Intelligent CIO Europe Issue 06 | Page 54

COUNTRY FOCUS: UK Farmers are coming to terms with the rate of agricultural innovation and are thus improving crop management with Information Technology software. Data is quickly becoming the catalyst to success and farmers must learn how to leverage it in order to progress. ///////////////// UK agriculture must harness potential of managing data for success D ata is going to impact agriculture more than anything else in the 21st century, said Graeme McCracken, Managing Director of Proagrica, during a recent interview. Farmers will use their data to apply the right products, at the right rates and at the right time; distributors will use data to properly buy inputs and to position them properly; manufacturers will use data to improve the way they manufacturer and recommend the use of their products. “But, it isn’t going to be easy to achieve meaningful results in these areas,” continued McCracken. “Today, as an industry, we are collecting huge quantities of data, but I would say 90% of it is wasted. Meaning 54 INTELLIGENTCIO that 90% of the collected data is not used to impact the decision-making on the farm, or higher up in the supply chain. Everyone has grand ambitions in this area, but due to the lack of trust between participants and the lack of standards around data management, progress has been slower than the opportunity would dictate.” Proagrica’s global agriculture integration and data analytics network, which has implemented data solutions across the globe, works with a large base of collaborative farmers and their supply chains to increase the available data’s quality and consistency. The insight produced from the accumulated data provides actionable value for farmers and their respective supply chains, sharing the benefits across the collaborative supply chain. “Trust is a big issue for the industry when it comes to data, particularly given recent events in the news outside of agriculture,” said McCracken. “We believe that farmers, agronomists and everyone else in the supply chain should own and control the data they collect, but to really gain value from their data they will need to leverage each other’s strengths on how to interpret the data to, for example, make cropping plans and to execute those plans.” Proagrica believes data should be a tool for a business’ own development, adding value to its own processes and hard work. www.intelligentcio.com