Farmers to Florists

A Real-Life Look at Using Farmers to Florist for Weddings and Events

9 min · 16. apr. 2026
episode A Real-Life Look at Using Farmers to Florist for Weddings and Events cover

Beskrivelse

Takeaways * Tracking actual bloom timing year over year helps flower farmers make better crop planning decisions. * Floral recipe building simplifies sourcing, delegation, pricing, and event prep. * Better systems and communication tools can save real labor hours in both flower farming and floral design businesses. In this behind-the-scenes episode of Farmers to Florists, [https://www.farmerstoflorists.com/] Dr. Liz Fiedler Mergen shares exactly how she is using the Farmers to Florist platform inside her own flower farm and floral design business. From managing early season crop planning in a heated high tunnel to building floral recipes for stem bars, weddings, and statement installations, Liz walks through the real systems helping her save time and stay organized. She also explains how actual bloom timing can vary based on planting date, location, and growing conditions, and why tracking that data matters for future seasons. On the florist side, she shares how recipe guides help her calculate stem costs, manage wholesale sourcing, and keep event prep out of her head and in one organized place. The episode also highlights platform updates like a florist wishlist feature and email alerts that improve communication between flower farmers and florists. If you are looking for practical flower farming strategies, floral business systems, and tools to make local flowers easier to grow, design with, and sell, this episode offers a real-world look at what that can look like. Key Topics Covered: * How Dr. Liz uses Farmers to Florist in her own business * Crop planning for cool hardy annuals and early tunnel production * Tracking real bloom timing versus projected days to maturity * High tunnel growing in zone 4B Minnesota * Florist inventory visibility and wishlist planning * Email alerts for flower orders and farmer-florist communication * Building floral recipes for stem bars and wedding events * Calculating wholesale flower costs and markup * Delegating floral prep with organized systems * Saving labor hours through better floral business workflows https://www.farmerstoflorists.com/ [https://www.farmerstoflorists.com/]

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Alle episoder

11 episoder

episode How Farmers to Florists Became a Minnesota Cup Startup Semifinalist cover

How Farmers to Florists Became a Minnesota Cup Startup Semifinalist

Takeaways * Farmers to Florists was selected as a semifinalist in the Minnesota Cup Startup Competition * The biggest challenge in local flowers is not growing flowers but solving supply chain inefficiencies * Building in public creates stronger businesses, stronger products, and better customer alignment In this behind the scenes episode, Dr. Liz Fiedler Mergen shares the exciting news that Farmers to Florists has been selected as a semifinalist in the Minnesota Cup Startup Competition. She explains how this experience is changing the way she talks about the business and why Farmers to Florists is much more than a floral platform. This episode dives into the real supply chain challenges facing flower farmers and florists, why coordination problems cost businesses money, and how better planning systems can transform local sourcing. Dr. Liz also shares lessons from pitching, startup growth, and building a business in public. Key Topics Covered: * Minnesota Cup startup competition experience * The local flower supply chain problem * Why Farmers to Florists is infrastructure, not just software * Startup lessons from pitching and networking * Building businesses through user feedback * Thinking bigger than your niche https://www.farmerstoflorists.com/ [https://www.farmerstoflorists.com/]

I går7 min
episode Crop Planning for Flower Farmers: Stop Guessing and Start Growing with Purpose cover

Crop Planning for Flower Farmers: Stop Guessing and Start Growing with Purpose

Takeaways * Why crop planning is the turning point from hobby flower growing to building a scalable floral business * How documenting planting dates and harvest timing creates better business decisions year after year * The four ways crop planning helps flower farmers predict, scale, and align production with real demand In this episode of Farmers to Florists, Dr. Liz Fiedler Mergen breaks down the mindset shift that transformed her flower farm from growing beautiful blooms to growing intentionally for profit and reliability. If you are selling subscriptions or farm stand bouquets, flexibility works. But once weddings, event design, and wholesale floral relationships enter the picture, crop planning becomes essential. Dr. Liz explains the four core functions of a crop plan: predicting bloom timing, tracking actual harvest outcomes, scaling production intentionally, and aligning flower production with customer demand. She also shares why your first crop plan does not need to be perfect. The real value comes from collecting data season after season until your business becomes more predictable and profitable. Whether you use spreadsheets or the Farmers to Florists platform, this episode will help you stop guessing and start building a stronger floral business. Key Topics Covered: * Transitioning from flexible flower farming to intentional production * Planning flowers for weddings and event timelines * Tracking planting and harvest dates * Using historical data to improve crop decisions * Building better relationships between flower farmers and florists * Scaling flower production without increasing chaos * Creating demand-driven floral businesses https://www.farmerstoflorists.com/ [https://www.farmerstoflorists.com/]

