Posts

2016 year end review

Reviewing 2016

We often get so focused on process that we fail to stop to take a look back now and again. If you feel like you’ll never reach your goal of <fill in the blank>, take some time for review to see how far you’ve actually come.

Where were things one year ago? If you were like most, you were highly optimistic about the potential of 2016. While durum was still troubled by fusarium, there was tremendous, widespread excitement to climb abroad the lentil train! After an usually warm and dry winter, from one of the strongest El Ninos ever recorded, the concerns of a potential late and wet start to seeding were quickly cast aside.

The way 2015 started out (with multiple late spring frosts) you might have been cautiously optimistic about the 2016 crop, even though it looked like it was setting up for a repeat of the 2013 record yield. Diligent pesticide applications meant to protect this potential boomer of a crop may have worked well, unless we’re talking about chickpeas and durum. The rain didn’t allow for the desired warm dry autumn, and the 2016 harvest literally became a marathon. While I haven’t done any calculations, I’d be placing my money on an approximate 70-75 day average harvest duration in 2016.

Yields were all over the map, and this has again kept many income statements looking tight. There were far too many discouraging sides to crop rotations everywhere, and many of those farmers who tore up their long term crop plans to chase big returns are feeling a little sore. Fertilizer prices dropped in the summer and stayed low most of the fall, allowing those farms that have strong working capital to buy their 2016 fertilizer cheaper than they have in recent memory. Saskatchewan reelected its government; Manitoba voted in a new one. And we found ourselves gobsmacked by goings on leading up to the US election.

And so, in looking back over 2016 we want to focus on progress, innovations, shortcomings, and of course, lessons learned over the last 12 months.

Direct Questions

What progress did you make on your long term goals? Short term goals?

What innovations did you employ this year?

How have you evaluated results to determine their success or failure?

From the Home Quarter

There was a pointed competitive advantage described in the article above; did you pick it out? In a business that produces commodities, you need to create every advantage possible to give your business the best opportunity for sustained profitability.

Where did your business fall short of expectations in 2016? Where did it exceed? What did you learn from it, and what will you do different?

Does this sound familiar? I wrote something very similar a year ago. One year later, it still applies.

success criteria

Success Criteria

It is always interesting to listen to the variety of different opinions on how each farm views “success.”

For many it is measured by a tangible: number of acres under cultivation, number of combines in the fleet, etc.
For others, it is an intangible: family harmony.
Most of the time though, year by year success is measured in bushels.

Here is my response to a tweet just the other day:

Profit is always the supreme success criteria. Generally, I stop there because so much of the focus at the farmgate is primarily, almost exclusively on production, and it drives me crazy! But we simply cannot ignore the basic tenet of primary production: you need the bushels!

In the commodity business, and I don’t care if it is grains, livestock, oil, or minerals, the only businesses that produce commodities with consistent profitability are those that produce at the lowest cost per unit…period.

What’s the best way to lower your cost per unit? Produce more units, and in this case that means more bushels! Of course, the caveat is that you must produce more bushels without incurring more cost, or at least if costs must increase that their increase is not linear to (ie. less than) yield increase.

I am continually challenging my clients to find ways to reduce their overall costs. In an industry that has dedicated immeasurable amounts of focus on production, it is not unreasonable to admit that many farms are already producing maximum yields for their region, soil type, weather patterns, etc. Without further advancements in plant genetics, increases in yield beyond the average will mostly be achieved by the good fortune of ideal weather during the growing season.

Control what you can control (your costs) and accept what you can’t control (the weather.)

Direct Questions

How do you calculate your Unit Cost of Production (UnitCOP)? Do you calculate it at all?

How do you determine when the chase for more yield is no longer profitable?

What strategies do you employ to reduce your cost per unit?

From the Home Quarter

As read in the tweet above, “How about net profit?” Profit is the reason we’re in business, is it not? A business without profit is not a business, it is a charity!

Business is always evolving, growing, changing…maybe our definition of success should change too.

 

 

cash is not king

Cash Isn’t King

I think this phrase has gained such popularity because of alliteration. The hard “c” in cash just rolls with the word “king.”

Let me emphatically disagree with the ideology that cash is king.

