Case Study Summary
Shala Organic Farm started with a powerful mission: to prove that Iraqi soil can still produce clean, healthy food when it is treated correctly.
But before the brand became visible, the market did not fully understand the value of organic farming, organic compost, local Iraqi seeds, or clean agriculture. Many people did not believe organic products were necessary, and many farmers misunderstood organic compost as something that would not work.
Masar helped Wafaa Shala grow Shala from an unknown farm project into a founder-led Iraqi organic agriculture brand through brand strategy, social media management, educational content, video production, product marketing, paid ads, PR, and founder personal branding.
The work focused on making people understand before asking them to buy.
Through Wafaa’s voice, farm storytelling, wheat harvest content, organic compost education, and product communication, Shala became more than a farm. It became a public-facing clean-agriculture movement around Iraqi soil, local seeds, health, and organic living.
Client
Shala Organic Farm
Project Period
October 2024 — October 2025
Current support: consultation and ads support
Industry
Organic Agriculture
Clean Food
Organic Compost
Iraqi Wheat
Sustainable Farming
Farm Products
Health & Wellness
Agricultural Education
Market
Iraq
Founder
Wafaa Shala
Wafaa Salahaddin Al-Hamandi
Platforms Used
Instagram
Facebook
TikTok
WhatsApp
Project Type
Founder-led brand building
Organic agriculture marketing
Social media management
Educational content system
Product marketing
Paid advertising
PR support
Farm awareness campaign
Agriculture brand strategy in Iraq
Services Used
Brand Strategy
Social Media Management
Content Strategy
Video Production
Photography
Founder Personal Branding
Product Marketing
Paid Ads
Design
PR
Event Communication
The Challenge
Shala did not start as a known brand.
Before the marketing work, Shala was mostly hidden from the public. The farm had a strong mission, a real founder, and a valuable product direction, but people did not yet understand why it mattered.
The market was not immediately ready.
Many consumers in Iraq did not understand the value of organic food. Many farmers did not understand the difference between organic compost and chemical fertilizer. Some people doubted whether organic compost could actually work. Others reduced it to a simple misconception, thinking it was only animal waste rather than a soil-revival solution.
The challenge was not only awareness.
The challenge was belief.
Shala needed people to understand why organic farming matters, why Iraqi seeds matter, why soil health affects food quality, and why clean agriculture can become part of daily life in Iraq.
At the same time, Wafaa Shala had to become the human voice behind the project. The brand needed more than product posts. It needed a founder people could see, hear, trust, and learn from.

The Iraqi Market Insight
Organic agriculture in Iraq cannot be sold only as a product.
It first needs to be explained.
Masar understood that the audience needed education before conversion. People had to understand the problem before they could value the solution.
For consumers, the conversation was about health, family, food safety, clean food, Iraqi land, and trust.
For farmers and plant owners, the conversation was more practical: stronger roots, better soil, safer plants, summer protection, healthier wheat, and reducing dependency on chemical solutions.
This shaped the strategy.
Instead of presenting Shala as a normal farm or product seller, Masar helped position the brand around a larger idea:
Clean food starts from clean soil.
The marketing had to connect the farm, the founder, the compost, the wheat, and the products under one story.
That story was not about selling organic products only.
It was about helping people believe that organic farming is possible in Iraq.
Strategy
The strategy was built around Wafaa and her mission.
Masar helped shape Shala as a founder-led organic agriculture brand, where Wafaa became the public face of the farm and the person explaining the value of organic farming in a simple, direct, and human way.
The main strategic goals were:
- Introduce Shala to the Iraqi market.
- Make people understand organic compost and clean agriculture.
- Build trust through Wafaa’s personal presence.
- Show the farm’s real work, not only its products.
- Connect Iraqi local seeds, wheat, soil, and health under one clear brand story.
- Build demand for organic compost and farm products.
- Move Shala from a personal farming project into a recognized Iraqi organic agriculture brand.
The content was not built around hard selling.
It was built around teaching, showing, and proving.
Wafaa Shala’s Personal Brand
Wafaa was essential to the brand because Shala needed a human voice.
In a sector dominated mostly by men, Wafaa appeared publicly as a woman working in agriculture, teaching organic farming, showing her field work, and explaining how compost, soil, seeds, and clean farming affect health and food quality.
Masar helped make Wafaa more visible through founder-led educational videos, farm content, and PR support.
Her strongest content was educational content, especially videos where she explained organic compost, showed her work, appeared on the farm, interacted with animals, and shared real farming moments.
