Dairy Goes Digital: Checkoff Adopts Data-Driven Marketing Strategy to Reach Modern Consumers

The Dairy Checkoff’s new approach to consumer marketing helps farmers bridge the gap between physical vs. digital touchpoints and deliver more end sales.

ARLINGTON, TEXAS (RFD-TV) — When it comes to connecting with consumers, the dairy industry is blending the physical with the digital. Dairy Management Inc. President and CEO Barb O’Brien told Tammi Arender that this new approach is helping farmers bridge the gap between online engagement and the purchase point.

DMI Chairwoman Marilyn Hershey, a dairy farmer from Pennsylvania, explained further that the Dairy Checkoff‘s success depends on collaboration across national, regional, and local systems, as well as a perfect mix of both digital and physical touchpoints with consumers.

“Digital is that blend of physical and digital, and the reality is: put consumers in the middle, and they are surrounded by their lives’ experience,” Hershey said. “They are surrounded by physical points of contact with our products and digital ones — and we know consumers can enter that experience at any point -- so we need to ensure we have the right balance and blend of communications flowing through those channels to make them aware of our products, our farmers, our practices, and our industry. We need to make sure there’s a trigger for that purchase as they’re going through the consideration process, and pull that through into an actual end purchase. It’s been fascinating to watch; the role data and technology are playing in that consumer transaction is amazing. And we’re following that bouncing ball, and it’s going to continue to evolve, right? I don’t know if you heard that data point, 69% of purchases today are influenced through some kind of digital trigger, so it’s important.”

O’Brien was one of the featured speakers at this week’s National Milk Producers Convention in Arlington, Texas. She also wanted dairy farmers to know that every dollar they pledge to the Dairy Checkoff is well spent, thanks to the technology that can provide.

“I want farmers to know this program is working,” she said. “The investment they make in the Dairy Checkoff program is creating the science and the insight to ensure that we are going to market on their behalf in a very intentional and precise way. Every dollar is spent with intention, with a clear understanding of who we’re marketing to, what resonates with that particular target, and how we can present what is, in fact, a growing portfolio of products that will meet their needs.”

Related Stories
Valley Irrigation’s Darren Siekman explains the advantages of their new pivots for growers managing acreages of up to 60 acres.
Purdue University’s Dr. Michael Langemeier discusses the survey’s findings in February and broader signals in the months ahead.
Pennsylvania Secretary of Agriculture Russell Redding discusses the recent surge in bird flu cases, the state’s expanded biosecurity response and efforts to support poultry producers.
Farmer and retired colonial Joe Ricker joined us to highlight Ag Safety Awareness Program Week, share his work supporting veterans and farmers, and offer guidance on making safety a year-round priority on the farm.
Dry conditions may tighten hay supplies before summer growth. John Mays of Central Life Sciences joined us to discuss the risks of extended grain storage, how quality can be affected over time, and what growers can do to protect their grain while waiting for market opportunities.
Agriculture Freedom Zones reflect rising concern that data center growth must not strain rural grids or displace productive farmland.

Tammi was raised on a cotton and soybean farm in Tallulah, Louisiana. In 1981, she became a TV news anchor and reporter at KNOE-TV in Monroe, Louisiana. She is also an anchor/reporter for RFD-TV and Rural Radio Channel 147 on Sirius XM at their Nashville news studio, where Tammi currently resides.

LATEST STORIES BY THIS AUTHOR:

The West Carroll Parish Ag Expo represents more than farming — it is about the future of agriculture, where tradition meets innovation, and where the backbone of Northeast Louisiana continues to thrive.
FD-TV’s own Tammi Arender caught up with Gregg Doud, President and CEO of the National Milk Producers Federation.
House lawmakers are expected to vote late this afternoon to end the longest government shutdown in U.S. history. The bill they are voting on includes some big priorities for Rural America.
It started as a simple service project for 4-H — collect some shoes, help a few people. But for Franklin Parish High School senior Eli Rogers, it has turned into something much bigger.
Bubba and Amy Miller run Miller Cattle Company in Eros, Louisiana. After visiting other homesteading fairs, they decided to put on their own.
Tammi Arender takes us to 3 Board Farm to meet some first-generation farmers who took a leap of faith and, in the process, found a new purpose.