One could argue that the king rules all, answers to no one, and has absolute power. While I’m sure that is what the king would have everyone believe, the truth is that kings have always been influenced by the likes of his queen, his advisors, other diplomats, etc. Is he, then, truly the top, unflappable, incontestable?

Since we live in a democracy and are no longer ruled by a king or queen, when I hear such terms I think of cards. The card games I enjoy the most are 3-Spot (also known as Kaiser) and Poker. In both games, the king is soundly trounced by one card that is even greater.

Yes, I’m saying it.

Cash is not King.

It’s the ACE!

If cash is king, then that means that something else is the Ace, something else is more important than cash. This is simply not so.

Cash is the ace, the pinnacle, the life blood of your farm.

Imagine how the decisions would be different, the decisions that are made every day and every year on your farm, imagine how they would be different if you had an abundance of cash:

  • Instead of gambling on trying to time the commodity market high, you could sell your production whenever was most convenient and/or at an appropriate profit point.
  • You would cease the need for operating credit, vendor credit, or cash advances.
  • “Cash management” would no longer be juggling between various creditors and hoping you can deliver grain in time to make payments, but instead it would be paying bills on time (ahead of time?) and selling grain when it made the most sense.
  • Risk management programs would be a non-issue.
  • Equity loans to recapitalize the business would be a completely foreign concept.
  • Acquisition decisions (land, buildings, equipment) would be easier, faster, and more empowering.
  • YOU’D HAVE LESS STRESS!
    (That is capitalized for a reason.)

Cash is the Ace. It ranks above precision planting, Group 2 resistance, or the latest technology trends. The Ace outranks the King; it outranks all the other cards.

Direct Questions

Has cash always been your Ace, or have other things become more important?

What are the top three benefits to you and your business if cash was abundant?

How confident would you be to have TWO Aces in your hand?

From the Home Quarter

We often regard agriculture as doing amazing things with scare resources. Cash does not have to be one of those scarce resources even though that has been the mantra for generations (a.k.a Asset Rich – Cash Poor). Assets do not pay bills, cash does. The desire to convert cash into assets needs to be squelched at a time when debts are high, cash flow is tight, and profit margins are narrow.

Since cash is the life blood of your business, and a critical contributor to your financial health, when is the last time you had a checkup?

With your year-end financial statements now done, you’re ready for a checkup. Email your financial statements to me and I’ll provide you with a financial health report card. Normally a $500 value, this service is free if booked by June 13, 2016.

 

ROI and ROA equipment

Farm Acronym Challenge: ROI and ROA

ROI (return on investment) is a metric I lean on heavily when working with clients to illustrate an expectation of profit. Each farm deploys (what feels like) unprecedented volumes of capital every year in an effort to grow a crop; there should be an expectation of profit for doing so, and I expect my clients to demand an ROI that reflects the risk they take. Accepting lesser returns is insufficient and could be realized with less risk by deploying said capital elsewhere.

We can break down ROI by measuring a return on various aspects: crop inputs, investment in equipment, annual cash costs, etc. Some of the many options against which we can measure ROI are highly useful, others less so. We try to decide which metrics to measure based on which gives us the most useful information. Of course, the ability to have an accurate measurement of ROI depends entirely on quality information and your ability to collect it.

ROA (return on assets) is a measurement I will be using more in the future than I have in the past. More and more I am finding that there are excess assets on farms, especially equipment, that are using good capital yet providing an inadequate return.  Here is what I mean.

ROA is defined as a company’s net earnings relative to total assets. By dividing net earnings by total assets, we see how efficient management is at using assets to generate profit. A company that generates $1,000,000 in net earnings on $5,000,000 in assets has a 20% ROA. A similar company generating $1,000,000 profits with $10,000,000 in assets has a 10% ROA. It’s simple math. And the question begs: if you had invested $10,000,000 elsewhere, could you get better than a 10% return on those assets?

Before the argument about land values is thrown out there, let’s just curb it right away. Yes, ROA can be manipulated (as can ROE – return on equity) by owning fewer assets. Banks do it all the time: they sell their owned real estate such as stand alone bank branches and ivory office towers in order to lower their total assets, thereby making their profitability (when measured as ROA) look fantastic.