26. maj 20268 min
episode Farmer vs Florist Pricing: What Customers Don’t Understand cover

Farmer vs Florist Pricing: What Customers Don’t Understand

Use code PODCAST at checkout for 30% off! https://www.farmerstoflorists.com/ [https://www.farmerstoflorists.com/] Takeaways * The difference between farmer pricing and florist pricing comes down to labor, design, and customization. * Competing on price leads to undervaluing your work and eventual burnout. * Clear communication helps customers understand and respect pricing. Summary of the Episode In this episode of Farmers to Florists, Dr. Liz breaks down one of the most misunderstood aspects of the floral industry: pricing. She explains why a $30 bouquet can quickly become a $60 arrangement and how the shift from farmer to florist introduces additional layers of labor, design, and risk. This episode offers practical language for communicating value to customers while reinforcing the importance of sustainable pricing strategies. Key Topics Covered: * Farmer vs florist pricing differences * What goes into custom floral design * How to explain pricing without defensiveness * The risks of underpricing your work * Building a sustainable and profitable floral business https://www.farmerstoflorists.com/ [https://www.farmerstoflorists.com/]

30. apr. 20265 min
episode A Real-Life Look at Using Farmers to Florist for Weddings and Events cover

A Real-Life Look at Using Farmers to Florist for Weddings and Events

Takeaways * Tracking actual bloom timing year over year helps flower farmers make better crop planning decisions. * Floral recipe building simplifies sourcing, delegation, pricing, and event prep. * Better systems and communication tools can save real labor hours in both flower farming and floral design businesses. In this behind-the-scenes episode of Farmers to Florists, [https://www.farmerstoflorists.com/] Dr. Liz Fiedler Mergen shares exactly how she is using the Farmers to Florist platform inside her own flower farm and floral design business. From managing early season crop planning in a heated high tunnel to building floral recipes for stem bars, weddings, and statement installations, Liz walks through the real systems helping her save time and stay organized. She also explains how actual bloom timing can vary based on planting date, location, and growing conditions, and why tracking that data matters for future seasons. On the florist side, she shares how recipe guides help her calculate stem costs, manage wholesale sourcing, and keep event prep out of her head and in one organized place. The episode also highlights platform updates like a florist wishlist feature and email alerts that improve communication between flower farmers and florists. If you are looking for practical flower farming strategies, floral business systems, and tools to make local flowers easier to grow, design with, and sell, this episode offers a real-world look at what that can look like. Key Topics Covered: * How Dr. Liz uses Farmers to Florist in her own business * Crop planning for cool hardy annuals and early tunnel production * Tracking real bloom timing versus projected days to maturity * High tunnel growing in zone 4B Minnesota * Florist inventory visibility and wishlist planning * Email alerts for flower orders and farmer-florist communication * Building floral recipes for stem bars and wedding events * Calculating wholesale flower costs and markup * Delegating floral prep with organized systems * Saving labor hours through better floral business workflows https://www.farmerstoflorists.com/ [https://www.farmerstoflorists.com/]

16. apr. 20269 min
episode How Flower Farmers Can Grow Without Burnout cover

How Flower Farmers Can Grow Without Burnout

Takeaways * Burnout in flower farming is usually caused by weak systems, not lack of talent or passion. * Clear boundaries, communication policies, and workflow structure help growers scale sustainably. * Building systems early creates a more reliable, profitable, and healthier floral business. In this episode of Farmers to Florist, Dr. Liz Fiedler Mergen explores one of the most important but overlooked topics in the floral industry: burnout. She explains why many flower farmers do not struggle because they are poor growers, but because their business systems have not kept pace with growth. From inventory management to customer communication, relying on memory and last-minute decisions creates stress that is difficult to sustain. Dr. Liz shares how structure, boundaries, and predictable processes can help flower farmers and florists build healthier businesses. She discusses the importance of deadlines, pickup windows, communication expectations, and scalable systems that reduce overwhelm while improving reliability. This episode is a valuable reminder that sustainable growth in flower farming is not about doing more at all costs. It is about building a floral business that works for you, your customers, and the long-term health of the local flower industry. Key Topics Covered: * Burnout in the flower farming and floral industry * Why systems matter more than talent alone * Common business bottlenecks for flower farmers * Setting boundaries with wholesale flower buyers * Creating reliable communication and order processes * Building a sustainable flower farm business * Supporting stronger florist-grower relationships * Preparing your business for future growth without overwhelm https://www.farmerstoflorists.com/ [https://www.farmerstoflorists.com/]

7. apr. 20265 min