Building a Leadership Pipeline in Ag Cooperatives

Dr Ray Johnson
Senior and junior board members discussing agribusiness strategy in a rural office.

One of the biggest risks facing Australian agricultural cooperatives today isn’t the weather or the markets. It is the empty seat at the boardroom table.

We see it across the country. A cooperative has a solid board of directors who have been there for twenty years, but there is no one standing in the wings ready to take over. When those experienced heads eventually retire, the business loses decades of institutional knowledge in one hit.

Building a leadership pipeline is not about fancy HR terms or expensive recruitment firms. It is about making sure your co-op is still here and locally owned in another fifty years.

The Succession Gap in Regional Australia

In many regional towns, the same five or six people seem to sit on every committee, from the local show society to the co-op board. While that dedication is great, it creates a bottleneck.

Younger farmers or local professionals often feel like they need to wait for an invitation that never comes. Or worse, they look at the workload and the complexity and think they are not qualified. Our work in agribusiness shows that if we do not actively pull the next generation through, we end up with a leadership vacuum. This often leads to the co-op being sold off or merged because there is no one left to run it.

1. Start with Associate Director Roles

The jump from running a farm to overseeing a multi-million-dollar cooperative is massive. You cannot expect someone to make that leap overnight.

A practical way around this is creating associate or shadow director positions. This allows younger members to sit in on board meetings, see how the financials are handled, and understand the regulatory side of things without having the full legal weight on their shoulders yet. It is essentially a multi-year job interview where they get to learn the ropes.

2. Training for the Business of Co-ops

Running a co-op is different from running a private company. You are balancing the needs of member-owners with the need for a profitable bottom line.

We need to be proactive about getting emerging leaders into the right courses. Whether it is the Australian Institute of Company Directors (AICD) programs or specific co-op governance workshops, the investment should be on the co-op’s tab. It is much cheaper to train a local than it is to deal with a board that does not understand its financial obligations.

3. Look Beyond the Farm Gate

While the heart of any ag co-op is the producer, a modern board needs a mix of skills.

A pipeline should also include people with backgrounds in tech, logistics, or finance who live in the community. Having a young local accountant or a school principal on a subcommittee brings a fresh set of eyes to the business. It stops the board from becoming an echo chamber where everyone thinks the same way.

4. Normalise the Conversation

Succession should not be a taboo topic. It needs to be a standing item on the agenda. Current directors should be asking themselves who their replacement is.

If you are a director today, your legacy isn’t just the profit you made this year. It is the quality of the person you leave behind to take your spot.

Keeping the Legacy Locally Owned

Agri cooperatives are the backbone of regional economies because they keep the profits in the town. But they only stay strong if the leadership stays local and stays fresh.

If you are a member of a co-op and you see someone with a bit of spark and a good head for business, start the conversation. You don’t need a formal strategy to ask someone to grab a coffee and talk about the future of the company.

If you want to talk about how to structure your board or find the right people for the future, you can check out our business services or get in touch with our team about your specific situation.

About the Author

Picture of Dr Ray Johnson
Dr Ray Johnson

Managing Director

Dr. Ray Johnson is a seasoned agribusiness leader with over 25 years of experience across animal nutrition, livestock genetics, and executive search. Having held CEO and MD positions at NSW Farmers, Genetics Australia and Rhone-Poulenc Animal Nutrition, ANZ, Ray has led and advised companies at the highest levels. With a PhD in Ag science and extensive Board experience, he offers strategic insights to businesses seeking growth and leadership in the agribusiness sector.

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