Today, let’s focus on the asset that gets much love: farm equipment.

How would we measure ROA when it comes to farm equipment? I prefer to use Fair Market Value (FMV) because that figure represents both what it would cost you to acquire said asset and what you could reap should you sell said asset; it is arguably the asset’s intrinsic value. Online searches and blue book values are great ways to validate FMV. I summarize it as “when the auctioneer’s gavel drops, what would you get for that piece of equipment?”

Focusing on ROA as it pertains to equipment only, and excluding land, levels the playing field so to speak. All things being equal, this approach will clarify which farm management team is efficient with how it invests in equipment, and which is not.

Direct Questions

How do you measure the effectiveness of your investment in assets, specifically equipment?

Are you over-invested or under-invested in equipment? What evaluation methods do you use to validate your position?

If you were to invest your capital elsewhere, what return would you expect? What return do you expect from your farm? Is there a difference? Why?

From the Home Quarter

When calculating ROA, consider multiple criteria: all assets (land, buildings, equipment;) land and equipment only; equipment only. The ROA will obviously be much lower when including more assets, but don’t let that sway you into selling land to improve your ROA. Land ownership has been, and will continue to be, the anchor of a farm’s wealth.

What is a target ROA? The jury is still out. Simply put, there isn’t a large enough sample with adequate accurate information available to draw from.

So let’s find out!

With the utmost confidence and maintaining your privacy always, I am proposing an experiment: Email to me your net earnings, your cultivated acres, and your fair market value for each of land, buildings, and equipment for 2015. I will compile the data with no identifying criteria so that you maintain privacy. The compiled data will be available only to those who take part in the experiment. Include 2014 and 2013 as well if you’d like to see how you are trending.

As a thank you for taking part, Growing Farm Profits will offer an analysis with feedback on your ROA  and ROI calculations and trends at NO CHARGE! (Normally a $470 value!)  – Offer expires April 20

 

 

even emergence

Farm Financial and Business Information – Best Practices

Recently, I read an article that listed the “Top 10 Ag Data Platforms of 2015.” I recognized only 2 of them. Clearly, the choices available to producers in finding and using an appropriate data template is abundant. In recognizing that this does pose challenges in trying to decide which one to use, several of them offer a free trial period: use the service for a set amount of time and if you’re not happy, they’ll refund your fees. Can’t lose, right?

Like so many other aspects of life and business, going on the cheap, finding the lowest cost solution, spending as little as possible often has the opposite effect than what is desired. When I needed steel toed work boots for the farm, I used to spend about $120 for “cheap” boots from the discount or department store. The last pair I bought were Red Wing and cost me well over $300. They outlasted 2-3 “cheap” pair and my feet were far more comfortable during those long 18 hour days at seeding, keeping me less fatigued. Was there greater value in the more expensive boots? You bet there was!

If cost is your #1 concern when considering options for managing your data and business information, then please consider why you buy the name brand hand tools, cars, trucks, and farm equipment that you do? If cost was the only concern, wouldn’t we all be driving cheap $10,000 cars, using WalMart wrenches made in China, and farming with Belarus tractors?

Find what works for you and just use it. If you don’t know what works for you, then ask for help. I am meeting with an office organization expert this week to get the help I need in creating a work-space that is better organized and more suited to my work flow.

Last week we discussed “Using Your Financial Information,” but if you aren’t managing your information adequately, it will be difficult to use, and leave you to make decisions with information that is not accurate. We expect our financial institution to provide us with accurate statements, and we’d be pretty upset if the information they provided us wasn’t spot on. We need to have the same expectation of ourselves.

If doing your own income and expense entries, set aside 1 hour twice a week to input accounting data. I used to leave mine until it was time to file GST every quarter. I have found that there is value to letting my accountant’s office handle this task so I can focus on my business. In 2016, I’ll be leaving the data entry to my accountant.

The first piece of information I prefer to offer to new clients is a Unit Cost of Production calculation. This requires current and accurate figures for crop inputs, yield and price, operating costs, and overhead costs. To know what it costs to produce one bushel of canola or one tonne of barley on your farm requires accurate info, otherwise it’s still a guess! Using this accurate information is very empowering!

