26/04/2026
FROM FIELD TO INSTITUTION
The four (4) F2C2 clusters, representing an estimated 600 farmer-members, have reached a defining milestone, successfully delivering approximately 80MT of yellow corn to San Miguel Food Corporation on April 24, 2026, in Villasis, Pangasinan.
This achievement marks the culmination of a year-long journey shaped by rigorous social preparation, sustained capacity-building efforts, development of Cluster Development Plans, and active engagement in consultation dialogues with institutional buyers.
Through trust forged, skills strengthened, and partnerships cultivated, the clusters have transformed collective intent into tangible success, demonstrating not only productivity but the power of unity and shared purpose within the program.
ALIGNED TO THE CORN VALUE CHAIN
The strength of the F2C2 corn clusters lies in structured alignment with the agricultural value chain. Rather than participating in isolated segments, the clusters operate within a coordinated pathway that connects production to institutional markets.
INPUT SUPPLY- Through the support and intervention of the DA RFO 1 Corn Banner Program- Model Farm Initiative, the clusters received agriculture inputs, farm machinery and equipment, irrigation systems and equipment, and post-harvest facilities. Also, through the F2C2 Program, the clusters were guided in developing their production modules and supply plans, the integrated modules and plans in the developed Cluster Development Plans per cluster.
Through synchronized cropping schedules across 100 hectares per cluster, planting becomes coordinated rather than fragmented. This has resulted in a uniform crop maturity and predictable harvest periods.
PRODUCTION- The clusters implement standardized production guides, shared technical guidance, clustered monitoring of crop health, and supervised yield tracking per production area.
With consolidated land areas, performance benchmarking becomes possible, and easy tracking of underperforming areas and best practicing areas.
POST-HARVEST- The cluster coordinate harvest, drying operations, and being conscious of moisture compliance.
Instead of individual post-harvest practices, the volume is consoldiated and standardized. This has resulted in the clusters aiming for uniform feed-grade quality and the clusters' improved buyer confidence.
CONSOLIDATION- The clusters implement strategies in doing consolidation systems, scheduled hauling rotations, and volume tracking documentation. This reduced transport inefficiencies and led to timely institutional delivery.
DISTRIBUTION/END MARKET- With 500 hectares across five clusters producing an estimated 700-900 tons per cluster, the consolidated supply meets the scale required by institutional buyers.
FROM INDIVIDUAL MINDSETS TO COLLECTIVE MARKET POWER
The clusters did not begin with scale rather it began with individuals. Farmers who planted, harvested, and sold independently. Each decision and risk was personal and each negotiation stood alone.
Clustering requires a transformation of mindset. And under the leadership of various stakeholders, that transformation became intentional.
The first transformation required the psychological aspect: From "my yield, my buyer, my timing" to "our volume, our contract, our delivery schedule".
The clusters understood the program when it emphasizes that institutional markets do not negotiate with fragments rather they negotiate with volume.
And volume requires unity. That kickstarted the organization to adapt the collective marketing.
Yet the shift did not happen overnight because this development requires trust. Trust that volume would be honored, that quality would be maintained, and the collective discipline benefits all.
Today, the clusters function not only as a supplier but as a model of developed clustering. The farmer association and cooperatives stand as proof that when mindset evolves, structure follows. And when structure maintains, markets respond.
From individual mindset to collective market power, the organizations' transformation is about economics and culture. The clusters understood and applied unity.
And in unity, when organized, becomes leverage.
Photo Source: Department of Agriculture - Ilocos Region