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Miracle-Gro To Target Cannabis Market

vta

Active member
Veteran
High Hopes at Miracle-Gro In Med Marijuana Field

By Dana Mattioli
Source: Wall Street Journal

medical USA -- Scotts Miracle-Gro Co. has long sold weed killer. Now, it's hoping to help people grow killer weed.

In an unlikely move for the head of a major company, Scotts Chief Executive Jim Hagedorn said he is exploring targeting medical marijuana as well as other niches to help boost sales at his lawn and garden company. "I want to target the pot market," Mr. Hagedorn said in an interview. "There's no good reason we haven't."

Sales at Scotts rose 5% last year to $2.9 billion. But the Marysville, Ohio, company relies on sales at three key retailers—Home Depot Inc., Lowe's Cos. and Wal-Mart Stores Inc.—for nearly two-thirds of its revenue. With consumers still cautious about spending, the retailers aren't building new stores as quickly as they used to, making growth for suppliers like Scotts harder to come by. Against that backdrop, Mr. Hagedorn has pushed his regional sales presidents to look for smaller pockets of growth, such as the marijuana market, that together could produce a noticeable bump in sales.

Sixteen states have legalized medical marijuana, the largest being California and Colorado. The market will reach $1.7 billion in sales this year, according to a report by See Change Strategy LLC, an information data services company.

While the report focuses on revenue from growers and dispensaries, Kris Lotlikar, president of See Change, said the market for companies selling hydroponic equipment and professional services is also thriving.

"We see very good growth for these types of companies as the medical-marijuana business grows," he said.

Marijuana use remains illegal under federal law, but federal raids on medical dispensaries have eased since President Obama took office. And while major public companies haven't openly targeted the market, in recent months medical-marijuana companies have sought money from venture capitalists and signaled future IPOs.

Centennial Seed Co., a Boulder, Colo., medical-cannabis seed seller, is seeking $500,000 through a private offering. General Cannabis Inc., whose stock trades on the Pink Sheets, supports the medical-marijuana market with financial and Internet services.

The 55-year-old Mr. Hagedorn isn't a typical suit-wearing CEO. A former F-16 fighter pilot, he flies his Cessna to and from meetings in Port Washington, N.Y., where he grew up, and the company's headquarters in Ohio, much to the chagrin of his board. He also peppers his language with swear words and military references, and he showed up at the office on a recent June day in jeans and sneakers.

Mr. Hagedorn took over Miracle-Gro from his father, who co-founded the company. The idea to merge with Scotts dawned on him after he looked at the company's market value in 1995, he said, so he called his father's tax lawyer to vet the idea. "I said, 'Bob, I got this f— crazy idea. Do you think it'd be f— possible to take over Scotts?'" he recalls, sitting in the Port Washington office that his father once occupied.

Mr. Hagedorn is serious about sales growth, no matter how small. On a recent trip to a Farmingdale, N.Y., Home Depot, he saw a customer having a difficult time choosing soil. "C'mon, go help him out," he told Mike Carbonara, Scotts' president for the Northeast. A few minutes later, the customer was walking away with a bag of Miracle-Gro. Over the next half hour, Mr. Carbonara influenced three more sales.

Targeting marijuana isn't the only way Mr. Hagedorn is pursuing growth outside the national chains. Scotts is also looking to sell more through grocery stores.

And the company is recultivating its ties to independent lawn-and-garden-store owners, including offering them exclusive products. Mr. Hagedorn strained those ties with a 2009 speech in which he criticized the owners for not doing enough to promote Scotts products, prompting many owners to walk out.

"I don't give speeches to independents anymore," he said.

To target marijuana growers, Scotts would likely buy niche dirt companies that already exist rather than create its own line of branded products.

Raids on pot-growing operations have turned up Scotts products. Mr. Hagedorn takes that as a good sign of brand awareness, but he fears that some growers would be reluctant to use a mainstream product.

Rollitup.org, a website geared toward the marijuana-growing community, has several forums that debate Miracle-Gro's effectiveness. A user with the moniker Weedqueen12 wrote: "i think [Miracle-Gro] works well." Another user, dannyboy602, countered that Miracle-Gro causes pot plants to "burn and stress."

In the past, Scotts wouldn't have considered pursuing businesses or product lines that generated less than $10 million a year in revenue. But, Mr. Hagedorn said, "We can't operate our business like that anymore."
 

stonedar

Macro-aggressor
Veteran
well bleep me, in teh eye socket

Fox news covered this as well AND wasn't snarkey about it. they just said it and didn't roll theirs eyes or nothing.
 

