Open Access
Open access
Sustainability, volume 12, issue 24, pages 10479

Small Farm Business Analysis Using the AHP Model for Efficient Assessment of Distribution Channels

Aleksandra Tosovic-Stevanovic 1
Vladimir Ristanović 2
Dragan Calovic 3
Gojko Lalić 4
Milena Žuža 5
Gorica Cvijanović 6
1
 
Department of Economy, Faculty of Business, Economics and Entrepreneurship, 11 000 Belgrade, Serbia
2
 
Department of Economy, Institute of European Studies, 11 000 Belgrade, Serbia
3
 
Faculty of Contemporary Arts, University Business Academy, 11 000 Belgrade, Serbia
4
 
Department of Economy, Faculty of Social Sciences, University Business Academy, 11 000 Belgrade, Serbia
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2020-12-15
Journal: Sustainability
scimago Q1
SJR0.672
CiteScore6.8
Impact factor3.3
ISSN20711050
Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment
Geography, Planning and Development
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law
Abstract

Distribution of agricultural products from the aspect of farms is a continuous issue. Efficient application of the distribution model should provide a farm owner with regular income, as well as with a competitive advantage. Assessment of distribution channels in the context of an agricultural producer is subject to multi-criteria decisions, including both qualitative and quantitative factors. The aim of this paper is to develop a model which enables a structured analysis and an efficient assessment of distribution channels. The methodology based on the Analytical Hierarchy Process (AHP) will be a useful tool in setting various criteria for deciding on distribution channels, as well as a tool for managing a multi-variant qualitative assessment of data included in decision-making processes. The survey results show that the most important distribution channel for agricultural products is the channel of sales via processing plants (cooling and drying facilities, silos and agricultural combines), compared to sales through advertising (which significantly increased its share with the COVID-19 pandemic), sales through sales channels or at farmers’ markets.

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