One of the strongest trust-building moments was Wafaa showing the wheat harvest.
That content worked because it did not feel like a claim.
It showed proof.
People could see the land, the wheat, the founder, and the work behind the brand.
This helped the audience trust Shala more because the brand was no longer faceless. It had a founder standing in the field, explaining the mission, and showing the result.
Content System
Masar built Shala’s content around education, storytelling, product awareness, and farm proof.
The main content pillars were:
Organic Compost Education
This was the most important commercial and educational pillar.
The content explained what organic compost is, how it helps soil, how it supports roots, why it is different from chemical fertilizer, and how it can help plants become stronger in Iraqi conditions.
Wafaa Founder Story
Wafaa’s videos helped make Shala more human and trustworthy.
The audience did not only see a farm. They saw the person behind the farm.
Farm Life
Farm videos showed the daily reality of Shala: land, animals, wheat, plants, soil, and practical farming moments.
This helped people see that Shala was not a theoretical project. It was active, visible, and real.
Iraqi Wheat & Local Seeds
The wheat story gave Shala a deeper national and emotional identity.
It connected the brand to Iraqi heritage, food safety, farming history, and the revival of local seeds.
Farmer Education
The content also spoke to farmers and plant owners by explaining practical agricultural problems and how organic solutions could help.
This made Shala useful, not only emotional.
Product Marketing
The most important product category was organic compost.
It needed the most education and generated the strongest audience reaction.
The market needed to understand what compost does, why it matters, how it helps soil, and why it is not the same as chemical fertilizer.
Masar helped communicate the compost through practical benefits:
- Better soil
- Stronger roots
- Safer plants
- Healthier crops
- Summer protection
- Cleaner food
- Less dependency on chemical fertilizer
The second important story was the wheat.
Shala’s Iraqi wheat story helped give the brand cultural and emotional depth. It connected farming to heritage, health, food security, and Iraqi identity.
The strongest content idea was the wheat harvest.
The strongest campaign direction was also around the harvest because it showed the result of the mission in a visible and emotional way.
Creative Direction
Shala’s visual and content direction needed to feel natural, Iraqi, earthy, clean, and human.
The brand could not look like a generic agricultural supplier.
It needed to feel like a clean farming project with a mission.
Masar helped create and guide visual assets including:
- Roll-up designs
- Social media templates
- Product communication
- Farm visuals
- Educational post structures
- Event and PR communication
The visual direction supported the idea that Shala was both practical and emotional: a farm that teaches, produces, and advocates for healthier agriculture.
The case study visuals should show:
- Wafaa in the farm
- Wheat harvest moments
- Organic compost content
- Farm life
- Educational videos
- Social media growth
- Roll-up or event assets
- Product/farm visuals
Avoid showing anything that makes the brand feel like only a small farm or only a product seller.
Paid Ads & PR
Masar supported Shala with paid ads and PR.
The strongest ad and communication direction was around organic compost and educational content.
The main CTAs included:
- Message us
- Order now
- Ask about compost
- Learn more
- Visit the farm
- Book a farm experience
Leads, inquiries, and product interest were mainly collected through WhatsApp, Instagram DMs, calls, and social media messages.
The goal was not only to generate orders, but also to help people understand what they were buying and why it mattered.
Results
Shala moved from being an unknown farm project to a recognized Iraqi organic agriculture brand with a visible founder, an educational content system, product demand, and a clearer public mission.
Masar’s work helped Shala grow from “hidden” to visible.
The brand became associated with:
- Organic farming in Iraq
- Organic compost
- Wafaa Shala
- Iraqi local seeds
- Clean food
- Wheat harvest
- Farmer education
- Healthier agriculture
- Farm life
- Sustainability
Social Media Performance
Across the available Meta reporting window, Shala generated strong visibility on Facebook and Instagram.
Facebook performance included:
7.6M+
views
2.7M+
3-second views
93.7K+
visits
100.9K+
content interactions
672 days and 5 hours
watch time
5.6M+
organic views
65.8K+
link clicks
6.1K+
Instagram follows
2M+
views from ads
Instagram performance included:
4.3M+
views
718.6K+
reach
111.5K+
visits
151.4K+
content interactions
31.5K+
follows
3.8M+
organic views
6.1K+
Instagram follows
518.7k+
views from ads
The audience was strongly Iraq-based, with Baghdad as the leading city across both platforms.
Brand Growth Proof
Shala’s wheat story also became a strong symbol of the brand’s progress.
