From optimizing grazing and monitoring animals to water management and reproductive technologies, Smart Farming is helping beef producers improve management efficiency. Using available tools, producers can collect, monitor and confidently make decisions for their cow herd and land.
By automating repetitive data tasks, artificial intelligence allows farm teams to spend less time behind a screen and more time focusing on animal husbandry and field work.
Beef producers use the digital tool to improve forage quality and move cattle more easily.
Producers are encouraged to take time this month to note what’s working and what needs to improve their grazing plan.
Direct-to-satellite smart collars remove need for cell towers, enabling ranchers to manage cattle anywhere they can see the sky.
Halter’s Andrew Fraser explains how virtual fencing collars use sound, vibration and GPS to automate rotational grazing, increase pasture utilization and reduce ranch labor.
University of Florida’s Mario Binelli explains how hormone treatments and wearable technology like accelerometers take the guesswork out of cattle breeding to maximize ROI.
Four ways artificial intelligence helps these farmers manage their business.
The integration of artificial intelligence into financial systems is ushering in a more sophisticated era of tax management — one where software handles the heavy lifting.
Founders Fund leads $2B valuation round as Halter doubles down on its commitment to ranchers globally.
A century of female stewardship meets the digital age as virtual fencing replaces the physical grind of the past in Potter Valley.
The Smith family captures value from cover crops twice—first as high-quality cattle feed and then as biological fuel for no-till corn and soybeans.
Tags provide early detection, lower death loss and greater peace of mind at Harper Feeders.
Study shows artificial intelligence and thermal cameras can estimate body temperature in cattle.
This record-keeping system streamlines cattle records into a road map for profitability.
Realizing producers need an app to speed up tasks like inventory tracking and record keeping, the Breedr team created a system that generates feedback and data insights so ranchers can optimize cattle performance while proving the quality of their animals.
In today’s beef industry, every ounce of meat matters. On the fabrication floor at Cargill’s Fort Morgan facility, getting one more ounce of meat off the bone can equate to roughly 600,000 quarter-pound servings.
CattleMax platform helps connect herd health, breeding and more.
How a cattleman’s frustration with paperwork and a passion for innovation led to Herd Advisor — an app turning ranch talk into records.
701x aims to reshape cattle management through a blend of innovative technology, user-friendly design and customer service.
From skepticism to trust, Robb Forman has realized labor savings and better results through SenseHub’s heat-detecting technology using ear tags with accelerometers.
With tight supplies and strong consume demand for beef today, artificial intelligence is beginning to reshape how producers manage each animal.
John Deere’s Deanna Kovar details how the company is cutting parts costs, adjusting production and responding to EPA moves on Right to Repair and DEF as farm income pressure keeps the ag equipment market in a downturn.
For decades, embryo technologies were viewed as tools reserved for seedstock breeders, show-focused programs or those chasing the absolute top end of pedigree-driven genetics. But today, the economics of commercial beef production have shifted.
Pattern recognition with artificial intelligence is helping cattle operations notice changes in cattle health, management and economics earlier.
Ceres Tag is changing ranching by providing ranchers the data that matters most to their bottom line.
Barn camera systems are helping producers reduce labor and improve calf survival by spotting problems sooner.
How Bloody Buckets Cattle Co. is building on legacy and adopting new tools to find new opportunities.