Here is a list of Best Practices to consider implementing for managing your farm’s financial and business data:

  • Research and fully utilize an agronomic data platform; ideally it would require minimal manual entry on your part by gleaning info from your tractor/sprayer/combine consoles, and also easily convert to your accounting software.
  • Manage income and expenses regularly: don’t simply fill the shoe-box! Designate 1 hour twice per week to data entry.
  • Evaluate the worth of your time relative to tasks you do, and delegate accordingly.
    (IE. if you’re the CEO helping the hired men sweep out bins, you’re not allocating your time very well!)
  • Consider using outside help, or a designated employee, to manage date entry if you deduce that your time is better spent elsewhere.
  • Keep income & expenses, assets & liabilities, and cash flow records current each month.

Direct Questions

How are you best utilizing the resources you have available to compile your data? Are you using the right people, or slugging through on your own?

What data and information management tools are you using? Do they satisfy your needs? How are you using the reports they create?

Does managing financial information take a back seat to other tasks? What do you need to make it more of a priority?

From the Home Quarter

Choosing an information management platform is a daunting task. But it is less daunting than trying to make informed decisions with little or no usable information. The learning curve is steep at the beginning, yet once you’ve done all your set-up, keeping it updated is relatively easy. Making information management a priority can be less easy, depending on mindset. The benefits you’ll enjoy from being equipped to make informed decisions immediately as required are similar to the benefits you enjoy from getting your entire crop seeded early into warm moist soil. Even emergence on an early seeded crop is as satisfying as highly informed strategic management decisions…and just as important!

analyzing finances at the bin

Using Your Financial Information

Last week, we described how compiling your financial information will be beneficial to you in being able to analyze your previous year’s results so as to equip yourself in making informed decisions in the current, and future, years. This week, we discuss how to use that info.

Critical Balance Sheet Metrics

  1. Your Current Assets should be greater than your Current Liabilities by an amount that at least matches your cost to put in next year’s crop.
    Ideally, the difference between current assets and current liabilities should at minimum match your entire costs to run your farm for one year.
  2. You want your Total Liabilities to be no more than your 125% of your equity after net worth adjustments have been made.
  3. ROE is an acronym for Return On Equity. It is your net income divided by your net equity. Are you happy with the returns you’ve earned in each of the last 5 years?

Critical Income Statement Metrics

  1. First and foremost, is your Income Statement accrued? You can tell if you find an adjustment, up or down, to your income that would be labelled “inventory adjustment.” If your income statement is not accrued, call me for a quick description on how to do it yourself. It’s easy.
    Accruing your income statement is the only way to truly measure your profitability from the crop produced in a specific year.
  2. Did you have a profit? EBITDA (Earnings Before Interest Taxes Depreciation & Amortization) is a very important figure to know. It represents your profitability from operations; it shows you can generate profits. The calculation is Net Income + Interest Paid + Taxes Paid + Depreciation Expensed.
  3. Now that you’ve got EBITDA calculated, divide it by the following figures: Current Portion of Long Term Debt (found on balance sheet) + ALL interest paid (found on income statement) + ALL lease payments made (found on income statement). This is an important indicator for your lenders. This figure indicates to them your capacity to meet your financing obligations.

Critical Cash Flow Statement Metrics

  1. Cash Flow from Operations divided by Gross Sales indicates how many dollars in cash your business generates from every dollar in sales. The higher the figure, the better.
  2. Cash Flow from Operations divided by your “Property, Plant & Equipment” indicates how well your business uses its hard assets to generate cash.
  3. Cash from Financing divided by Cash from Operations indicates how dependent your business is on financing. The higher the figure, the more dependent on external money.

Solvency Calculations

Liquidity Calculations

Liabilities / net worth current assets / current liabilities
EBITDA / loan payments, interest & leases current assets – current liabilities

 

Direct Questions

Does the thought of doing such calculations overwhelm you, scare you, or just plain bore you? If the urgency of knowing these numbers doesn’t strike urgency into you, are you willing to ask for help?

How would you describe the benefit to your decision making if these figures were readily available?

From the Home Quarter

The comment has been made time and time again: “It’s easy to make money in the good times.” With tighter margins of late, more attention than ever before is being paid to management and finances. These calculations above are only a few of the measurements that you can take to gauge your financial strength or weakness.

