New Landowners in Virginia's Forest: A Study of Motivations, Management Activities, and Perceived Obstacles

Article 1 As forest ownership continues to change, forestry must change to be relevant to its new constituency and client base. Market segmentation can help in this task. There is no such thing as an average forest owner. This study assessed the motivations and forest practices of 661 new owners of...

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Main Author: Kendra, Angelina
Other Authors: Forestry
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/28802
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-08262003-120653/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-288022020-09-26T05:30:52Z New Landowners in Virginia's Forest: A Study of Motivations, Management Activities, and Perceived Obstacles Kendra, Angelina Forestry Hull, Robert Bruce IV Parkhurst, James A. Buhyoff, Gregory J. Hall, Troy E. McMullin, Steve L. market segmentation nonindustrial private forest ecosystem management cluster analysis NIPF cooperative management Article 1 As forest ownership continues to change, forestry must change to be relevant to its new constituency and client base. Market segmentation can help in this task. There is no such thing as an average forest owner. This study assessed the motivations and forest practices of 661 new owners of forested lands ranging in size between 2 and 50 acres. The study focused on rapidly growing counties in Virginia. Cluster analysis techniques were used to identify six market segments: Absentee Investors, Young Families, Forest Planners, Preservationists, Farmers, And Professionals. Only the smallest market segment (Absentee Investors, n = 26) reflects motivations and forest management interests that somewhat resemble "traditional" forest landowners. The results suggest that "lifestyle" concerns are the major motivations of these new owners and seemingly determine receptivity to professional forestry advice. This analysis helps understand these differently motivated segments and suggests possible marketing strategies professional foresters can use to "sell" forestry and active forest management. Article 2 Land managers increasingly are seeking to promote management of private forestland that transcends political and ownership boundaries. Descriptive analyses were used to characterize new landowners' intentions to participate in active management, both within individual property boundaries and in cooperation with neighboring landowners. The study also describes obstacles that these new owners perceive constrain their participation in active management. Further analysis explores potential differences in these variables related to amount of land owned, attitudes about private property rights, trust in forestry professionals, and attitudes about clearcutting and harvesting practices. The results suggest that private property rights are not an insurmountable problem to ecosystem management efforts. The forestry profession, however, seems to suffer from an invisibility problem among the population of new landowners. The very audience that ecosystem management programs target (owners of fewer than 20 acres of forestland) perceives itself to be least relevant to the message of cooperation. In fact, the biggest obstacle identified was that these new landowners have never thought about participating in active management, either within or across property boundaries. Ph. D. 2014-03-14T20:15:43Z 2014-03-14T20:15:43Z 2003-07-30 2003-08-26 2004-09-03 2003-09-03 Dissertation etd-08262003-120653 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/28802 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-08262003-120653/ KendraETD2.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic market segmentation
nonindustrial private forest
ecosystem management
cluster analysis
NIPF
cooperative management
spellingShingle market segmentation
nonindustrial private forest
ecosystem management
cluster analysis
NIPF
cooperative management
Kendra, Angelina
New Landowners in Virginia's Forest: A Study of Motivations, Management Activities, and Perceived Obstacles
description Article 1 As forest ownership continues to change, forestry must change to be relevant to its new constituency and client base. Market segmentation can help in this task. There is no such thing as an average forest owner. This study assessed the motivations and forest practices of 661 new owners of forested lands ranging in size between 2 and 50 acres. The study focused on rapidly growing counties in Virginia. Cluster analysis techniques were used to identify six market segments: Absentee Investors, Young Families, Forest Planners, Preservationists, Farmers, And Professionals. Only the smallest market segment (Absentee Investors, n = 26) reflects motivations and forest management interests that somewhat resemble "traditional" forest landowners. The results suggest that "lifestyle" concerns are the major motivations of these new owners and seemingly determine receptivity to professional forestry advice. This analysis helps understand these differently motivated segments and suggests possible marketing strategies professional foresters can use to "sell" forestry and active forest management. Article 2 Land managers increasingly are seeking to promote management of private forestland that transcends political and ownership boundaries. Descriptive analyses were used to characterize new landowners' intentions to participate in active management, both within individual property boundaries and in cooperation with neighboring landowners. The study also describes obstacles that these new owners perceive constrain their participation in active management. Further analysis explores potential differences in these variables related to amount of land owned, attitudes about private property rights, trust in forestry professionals, and attitudes about clearcutting and harvesting practices. The results suggest that private property rights are not an insurmountable problem to ecosystem management efforts. The forestry profession, however, seems to suffer from an invisibility problem among the population of new landowners. The very audience that ecosystem management programs target (owners of fewer than 20 acres of forestland) perceives itself to be least relevant to the message of cooperation. In fact, the biggest obstacle identified was that these new landowners have never thought about participating in active management, either within or across property boundaries. === Ph. D.
author2 Forestry
author_facet Forestry
Kendra, Angelina
author Kendra, Angelina
author_sort Kendra, Angelina
title New Landowners in Virginia's Forest: A Study of Motivations, Management Activities, and Perceived Obstacles
title_short New Landowners in Virginia's Forest: A Study of Motivations, Management Activities, and Perceived Obstacles
title_full New Landowners in Virginia's Forest: A Study of Motivations, Management Activities, and Perceived Obstacles
title_fullStr New Landowners in Virginia's Forest: A Study of Motivations, Management Activities, and Perceived Obstacles
title_full_unstemmed New Landowners in Virginia's Forest: A Study of Motivations, Management Activities, and Perceived Obstacles
title_sort new landowners in virginia's forest: a study of motivations, management activities, and perceived obstacles
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/28802
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-08262003-120653/
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