30 JUL 2024

What is the driver behind the business model

Agriculture is in a positive cycle, a big part of Australia has had good winter rains and the season in the north is looking promising. Commodity prices are either at a good sustainable level or there’s reason to expect production levels will abate the lower prices.

Now is the time to understand where you are positioned in the supply chain and where you are striving to be. You need to have a goal! Although sometimes it is unachievable, you must strive to reach our potential.

Keep an eye on the horizon

Environmental factors have a large impact and each person has their own view on where we are heading. But there are many other factors that affect the outcome, such as knowledge or skill level, business scale, labour availability, financial standing, enterprise balance, and so on.

The drivers are different on every property. While profit drivers always seem to be brought back to the dollar sign by people outside agriculture, this is not the thinking of people in the industry (although monetary profit is very nice and necessary)! Environmental sustainability goes hand in hand with agriculture, as we depend on it to keep our business models in good shape for the future.

Measure everything but the big picture matters

As the majority of agricultural businesses have multiple enterprises, you need to evaluate our enterprises as individual pieces. For example, that’s a cow and calf operation, self-replacing merino flock, prime lamb production or beef backgrounding. Even though you asses them separately, they should then be overlayed with each other. Do they have common timelines, inputs, cashflow and so on? Is that good or bad?

The questions that you need to ask are: Why do we do this? Is this the most efficient use of labour/skill resources? Does this have the cashflow we require? Does it suit our environmental and climate conditions?

Within our enterprises, it is good to have flexibility! If you are breeding crossbred lambs and finishing them as prime lamb, for example, have you done the maths to see how the bottom line would change if you ran extra ewes and marketed more lambs earlier? Don’t forget the earlier sale of the lambs as store lambs would leave higher levels of dry matter in the paddock for the breeding ewe. The flow-on positives could be a higher quantity sold that could equate to higher total dollar values, less supplementary feed, higher body condition scores and better ground cover. Don’t underestimate the positive and negative effects on your mind of relying on the rain, too.

Most enterprises have flexibility, but sometimes you do not see it from your side of the fence. Steer or heifer backgrounding gives great flexibility. This offers flexibility with most relevant inputs, labour, seasonal conditions, market requirements and cashflow. The level of intensity can be varied into all the above inputs, which invariably affect the bottom line.

It is important to realise we each have an individual view on what we are aiming for and there are many ways to achieve our goals. There are ways you can minimise risk and improve your bottom line. Never stop asking questions!