And if you need a hand figuring out what to do next, contact me any time.

Financial data

Compiling Your Financial Information

The proverbial shoe-box, or an organized file package.
Maybe a shoe-box that supports accounting software.
Maybe it’s a fully completed accounting software package that includes all depreciation expensed and dividends paid.

For those of us on a December 31 year-end, the calendar has turned and the clock is ticking. If you haven’t had a planning meeting with your accountant prior to now, it’s likely too late to act on some of the options you had.

When are you able to get your information in to your accountant? My mentor threw down the gauntlet last year when he showed me that his accountant had his financial statements prepared a mere 28 days after his fiscal year end. That’s some WOW factor there! For my file, I’m shooting for thirty-five days or less; target: early/mid-February.

For me to help my accountant meet my goal of a 35 day turnaround, I need to provide him with accurate information as fast as possible. I need to provide clear information on income and expenses (not a shoebox full of invoices and receipts.) I need to provide a detailed report on changes in my fixed assets over the year, my accounts receivable at year end, etc. The better the quality of info I provide to him, the faster he can get my file off his “To Do” pile and onto the “Done” pile.

It is a typical comment made every year: we have to wait for the bank, and other creditors, statements before the final month report can be ready to send to the accountant. I’m not waiting. I’m logging into my online banking and retrieving transaction info right away. The details are there, so why let this time go to waste?

When getting your taxes and reporting completed as quick as possible, the benefits are many:

  1. You will get ahead of your accountant’s busiest time, which  makes him/her happy!
  2. You will get your bank annual review done earlier and on time, which makes them happy!
  3. You will receive your financial reporting earlier allowing you to fully analyze last year’s results and make improved decisions for this year accordingly.
  4. You will be equipped to seek new credit before seeding, if required.

The government has filing deadlines for taxes, the bank has reporting deadlines for your annual review. To receive your December 31 financial statements in August because it took you so long to get your info in to your accountant provides you, and your financial partners, little use. The information in those reports is too old because so much has changed on your farm since the date on the statements. Would you write a cheque in August based on the balance you see in your December bank statement?

Direct Questions

What systems and processes do you have in place to compile your business and financial information as quickly and accurately as possible?

How are you using your financial information to make business decisions?

Have you discussed with your accountant as to how he/she prefers to receive information from you? Making their jobs easier will get you higher quality reports much faster.

From the Home Quarter

Getting your year-end completed quickly will help you be more profitable. When your statements are early (or at least on time,) you create opportunity with your creditors. Opportunity with your creditors creates strategies for growth (and possible lower borrowing costs.) Strategies for growth create opportunities to expand, increase efficiency, control expenses, etc…all which lead to greater profitability.

And it is all starts with getting your information compiled and delivered to your accountant fast and on time.

 

2016 year end review

Reviewing 2015

We often get so focused on process that we fail to stop to take a look back now and again. If you feel like you’ll never reach your goal of <fill in your own goal,> take some time for review to see how far you’ve come.

Where were things one year ago? If you were like most, you were concerned about excess moisture from fall 2014, and about how you might get the crop in next spring. If you grew durum, you were likely troubled with how to market a crop decimated by fusarium. If you have hired staff, you may have been thinking about how to keep your good people over the winter so as to ensure you’ve got them in the spring.

Spring changed from too wet to a drought in about a 3 week period. Mix in a handful of late May frosts, and before the first in-crop spray was applied, many of you were not sure what kind of crop you might have. After the frost, many of you had re-seeded a significant portion of your farm. The frost and the re-seeding brought on a new challenge that was unforeseen to many: multiple levels of plant growth/maturity. What fun this created at harvest! Of course, that’s when most of the rains came…August and September.

Yields weren’t the disappointment most of us were expecting based on such little rain through May, June, and most of July. And while this kept many income statements from looking like a total disaster, there were far too many discouraging sides to crop rotations everywhere; returns resembled the early 2000’s rather than the last 4 to 5 years. Oil prices were dropping all year, and many of you began getting phone calls from people now unemployed from the oil industry to come work on your farm.