HighDesertJoe

COME ON PEOPLE NOW
Veteran
Hey why not.
If they can do for Cannabis what they did for Giant PUMPKINS
we might be in for a real treat.
I can hear the load speaker at Home DePOT now,
"I need a price check on a 50 pound bag of Miracle-Gro Marijuana Potting soil"
 

fabvariousk

Active member
Veteran
Maybe I can get them to sponsor me!?:)
It is funny that this probably just means a change in packaging and raising the price.
I guess for the people who feel MG is not good because it is not expensive they can finally give it a go.
 

SOTF420

Humble Human, Freedom Fighter, Cannabis Lover, Bre
ICMag Donor
Veteran
In the past Miracle Grow for Tomato's :bigeye: always kicked ass for me in my younger days and grew some quality plants & buds. :plant grow:

I guess if they can come up with something organic now & higher quality that gives growers excellent results across the board then I say more power to them. I mean we use their Bone Meal, Blood Meal and soil's already so no big leap here! :canabis:
 
This may mean there will be more money available to be dished out in bribes to get politicians to be more pot friendly. I would never buy any of their toxic products but this might not be a bad thing.
 

SOTF420

Humble Human, Freedom Fighter, Cannabis Lover, Bre
ICMag Donor
Veteran
Maybe they can create some products to combat the fungus gnats they have spread across America in their bags of heavily infested soil. I think just about every garden in the US can thank them for their fungus gnats but it's not like FF is any better in that regards just the FFOF soil is way better :good:
 
M

Milhouse

I am already using Scott's Professional Hydroponic Special and it is best nutes I have ever used!
 

growshopfrank

Well-known member
Veteran
i cant wait to see their tv adds, mr sincere (same guy that sells hemorrhoid meds) telling me that i need miracle gro to grow the dank should be a fucking train wreak
 
M

Milhouse

I submitted this same article in the news section today.

Is anyone else happy as hell they didnt us ICMAG to get thier quotes? I saw that and gave a relieved sigh! Although it would be cool to have your screen name in a wall street journal article, any publicity like this cannot be good for that forum.
 

SOTF420

Humble Human, Freedom Fighter, Cannabis Lover, Bre
ICMag Donor
Veteran
Miracle Grow, the fungus gnat company! :biggrin:

(quote that asshats! ha) :bigeye:
 

Grass Lands

Member
Veteran
I grew back in the day with Super Soil cut with perlite, MG 15-30-15 as my veg nute and GreenLight 12-55-6 Superbloom as a bloom nute before all the new fangled products we have now...did pretty well...now I use the Fox Farms lineup with a few other goodies...the yields are a little better with the FF nutes, but the big diff is the flavor and aroma of the herb...way better with the FF lineup...

If they do buy out a company we can only hope they will not change the formula...otherwise there will be a lot of folks on the move...
 

spurr

Active member
Veteran
Some excerpts I find most telling:

High Hopes at Miracle-Gro In Med Marijuana Field

By Dana Mattioli
Source: Wall Street Journal

...

Centennial Seed Co., a Boulder, Colo., medical-cannabis seed seller, is seeking $500,000 through a private offering.

...

To target marijuana growers, Scotts would likely buy niche dirt companies that already exist rather than create its own line of branded products.

And this one made me laugh:

...

Rollitup.org, a website geared toward the marijuana-growing community, has several forums that debate Miracle-Gro's effectiveness. A user with the moniker Weedqueen12 wrote: "i think [Miracle-Gro] works well." Another user, dannyboy602, countered that Miracle-Gro causes pot plants to "burn and stress."

...
:laughing::laughing::laughing:
Really?! Quoting at least one pseudonymous person from the Internet (e.g., "Weedqueen12" and "dannyboy602" could be the same person), come on Dana and the WSJ, where the hell is your journalistic integrity?!
 

jakeh

Active member
If they get into this line I can tell you what I would like to see is a quality version of their liquafeed. The dosatron seems high and I'm sure they could do a good job with it. There should be a way to do it cheaply.
 

skyspider

Member
I have used those dried up 'slabs' that youb add water to and shake the bag mixed with other stuff and had good results
 

mg75

Member
miracle grow has organic liquid fertilizers available at home depot. it's part of the organic choice lineup. their organic choice soils are recommended by mandala seeds which are always pushing for organic growing. apparently this indicates they do already have support within the grow community from a reputable seed company.
AN and miracle grow (soon) are probably the only nutrient companies that are openly selling cannabis related plant foods. that's some balls from such a well known national company (miracle grow/shultz).
 

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