The solution to the crisis is quality products…
How can quality and standard production be achieved when the price of production materials increases between one hundred and fifty percent?
We estimate there are around 3,000 producers, many of them small family businesses. Some of these producers operate in fruit trees and other agricultural fields, in addition to ornamental plants. Because we are a mobile society that changes location, decisions, and professions rapidly, the number of producers can fluctuate even during times of crisis. Of course, this fluctuation in producer numbers can negatively impact price stability and create market volatility.
On the other hand, small-scale production, especially in agricultural production, has a critical impact. In industrial production, despite all the advantages, if market demand declines and product prices remain stable, balancing costs becomes increasingly difficult. However, small producers generally maintain their businesses with the same labor effort, whether a crisis occurs or not. This is perhaps the critical point. If, within a sector's diverse range of producers, there are small producers who specialize in the types of production they engage in, and who produce in planned, standardized forms and quantities, the sector will recover quickly from recessions and revitalize. This will make economic crises easier to overcome.
However, predicting what will happen in the coming period isn't easy or pleasant. We'll see how things unfold. How can high-quality, standardized production be achieved when prices for production materials like fertilizer, peat, potting soil, and more are rising by 100-150 percent? But production will continue... Production will continue... So, let's at least use every resource available for high-quality production. At the very least, product sales will be guaranteed. Higher-quality products are still selling very quickly, and it looks like they will continue to do so.