And so, in looking back over 2015 we want to focus on progress, innovations, shortcomings, and of course, lessons learned over the last 12 months.

Direct Questions

What progress did you make on your long term goals? Short term goals?

What innovations did you employ this year? How have you evaluated results to determine their success or failure?

Where did your business fall short of expectations in 2015? What did you learn from it, and what will you do different?

From the Home Quarter

Without getting too proverbial, if we don’t take the time to review results, we are likely to repeat our previous actions. Decisions that hurt our gross margin, or dramatically increased our controllable expenses need to be acknowledged and rectified. Decisions that maximized profits, or increased efficiency need to be leveraged even further. But we will never know if we don’t stop to look back once in a while.

 

For an impartial view of your farm’s 2015 results, our proprietary Farm Profit Improvement Program™ will clarify your financial position, and help you understand the factors that feed your growth or hinder your progress. Call me or send an email to learn more.

planning

Financial Literacy Month

November is Financial Literacy Month, an initiative of The Financial Literacy Action Group which is “a
coalition of seven organizations that work to assist and improve the financial literacy of Canadians.”
http://www.financialliteracymonth.ca/About-FLAG/

Watching some news the other morning while having breakfast, I saw a financial commentator discuss 3
simple financial questions to which Canadians have averaged 1.8 out of 3 correct answers. And trust me,
these were SIMPLE questions. But anyone who knows me knows that I will always acknowledge that
“you don’t know what you don’t know.”

That being said, there is no shame in not knowing what you don’t know. It is when you don’t know what
you should know that risk is increased. Here is a short quiz for you to take regarding your farm financial
literacy for the occasion of Financial Literacy Month.

1. Your current assets are MORE than your current liabilities. This means your working capital is
a. Negative
b. Positive
c. I don’t know

2. Your contingency fund (emergency cash) has a balance of $50,000 in a savings account earning
1% interest per year. If inflation is currently 2%, then the net real value (the buying power) of
your contingency fund after 1 year is
a. More than $50,000
b. Exactly the same as the start: $50,000
c. Less than $50,000

3. The tractor you bought last year for $200,000 can be sold today for $215,000. You’ve claimed
$30,000 in depreciation on that tractor, meaning it has a book value of $170,000. You’ve just
sold the tractor for $215,000, and now you will have a
a. $45,000 capital gain
b. $15,000 capital gain
c. $30,000 recaptured CCA
d. Both b) and c)
e. None of the above

4. My banker is always in a hurry to see my financial statements because
a. He’s looking for a way to increase my interest rates
b. They need to ensure I’m still a good credit risk
c. She’s trying to lend me more money

5. I’m a farmer; I don’t need to know all those ratios and analysis and stuff.
a. True
b. False

While these questions I’ve posed to you aren’t the simplest questions that everyone should know, they
will create a benchmark for you to get an idea of what you do know and where your mindset is. At the
end of the day, it is up to you to determine if and how you will tackle the imperative task of advancing
your farm financial management. In a bit of shameless self-promotion, I have developed a classroom
seminar titled Advancing Your Farm Financial Management.
https://fbdi.gov.sk.ca/LP_LearningActivityDetail.aspx?id=Q6UJ9A03H15A&area=Financial+Management

It is a one day commitment. It has been developed for the farm business owner who wants to take his
basic financial knowledge to an intermediate level. It has been approved for reimbursement under the
Farm Business Development Initiative. http://www.agriculture.gov.sk.ca/GF2-FBDI

Course participants will learn what is important to their banker and why. They will develop an
appreciation for the risks all farmers face, plus the risks to their specific farm and how to mitigate those
risks. Each participant will go home having built the foundation of their own personalized financial
management plan. And the best part: lunch is on me!

Direct Questions

When it comes to financial jargon, the importance of financial management and how to use the
information, if you don’t know what you don’t know, who will you call for help?

I hear it is not uncommon to pay upwards of $10,000-$20,000 to your equipment dealer for them to go
through your combine to ensure everything is up to par. What is it worth to do the same for your farm’s
finances? Do you do it as often as you do for the combine?

