Tim Neale’s experience with agtech is two decades in the making. Through his company DataFarming he is working with over 20,000 farms to implement precision agriculture solutions. Tim is passionate about agtech adoption by keeping agtech simple, effective, and easy to use.
This is the latest interview from our AgTech Finder perspectives series, and we’re delighted to have Tim provide his insights for farmers, agronomists and agtech providers about how best to deliver adoption of agtech.
Measure to manage
Tim explains, there is no going back when it comes to technology, and agtech is no different.
“I know people, farmers included, get frustrated with technology. But we can’t go back to a pre-digital era and why would we want to when we have agronomists able to make $100,000 decisions on a single satellite image.
“We’ve got make agtech work for the farmer. The more measuring tools in a farmer’s toolbox the better to make decisions – measure to manage is the key message here. But decision-support tools have been too complex and we as agtech providers need to improve that.”
Drivers for using agtech on-farm
As Tim explains, the driver for farmers to use agtech isn’t always a financial return on investment.
“A farmer’s driver for using agtech is value and that’s not always monetary. The total drivers for adoption are more all-encompassing than just economic.”
Tim has identified 7 key drivers for farmers to adopt agtech:
Cost – what are the upfront costs and will it save me money?
Convenience - does it make my life easier?
Compliance – will this support my regulatory requirements now and in the future, including providing the evidence I need?
Complexity – is it easy to use and get started?
Capacity – do more with less
Connectivity - can ‘this’ plug into ‘that’?
Consumers – what can this prove to the consumer? Consumers are demanding more from farmers in the way of proof of provenance and sustainability credentials.
Champions – are peers championing the product?
The agtech journey
At DataFarming, Tim and Peta take farmers on a journey of discovery when it comes to agtech.
“You can’t keep putting bad technology out there that doesn’t work or doesn’t deliver. If you don’t get it right, then farmers are going to hesitate to go down the agtech path. This is where the technology sector has failed the agricultural industry on many occasions.”
At DataFarming we break down the barriers to adoption and release products that are going to work, make life easier, and so then make overall adoption of agtech easy.”
To help adoption uptake by farmers, Tim sees that agtech should have the following characteristics:
Make it easy to get started
Keep it simple
Have a low-cost entry point
Deliver instant value
As a provider, provide support and respond to enquiries
Make it relevant and talk the language
Make it intuitive so it just works
Agronomists are key
The role of agronomists is changing every day – farms are bigger, they need to manage more, every year there are less farmers with the corporatisation of agriculture, and the expectation is that they are now the ‘tech’ people.
“Agronomists need to be upskilled in agtech and we, as the agtech companies, need to give agronomists the tools to do their roles effectively in a non-threatening way. They are critical to the whole cycle and if an agronomist doesn’t understand the piece of technology then it won’t get to the farmer.”
There are some simple starting points for agronomists at the beginning of the journey, such as record keeping and planning tools, precision ag, and satellite imagery.”
Next steps for agtech in Australia
Tim sees the next steps being all about capital for agtech. In Australia proper ‘patient’ capital is needed, with much of the Australian agtech sector being capital poor compared to our American cousins. Economies of scale will be needed, such as forming alliances.
“The interest over the last 12 months has been booming, driven by COVID, sustainability, and food security concerns. It’s now or never for farmers, producers, agronomists, and agtech companies to get it right and start boosting adoption.
“The model of investment in Australia is broken; we are the worst OECD country globally with respect to commercialisation of research. That needs to change, starting with government and universities truly working with businesses to build out complete solutions, not creating market failures as is happening now.”
Connect with Tim Neale and DataFarming
Hear from Tim at the Food Agility Summit 2021
Hear from Tim at the Food Agility Summit 15-16 March 2021 in a feature panel session called Hunting unicorns in a burgeoning Australian agtech industry. An online event for farmers, producers, agrifood ventures and agtech providers not to be missed!
Food Agility Summit 2021: foodagilitysummit2021.com