The project began with around 14 kg of authentic Iraqi wheat seeds on about 1,000 m² and expanded to more than 100,000 m², reaching nearly 5 tons of organic wheat by 2025.
This growth supported the brand story visually and emotionally.
It gave the audience proof that Shala was not only talking about clean agriculture.
It was producing it.
Product & Audience Impact
Marketing helped increase interest in Shala’s organic compost and wheat.
People began asking more about organic compost, organic wheat, and how Shala’s farming methods worked.
The compost became the most important commercial product because it solved a practical problem for plant owners, farmers, and people who wanted healthier soil and stronger plants.
What Worked Best
The strongest part of the strategy was founder-led education.
Wafaa’s educational videos worked because they combined three things:
- A real person.
- A real farm.
- A real problem people needed explained.
The wheat harvest content also worked strongly because it gave the audience a visible result. It showed the journey from soil to crop, making the brand more believable.
Organic compost content worked because it connected education to a direct need. People did not only learn about Shala’s mission. They also understood a product that could help their plants, soil, gardens, and crops.
The strongest combination was:
Wafaa + education + farm proof + product relevance.
What Masar Learned
The Shala project reinforced several lessons about marketing agriculture and sustainability in Iraq:
- Complex products need education before selling.
- Founder-led content builds trust faster than anonymous brand content.
- Organic agriculture in Iraq needs proof, not just claims.
- People trust what they can see: soil, wheat, harvest, farm work, and real results.
- A strong agricultural brand needs both emotional storytelling and practical benefits.
- Product categories must be connected under one clear brand story.
- Health, family, Iraqi land, clean food, and local seeds are powerful emotional triggers.
- Compost and farming products need simple explanations, not scientific language.
- PR and social media work better when the founder has a clear public voice.
- In Iraq, sustainability becomes stronger when it feels local, useful, and connected to everyday life.
Why This Case Study Matters
This case study shows how Masar helps complex brands become easier to understand.
Shala was not a simple business with one product and one message.
It was a farm, a founder story, an organic agriculture project, a compost product, a wheat revival mission, and a clean food movement.
Masar helped simplify that complexity into a public-facing brand story.
The project shows Masar’s ability to support:
- Organic agriculture marketing in Iraq
- Founder-led brand building
- Educational content strategy
- Product ecosystem branding
- Social media growth
- Agricultural product marketing
- PR communication
- Audience trust building
- Iraqi cultural and environmental storytelling
Most importantly, it shows that Masar can help a brand build belief before selling.
Key Services Used
Organic Agriculture Marketing in Iraq
Founder-Led Brand Building
Social Media Management
Content Strategy
Video Production
Photography
Product Marketing
Paid Ads
PR Support
Educational Marketing
Organic Compost Marketing
Iraqi Wheat Storytelling
Farm Awareness Campaigns
Sustainability Marketing
Agriculture Brand Strategy
Iraqi Audience Understanding
Frequently asked questions
What did Masar do for Shala Organic Farm?
Masar helped Wafaa Shala grow Shala Organic Farm through brand strategy, social media management, content strategy, video production, photography, Wafaa’s personal brand, product marketing, paid ads, design, PR, and farm awareness communication.
Who is Wafaa Shala?
Wafaa Shala, also known as Wafaa Salahaddin Al-Hamandi, is the founder and public face of Shala Organic Farm. She became known for organic farming education, Iraqi wheat, organic compost, and her work in clean agriculture.
What was the main challenge for Shala?
What product was most important for Shala?
Organic compost was one of the most important commercial products because it needed education and directly solved problems related to weak soil, plant health, root strength, and safer farming.
What content worked best for Shala?
Wafaa-led educational videos, farm life content, organic compost education, and wheat harvest content worked best because they showed real work, real proof, and a clear mission.
Did Masar help with Wafaa’s personal brand?
Yes. Masar helped position Wafaa as the public voice behind Shala: a woman in agriculture, organic farming educator, and founder leading a clean-agriculture project in Iraq.
What results did Shala achieve?
Across the available Meta reporting window, Shala generated millions of views across Facebook and Instagram, strong content interactions, significant profile visits, and strong follower growth. The brand also became more recognized as an Iraqi organic agriculture project.
Why is this case study important?
This case study shows how Masar can help turn a complex agricultural project into a clear, trusted, founder-led brand story through education, content, PR, paid ads, and audience understanding.
What does this case study show about Masar Agency?
It shows Masar’s ability to build trust around complex ideas, simplify difficult categories, support founder-led brands, and market agriculture and sustainability projects in Iraq.
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