Wendy Bingham, Co-Owner, Bingham Beef, North Powder Oregon. Member of the Cattlemen’s Beef Board and the Beef Checkoff’s Domestic Marketing Committee.

Beef Check-off Board

CATTLEMEN’S BEEF BOARD OP-ED

Beef’s Future Depends on Demand

By Wendy Bingham, North Powder, Oregon. Co-owner, Bingham Beef and Cattlemen’s Beef Board Member

In the beef business, demand means everything, And I see why that’s true, firsthand, every day. My husband and I started selling beef directly to consumers after a surprising conversation at a class on how to grow our business. A neighbor said he’d lived in our valley for nearly 60 years and had never been able to buy a half a beef from any ranchers he knew. I told him I’d sell him one that very day.

Since 2019, we’ve built Bingham Beef into a business that sells everything from shares to individual cuts. We serve a loyal local base here in North Powder, Oregon and reach more distant customers through our online store. What makes our operation unique isn’t just the beef—it’s the relationships. I enjoy talking with customers, answering their questions and even sharing recipes.
I also represent Oregon as a producer on the Cattlemen’s Beef Board and serve on the Beef Checkoff’s Domestic Marketing committee, which oversees Checkoff–funded programs that promote beef here in the U.S. Serving on this committee has reinforced what I already know from my own experience—strong demand doesn’t just happen. It’s built through effort, investment and consistency. And, contrary to what some producers may believe, demand and consumption aren’t the same thing.
Consumption is simply how much beef people eat. Demand reflects how much they want to buy—even if prices climb. For example, U.S. per-person beef disappearance was estimated at about 59 pounds in 2024, and it’s holding steady in 2025. That’s remarkable when prices are at record highs—ground beef alone topped $6.12 per pound in the summer of 2025.

As ranchers, we’re great at producing top-quality beef. But producing it isn’t enough. If consumers don’t know why they should choose beef—or trust it—we could be left with freezers full of great meat no one wants.
That’s where the Beef Checkoff can be so important. The Checkoff’s mission is simple—to drive demand for beef through promotion, research, education and innovation—all funded by producers and importers. Many producers prefer to focus on genetics and herd health rather than marketing, so Checkoff contractors are on the front lines creating demand for the nutrient-rich product we raise.

The Beef. It’s What’s for Dinner. brand reminds consumers why they love beef and makes it top of mind. But promotional campaigns can’t do it all. Programs like Beef Quality Assurance (BQA) help producers improve practices—like injection-site technique—which boost per-head value while demonstrating how much ranchers truly care about quality and safety. That builds consumer trust, which also drives demand.

At Bingham Beef, our customers are increasingly aware of different cuts of beef thanks to the Checkoff’s efforts. Even when food prices rise, I see customers staying loyal to beef. That’s demand in action—and it’s exactly what the Checkoff strives to sustain.
That’s also how the Checkoff’s work connects directly to my business. When customers ask about beef’s role in a healthy diet, I can point to Checkoff funded research. When they wonder about sustainability, I can share the educational materials developed thanks to the Checkoff. The more consumers see beef positioned positively and confidently, the more likely they are to choose it—whether from me, their grocery store or a restaurant.

Some producers say they don’t see returns from their Checkoff investments in their bank accounts. I understand it can be difficult to see the connection between a national ad campaign or a nutritional research study to the check you get for your calves. But those investments are helping keep beef in the spotlight, earning trust and loyalty from consumers.
Even with tight cattle supplies and rising costs, U.S. consumers aren’t backing off beef. Per capita consumption is still high, even as prices continue to climb. That kind of stability signals just how much consumers value and enjoy beef, and it doesn’t happen by accident. It’s the result of steady Checkoff efforts to keep demand strong across the board. If you’re curious about the Beef Checkoff’s value, I challenge you to learn more about what the Checkoff’s doing to keep beef at the center of the plate.

About the Beef Checkoff:

The Beef Checkoff Program was established as part of the 1985 Farm Bill. The Checkoff assesses $1 per head on the sale of live domestic and imported cattle, in addition to a comparable assessment on imported beef and beef products. States may retain up to 50 cents on the dollar and forward the other 50 cents per head to the Cattlemen’s Beef Promotion and Research Board, which administers the national Checkoff program, subject to USDA approval.

 

For more cattle info go to:

Home – American Cattlemen

For more dairy info go here:

Home – American Dairymen

If you also enjoy the Outdoors, the Iowa Sportsman is below:

Home – The Iowa Sportsman

 

Skip to content