the veg box's website
Invoicing is automated based on placed orders
Secure payment
Product catalogue is easy to update
Once the sell-cycle's stock is sold-out, the shop indicates so and stops sales
It is easy include other products to the website and sales, out with the standard veg boxes (for example, if they have sausages available at certain times of year)
Technical support during working hours
All information can be downloaded to excel spreadsheets or other reports
Increasing managed volumes is easy
Different sales cycle management
Aesthetically pleasing
Part of the offer is a branded site for each veg box
Customer management
Different customer profiles (individual, wholesale, restaurants)
Customer dashboard where they can check their new/active/cancelled orders, lifetime sales details, contact information, payment information, etc).
Customer can copy previous orders / re-order
Customers can have a "wallet" for upfront payments (refunds are added as available money in the account unless refund requested)
Holiday / cancellation dates
Customer can easily provide feedback
Customized rewards / coupon builders / loyalty programmes
Customer software support
Customer database
Manager board
Sales Dashboard with information about new/active/cancelled orders, lifetime sales details, etc.
Sales report
Interface with accounting system
Cash balance between wallets and orders
Print orders per categories/products
Print labels in order of delivery
Delivery routes
Links with veg box social media
Push notifications
Product trends analysis
Other analytics?
They are also working on harvest lists soon....
Alternatives
- Several people have mentioned NeighbourFood.
- Dylan (thanks again) shared Local Food Nodes.
- Thanks to Donna who has had a very positive experience with Big Barn,. Big Barn are UK based and have more local suppliers registered than OFN do. They aren't open source, but it seems they are willing to facilitate our project. They take 6% of the sale price (excluding delivery) plus 45p to cover card processing.
Choices
I expect we need more information before we can make a firm decision on software, and our choice of software may well influence the other aspects of the project. OFN seems like the front-runner, but Big Barn may well be a worth alternative. We probably need to talk to both organisations to find out how they feel our idea fits with their platforms?
Regarding OFN...
I hope to set the software up on a test server so we can evaluate it properly in a non-live environment. Any decision relating to what follows should probably wait until that happens.
Unnecessary technical detail...
► Show Spoiler
- We could use OFN-UK as a platform and act as advocates, facilitators, enablers and a communication nexus for local hubs, producers and similar entities. This is the simplest and easiest option, which may well make it the most sensible. It subordinates us to a UK wide entity when our focus is on the Highlands, and the individual hubs would be required to pay OFN-UK's (albeit very reasonable) fees. It's outwith the scope of this discussion, but Scotland may or may not remain a part of the UK in the longer term, what would happen in relation to OFN-UK in such and eventuality is unclear.
- We could ask for the hub-of-hubs feature to be implemented (or since it's open source we could implement it ourselves if anyone has the skills). Depending on how the software is written it may not be particularly involved, or it may be completely impractical.
- We could run the OFN software on our own server and administer it ourselves. That would take some work, exactly how much I'm not sure until the software is running on a server I can play with. On the other hand we wouldn't be paying OFN-UK for the use of their platform. Essentially we would be doing the same as OFN-UK, but with a specific Highland focus, the platform itself would be the uber-hub. This may have implications for existing hubs and producers using OFN (but I expect nothing insurmountable, it's the same software after all).
- Something else I've not thought of.