From the Home Quarter

In a business with as much inherent risk as production agriculture, ignoring certain aspects of your
business increases risk exponentially. And whether that ignoring stems from a lack of interest or
understanding or time, the risk does not simply go away because it has little attention paid to it…in fact,
it grows. To create an analogy, ignoring risk is like ignoring a weed in your field: pay little attention to it,
it still grows; deal with it right away, and you increase your probability of a successful crop.

In the spirit of Financial Literacy Month, I challenge everyone to become more fluent in one new
financial term each week in November.

And for the answers to the quiz above, send me an email.

Our proprietary Farm Financial Analysis provides you with a straight-forward, easy to read report of
your farm’s financial position with focus on areas of strength, caution, and danger. Call or email for
more details.

grain2

Innovation in Agriculture

Innovation
Noun | in·no·va·tion | \ˌi-nə-ˈvā-shən\
: a new idea, device, or method
: the act or process of introducing new ideas, devices, or methods
(Source: http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/innovation)

No one could ever decry the innovation of Canadian agriculture. Often looked favorably upon for
consistently being on the leading edge, Canadian farmers are typically the envy of other nations’
producers for our advanced processes and our willingness to constantly strive for something better.
Innovation takes many forms. It need not be monumental. It does not require a farm to re-identify itself.
While significant innovations like direct seeding and minimum tillage required major capital
investments, many others do not. If you’re like virtually every farm, there is innovation all around you…if
you take the time to look.

Consider the changes you’ve made to your farm since you began farming. Again, not just the big obvious
changes, but the little things too. The little things often make the biggest difference, and yet they are so
easy to overlook. Just think about the positive effect of doing your own grain moisture tests on farm.
I was having a conversation with a client recently about the impact of grain sampling and how the
grading at delivery points can sometimes be a bone of contention. He described in detail how and why
he samples every load as it is being augered from the bin onto the truck. This is an innovation he has
employed to ensure he has taken appropriate measures to protect himself during a dispute. It has paid
off several times in the past, and will likely be of continued value in the future.

An interesting conversation, to which I was privy, among a group of very progressive farmers was about
how each of them managed the challenge of “feeding their help” during harvest. Crews that number
well into the teens require more than a cooler full of sandwiches and donuts. One innovation that I
thought was most creative was the customization of an old Class C motorhome into a quasi food-truck.
While we automatically focus on operations when considering our success with innovation, we cannot
ignore the management side of business. A common issue among my clients this fall is land rent
renewals. Many of them are seeking better ways to access their rented land without taking on so much
risk with these high cost all cash arrangements. As with land prices, rents have also increased
substantially over the last several years (thank you Captain Obvious for contributing to this week’s
article.) Farmers, generally, are becoming less comfortable with the $70-$100+/ac they’ve added to
their LBF (Land, Buildings, Finance) costs for land rent over the years and are now recognizing that they
often can’t make money on that rented land. Unless you’re running a charity, one that benefits your
landlords, “re-think profit” becomes an innovation all on its own.

Innovation is refining your record keeping, automating your payroll services, or focusing on improving
your working capital. While innovation also includes variable rate, advanced water management, or
specialized grain monitoring systems, it need not always be BIG and OBVIOUS. I think the best
innovation for every farm is to examine how it views profit, growth, and wealth.

Direct Questions

How do you view profit, growth, and wealth? I define each as,

Wealth: – discretionary time.

Profit: – that what is required to fuel “wealth.”

Growth: – not necessarily “expansion.” Growth is innovation at any and all levels.
(Remember “always grow; grow all ways!”)

How can you bring about innovation in your management arsenal?

How does innovation make its way into your business? Do you invite it in, or does it have to force its way
in?

From the Home Quarter

I am a firm believer that change will continue to be rapid and drastic in the future. In terms of record
keeping and data management, it will one day be mandatory, so why not get on board before you’re
forced? Regarding my client’s issue on his grain sampling, I believe that future farmers will be forced to
manage their inventory similar to that of a food processor today. And if you have not heard the term
“social license” yet, then let this be the first. A farmer’s social license to farm could face scrutiny like
we’ve never seen before. All of this will require significant innovation. But, don’t fret over the big issues
yet. Start small with manageable innovations today.

Our proprietary Farm Profit Improvement Program™ includes analysis and advice on negotiating land
rental agreements. Please call or email for further details.