Agriculture has always been a business of margins, and every season, growers make thousands of decisions that influence productivity, profitability, and sustainability. When to irrigate. How to manage pest pressure. Where to invest resources. Which risks deserve immediate attention and which opportunities are worth pursuing.
Technology has transformed many of those decisions. Today's growers have access to more operational insight than ever before, helping them respond faster and manage their operations with greater precision. But as agriculture continues to evolve, I believe one of the industry's next opportunities lies beyond operational visibility and toward greater financial visibility.
Because nearly every farming decision has a business impact.
Connecting Operational Performance to Business Performance
The first evolution of digital agriculture focused on helping growers understand what is happening in the field, and we’ve seen that weather monitoring, pest forecasting, irrigation optimization, and crop intelligence have fundamentally changed how decisions are made. Those innovations created tremendous value. But increasingly, growers are asking a different set of questions:
- What is the financial impact of a pest management strategy?
- How should capital be prioritized across competing investments?
- Which decisions will create the greatest long-term return?
These are the kinds of questions CFOs ask every day.
Throughout my career, I've seen that the strongest organizations are not necessarily those with the most information. They're the ones that connect information to outcomes. They understand not only what is happening, but what it means for the business. And agriculture is moving in that direction as well. I believe the future of digital farming will be defined less by the volume of data available and more by how effectively that data supports decisions.
Building More Resilient Agricultural Businesses
Having spent the last 10 years working in the agricultural industry, one thing I’ve observed: growers operate in an increasingly complex environment. Input costs continue to fluctuate. Labor remains a challenge. Markets are unpredictable. Climate variability introduces new risks and unknowns every season. And while technology cannot eliminate uncertainty, what it can do is help growers access more of the financial insight that traditionally comes from a CFO
Since its inception, the Semios Group has helped growers transform operational data into actionable insights. I believe there is an opportunity to go even further. I’m excited to work with the Semios team and help connect agronomic performance with business performance, which will give growers greater confidence in the decisions that shape their operations.
Farming starts in the field of course, but long-term success is built through the decisions that strengthen the business behind it. And, while I won’t often be working directly with growers in my role as CFO, I’m excited to help shape the direction of the Semios Group so we can help our customers easily access CFO-style information without having to hire their own CFO. Because I believe every farm can benefit from thinking a little more like a CFO.