- Product information is split across a website, Facebook, Instagram, and text threads.
- The farm story is visible, but current availability is not.
- Customers do not know whether to call, message, order online, or visit a market.
- Location and service area details are incomplete.
- A general website template does not understand farm products.
- The next step for the customer is often unclear.
Farm storefront
Give your farm a clean online storefront customers can actually use
A useful farm storefront is not just a pretty page. It should answer the questions local customers ask before they decide to buy.
Start with a free public farm profile. Upgrade only when your farm needs more tools.
The problem
Why many farm websites fail after launch
Many farm pages look fine but still leave customers unsure about products, pickup, delivery, and whether the farm serves their area.
Neighborly Harvest
A one stop shop for the first version of your farm storefront.
Neighborly Harvest storefronts are built around the practical details local food customers need.
- Create a public farm profile or storefront built for local food discovery.
- Show products, photos, availability, service area, and contact links in one place.
- Start with a free Starter listing for discovery without Neighborly Harvest checkout.
- Upgrade to Growth or Preferred when checkout, order management, subscriptions, or delivery tools make sense.
- Keep the farm's existing website, phone, Facebook, Instagram, or ordering process when that is still the right fit.
Comparison
Standalone farm website vs. Neighborly Harvest
A standalone website can still be useful. Neighborly Harvest is the simpler first step for farms that need visibility, product clarity, and a practical customer path.
Use cases
A storefront for more than one kind of farm
Use it for simple discovery, product visibility, or as a stepping stone toward online ordering tools.
Small mixed farms
Show eggs, produce, flowers, honey, and boxes in one customer-friendly place.
Ranches
Explain beef boxes, pickup options, and direct order links.
CSA farms
Describe seasonal shares and guide customers to the right subscription or contact path.
Starter farms
Start free with a public farm profile before adding more advanced selling tools.
Farmer FAQ
Questions farmers ask before listing
What should a farm storefront include?
A farm storefront should include the farm name, photos, products, availability, location or service area, contact details, and a clear next step for customers.
Can I publish a storefront before all details are ready?
Yes. A Starter listing can begin with basic discovery information and improve over time.
Can I list my farm for free?
Yes. Starter farms can list for free. Starter is discovery focused, so it does not include full Neighborly Harvest checkout, cart, orders, subscriptions, or delivery tools.
Does Neighborly Harvest replace my farm website?
Not for every farm. It can be a simpler first step for farms that need visibility, a clean storefront, product listings, and local discovery before investing in a full standalone website.
Can customers buy directly through Neighborly Harvest?
Growth and Preferred tiers can unlock more advanced selling tools. Starter listings focus on discovery and can send customers to your website, contact details, or current ordering process.
Related pages
More ways to think about your farm storefront
Next step
Start with a free farm listing. Upgrade only when you need more tools.
Give customers a cleaner way to find your farm, understand what you sell, and know the right next step.