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Food Processing Industry in Arkansas

 

Arkansas has an abundance of resources to help food processing companies succeed. The Arkansas Economic Development Commission works directly with food processing companies looking to start-up, expand or relocate. In addition, we assist companies with finding the best incentives so companies are able to make money quickly and efficiently. 

There were 522 food and beverage companies in Arkansas at the end of 2022. These companies employed 55,130 people. Arkansas is home to Tyson Foods and numerous other food processing facilities, including Nestle, JBS USA, Kraft Heinz, Mars Inc., Cargill Inc., Hormel Foods Corp, Riceland Foods, Pilgrim’s Pride, ConAgra Brands Inc., Land O’ Frost and Frito-Lay, Inc.

Arkansas has the 5th largest percentage of food processing workers in the United States. The growth rate of the food and beverage industry from 2017 to 2022 was 6 percent in Arkansas.

The food processing industry is booming in Arkansas and continues to grow exponentially. Eight of the top 10 food and beverage companies by revenue in the world have manufacturing facilities in the state. 

Arkansas is meeting the workforce needs for food processing companies. The state now has the second-largest number of food processing workers in the US and Arkansas has responded to industry growth by modernizing the workforce.

food and beverage companies in arkansas

Food & Beverage Industry Blog Posts

Woman-Owned Small Businesses Are Rising in Arkansas

 September 14, 2021

Throughout Arkansas, small businesses are thriving, and greater numbers of entrepreneurs are launching new business ventures. As the number of small businesses grows in Arkansas, it is crucial to provide resources to help these business owners develop their companies.

As a champion for the business community, the Arkansas Economic Development Commission is proud to play a role in a new mentorship program for women business owners. Growing the small business and entrepreneurial community in Arkansas is critical because these businesses are the backbone of the state’s economy.

In Arkansas, small businesses make up the majority of the business landscape, at 99.3% of all businesses in the state. Women own 91,168 businesses in the Arkansas, according to the U.S. Small Business Administration. By providing resources and other assistance, we hope to fan the flames for greater small business growth throughout the state.

Mentorship can have a major impact on small business owners and their companies. Kabbage, a financial services and technology platform, found in a recent survey that only 22% of small business owners had mentors when they started out. However, 92% of the business owners surveyed said that mentors had a “direct impact on growth and the survival of their business.”

Starting in fall 2021, Woman Achieve, a mentorship program developed by the Venture Center, will pair woman entrepreneurs in Arkansas with seasoned business leaders to receive mentorship and to help the community of women professionals flourish in the Natural State.

Over the course of one year, mentors and mentees will work together to form relationships that will positively impact each other and create synergy in the wider Arkansas business community. Mentors will provide guidance, coaching, counseling, and support for their mentees, and will serve as role models and connectors for them. Mentees will learn from their mentors, applying lessons into their business, not only growing their individual companies but the larger Arkansas economy.

Across Arkansas and the United States, woman-owned businesses are on the rise. The U.S. Census Bureau reported in its 2019 Annual Business Survey that woman-owned businesses increased by 6,861, or 0.6%, to a total of 1.1 million from 2017 to 2018, the most recent year information on business increases is available. The U.S. women-owned firms had approximately 1.8 trillion in sales, shipments, receipts or revenue in 2018, according to the Census Bureau, and employed 10.1 million workers.

Over a five-year period, from 2014 to 2019, women-owned businesses in the U.S. increased dramatically by 21%, growing to almost 13 million, based on American Express’ 2019 State of Women-Owned Business Report. The report authors noted that this growth is only the beginning for woman entrepreneurs, declaring that “the potential of woman entrepreneurs for spurring economic growth has not been fully realized.”

The Arkansas Economic Development Commission is partnering with the Venture Center on Woman Achieve, along with fellow sponsors Wright Lindsey Jennings, Arkansas Capital Corp., and Venture Noire, to continue this growth for woman entrepreneurs.

In its inaugural year, 20 mentees and 20 mentors will be accepted into the program. Once selected, the mentees and mentors will be notified in October and will be invited to a meet and greet and a two-hour training. The program will formally kick off on January 12, 2022.

Applications for Woman Achieve open on Wednesday, September 8, and close on Friday, October 8.

Click here to apply to be a mentee and here to apply to be a mentor.

Mentorship helps lift people up, enabling them to rise beyond their expectations. Let’s rise together.

Katherine Andrews

Blog post contributed by:

Katherine Andrews
Director
Small Business & Entrepreneurship Division
Arkansas Economic Development Commission
Email

 

Esperanza Massana-Crane


Esperanza Massana-Crane
Director
Minority and Women-Owned Business Division
Arkansas Economic Development Commission
Email

 

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CATEGORY:

Minority & Women-Owned Business, Minority and Women-Owned Business Enterprises, Small Business & Entrepreneurship, Small Business & Entrepreneurship, Small Business & Entrepreneurship

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